{4F805597-AC32-42F4-9EE2-BAD88CE3B8B2} 18.03.07 Kosher for Passover in Israel
Search Advanced
Home Aliyah & Absorption Partnerships with Israel Jewish Zionist Education Regions 
You are here :   Jewish Zionist Education About Us Blogs 18.03.07 Kosher for Passover in Israel
About Us
Our Mission
Leadership
News
Blogs
Contact Us
Training Programs
Educational Shlichut
Experiences In Israel
Focus Areas
Regional Partnerships
Educational Resources
Compelling Content
R & D

The Education Department holds no liability for the views expressed in this blog , which are personal to the author or authors. They do not necessarily reflect the views of the Education Department or those of the Jewish Agency for Israel.

Kosher for Passover in Israel
18/3/2007

We were at Sachne one day last Passover. Sachne, also known as “The Park of the Three Pools,” is located near Beit Shahn in the Lower Galilee. It was a beautiful day, and the place was packed with both Jews and Arabs, religious people and non-religious. The kids had a lot of fun going in and out of the waterfalls in the park, and we spent most of the day there. We ate a picnic lunch, and for a treat we walked over to the park’s snack-bar and got the kids some ice cream. Not such an earth-shaking moment ordinarily, but on Passover it was. For such a thing does not occur outside of Israel. To begin with, it is difficult to find “Kosher for Passover” ice cream of any kind in most places in the States. And I have never seen “Kosher for Passover” ice cream bars--and if and when these do come into existence, they certainly will not be for sale at the concession stand of your nearest National Park.

My kids have a picture book called “Matzah Ball: A Passover Story.” The book tells the story of Aaron, who is invited by his friend’s family to join them at a Baltimore Orioles game. It turns out that the baseball game is during Passover, and so Aaron’s mom reminds him that he can’t eat any of the stadium’s junk food. Aaron complains, “It’s not easy being Jewish, and sometimes it feels downright weird.” (Aaron is rewarded for his sacrifice, though, because while his friends are off at the concession stand, he manages to snag a home-run ball thanks to the resiliency of the matzah he is holding in his hands.) In Israel it’s easy being Jewish and it’s easy keeping kosher for Passover (though perhaps it’s more difficult for a Jew here to be humane--but that’s a topic for another column). Most of your regular grocery items that you use year-round suddenly sprout “Kosher for Passover” labels two weeks before the holiday. Even Elie’s penicillin for his ear infection was stamped “Kosher for Passover” (though I did not request such a stamp). The only complicating food factor in Israel on Passover, if you are Ashkenazic, is that there are two “Kosher for Passover” food labels: the all-encompassing “Kosher for Passover” and the “Kosher for Passover for those who eat kitniyot (legumes).” A kosher for Passover buffet at a hotel or restaurant will often include rice, corn, beans, and other legumes, and it’s not always easy to steer your kids or yourself away from these items. Yet now that I am in Israel, this Ashkenazic stringency against eating legumes seems quite extreme. There are just too many religious Jews here who eat kitniyot for me to think that there is anything pious in abstaining from these foods.

If anything is weird about Passover in Israel it’s the lengths that secular Israelis go to cleaning for Passover. The days leading up to Passover constitute a national spring-cleaning period both for religious and less traditional Jews. A frequent radio advertisement this pre-Passover season urged women to forego Passover cleaning and vacation in Cyprus, where they would find beautiful beaches and hotels, and wonderful restaurants. Yes, apparently there are many women in Israel who both clean exhaustingly for Passover and who would entertain the possibility of vacationing at a non-kosher Cypriot Hotel for the holiday.

Passover in Israel feels normal because it seems like almost everyone is celebrating. I’m not exactly sure what the payoff is going to be, but it would certainly stand to reason that there are incredible psychic benefits for a Jewish kid who grows up on Israeli Passovers.

Copyright 2007, Teddy Weinberger


Send to A Friend
  
Print
Back to Top
Blogs
Blogs
03.06.08 American Jews and the Law of Return
05.05.08 A Hopeful Story
29.04.08 Yad Vashem in My Backyard
27.04.08 Aliyah and the "Push"
25.03.08 The Chancellor's Visit
12.03.08 Children in the Study Hall
28.02.08 Obama 3, Clinton 2
12.02.08 Spotlight on Israel
31.12.06 Heleni hamalka
15.02.07 Mother of All Purims
4.03.07 Hebron
18.03.07 Kosher for Passover in Israel
10.04.07 Some Passover Observations
12.04.07 Yad VaShem
17.04.07 Remembering the Fallen
25.04.07 Trial By Fire: Lag Ba’omer
13.05.07 Shavuot by Tnuva
20.05.07 Shavuot Reflections
30.05.07 In Nitzan With the Evacuees from Gaza
06.06.07 The 2+ 2 and High School Graduation
04.07.07 My Tisha B’Av Problem
25.07.07 Tu B’Av
31.07.07 Ten Years of Aliyah
15.08.07 Aluminum Foil and Aliyah
29.08.07 Sephardim and Jewishness
09.09.07 New Year in the Fall
09.19.07 Yom Kippur as Bicycle Day
15.10.07 Time On
31.10.07 Shmitah
02.12.07 Just Hanukah
19.11.07 Where Every Friday Night is Thanksgiving
11.12.07 Santa Claus and Zionism
23.12.07 People of the Book?
01.02.08 Religious and Secular Extremism
24.01.08 "The Mikado" Can Wait
29.01.08 The Annual Hike
28.08.2006 Reflections on a Visit to Israel
22.08.2006 International Arts and Crafts Fair
Info Center Resources Ask us Issues that matter
Home Site Map Privacy
Thursday 04 December, 2008 (c) All rights reserved to the Jewish Agency יום חמישי ז' כסלו תשס"ט