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dgrawixoss
Anfänger
2 Posts
registered: 26.10.2013
27.10.2013, 15:14
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feebsori
Hohlbratze
1013 Posts
registered: 23.10.2013
28.10.2013, 10:19
Learning to Savor Seder
However these weren't your normal crackers.
"Oh yeah, Passover is about to start!" said Kari Rubinstein, 30, a teacher from the District who were built with a bag of goods in her hand and a couple running shoes over the woman's shoulder at Washington's G Street market. "Wait when will it start?"
Not quite deep theology, but it was simply the sort of interaction Washington area Jewish outreach organizations were looking for when they determined this year to try "Passover from the Aisles." This system brings volunteers to food markets to promote the faith based holiday which marks your Jews' exodus from ancient Egypt and begins today and represents a new stage in mainstream Judaism activism in the United States, national outreach teams say, a "public area Judaism" that hopes to reach the growing ranks regarding unaffiliated Jews by using overt, inthestreets loyality. Such methods have already been the mainstay of Christian evangelists and the large Orthodox Jewish outreach group Chabad,
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, whose blackcoated volunteers have been in shopping centers and on street sides for decades.
Over the past a fortnight, Jewish volunteers from huge mainstream groups like the Jewish Federation of Better Washington and the Judaism Community Center of Greater Washington get fanned out to supermarkets via Reston to Gaithersburg to pass out dozens of Seder kits directed at making it easier and more entertaining to observe the holiday's central event.
The Seder,
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, or ritual storytelling meal, has traditionally been a serious twonight occasion, with readings,
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, wishes and multiple emblematic dishes. But the products aim to keep it simple and entertaining, with spot mats based on the Television drama "CSI" (in this case: Imaginative Seder Initiative), turning participants into "investigators" of the millenniaold exodus account. The kits include recipes, wine,
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, matzoh along with a song booklet with ditties such as "Take Us From Egypt," sung to the tune involving "Take Me Out to the actual Ballgame."
Many consumers stopped at the Whole Foods table. Some handled the place mats as well as the matzoh reverentially, as though they were rare artifacts; others created cracks about the obstacle of eating matzoh rather than all bread merchandise for eight days. People of various ages and races got the kits.
"This is actually cute. I like the CSI thing! We'll try out anything to make the Seder far more I don't know the right expression," said Jon Ariel, Forty-one, a father of a pair of young boys who resides in Montgomery County. He paused. "I don't want my kids to take a seat through the same boring Seders we sat through.Inch
"Passover in the Aisles" is new to the Washington area, but different versions have started in cities around the world in the past couple years, motivated by the fact that National Jews are more likely to observe the Seder routine than any other of the year except for the lighting of Hanukkah candles, according to the American Jewish Data Bank. To put it differently, to reach lapsed Jews, this is the leading time.
In the past, regular outreach has meant welcoming people to private residences for Seders or to big group Seders held in wats or temples and church cellars .. This new institution does not aim as evangelicals do to convert, but can acknowledge in a fresh way that Jews need to be out there with everyone else.
"Americans have multiple choices about where they enroll in houses of praise, and that's the thinking process that dominates our own spiritual culture,Inches said Arnold Dashefsky, director with the Center for Judaic Reports and Contemporary Judaism Life at the College of Connecticut. "Whether that suits you it or not, you are in a competition."
Nearby and national promoters said the new say in outreach is about "breaking along walls," "giving folks options" and "lowering the obstacles."
"We don't use the word 'outreach' anymore because it sounds like we're taking you and pulling you in. Jewish Community Centre.
"This is about going to where individuals are, not expecting them to come to organizations. Most Jews don't spend time inside Jewish institutions," said Kerry Michael. Olitzky, executive director with the New Yorkbased Jewish Outreach Initiate, which created the program, used from Dallas to Milwaukee and also Arlington.
Trying to reach Jews in public places spaces is new regarding mainstream groups, he said, because "this is the 1st period in which the Jewish community felt comfy enough to enterprise outside its several walls."
Some see a dumbingdown of the Seder within things such as the CSI spot mats and in the bestselling items about Judaica Web sites: 10 affects face masks, to be put on when the story can be told about Our god inflicting on Silk slave masters curses which include boils, lice as well as locusts; plastic frogs (representing another plague) that can change around the room; and also matzoh ball bingo.
"The simple problem here is how the level of learning with this country has gone along, so the whole Seder, which is designed to be a more serious experience with actually going through the Haggada [storybook], becomes more onerous for people who don't have backgrounds. They want a Seder but don't know how,Inches said Shlomo Perelman, an Orthodox Jew who worries but in addition operates two large Web sites that offer the trendy items. "But it is essential is that someone goes to a Seder."
That was the effect the Seder system had on Kathleen Overr, 43, who picked one particular up on her solution of Whole Foods.
"Wow, it can be that time of year. I had forgot," said Overr, who moved to the particular District last year from Los Angeles. Her Ethiopian Jewish grandmother oversaw the holidays by making dishes spiced sweetly with dates and plums. But once Overr left property, her Passover observance waned. Recently, however, she found herself hosting an evening meal with her partner for Rosh Hashanah, a period of introspection in the new year.
"I wanted to recognize where I originated, to see if there was something I really thought," she said. "I think this year we're going to have a Seder."
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