Menu

 
 
 
 
Best view 1152 x 864 ( +F11 )
Bookmark and 
 Share web counter
Visits
counter
Visitors
--- UNDER CONSTRUCTION ---

Alex News

ALWAYS ON TOP ( Scroll down for recent postings )

===
PAM ! Pam-para,pam-pam ! PAM ! PAM !
 

Sep 18, 2010

Say somethin' Pam... I dare you !

G'mar Chatima Tovah

Friday, September 17, 2010

By Pamela Geller - Atlas Shrugs

This evening marks the beginning of Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement. I want to wish all of my observant Atlas readers an easy fast. I intend to step back on this day, reflect, repent and ask forgiveness of anyone I may have hurt, embarrassed or offended (subversives and enemies of the state not included).

In the court of the sky, may we be judged mercifully.

These are perilous days. Pray, my dear friends, pray hard for us.

Here's a wonderful post from Brian of London over at Israelly Cool:

Tonight the Yom Kippur Day of Attonment for Jews begins. Many people know that Jews don't eat or drink for around 25 hours (sun down to sun down) but few know what actually happens on Yom Kippur in modern, non-religious, Israel. What I'm going to write below, many Jews in the UK don't know. I didn't know this till I moved here!

Maybe it isn't so clear to Jews or others outside of Israel what happens on Yom Kippur in Israel. Cars stop for the day. They just stop. It looks like a post apocalypse movie where the oil ran out one night and all we have left are bicycles and roller blades.

As far as I can tell (people are very vague on this) there really is no enforceable law against driving, it just isn't done. The police could stop you, but they'd just ask why you were driving, tell you to be careful and let you go. There is no religious police to enforce this kind of thing in Israel as it isn't a religious state.

Now it is true that this happens on every Sabbath in places where observant, religious Jews live in large majority: parts of Jerusalem, highly religious towns like Tzfat (Safed, Zefad, whatever) and many others: but on a regular Sabbath in Tel Aviv Friday night traffic is bad and the restaurants serving pork or shell fish are full to overflowing (some of them like to combine pork, prawns and dairy products in one dish to break as many of the Kosher rules as possible in one go).

On Yom Kippur, however, everything stops. Non-observant Jews and observant Jews alike, just hide the car keys. For sure, if your kid falls off his bike or your wife goes into labor and needs the hospital nobody (from both those communities) would think twice about driving the car to the hospital.

But on Yom Kippur the non-religious Jews just organize their lives such that they don't need to drive.

For sure most of them will not fast, and they probably stock up on downloaded movies or DVD's because the state TV channels shut down (but there's plenty of other cable channels).

But they just don't DRIVE their cars. The air smells good, the visibility gets better and from sundown to sundown the streets are full of people strolling or cycling along 10 lane highways. People have found a way to organize their lives that for just one day a year, nobody drives except for emergencies.

I left my apartment to have a look last year and I saw one pickup truck and 3 policecars moving. Slowly. Through the crowds of children on bikes on roads equivalent to the M1 or the London North Circular.

Below is a slideshow of what that looks like in Tel Aviv that I found on YouTube, there are many more videos but this kind of gives a good idea.

Slideshow Yom Kippur in Tel Aviv on YouTube

Video of streets without cars

So why is being Jewish so different when you're in Israel. Well there has never in my recollection (and when I've searched) been a Jew in England who's publicly got upset by anyone eating, even in front of him, on Yom Kippur. Jews have never, and will never I assure you, ask you to stop driving for a day. It just won't ever happen. Even in our own country this isn't a law, its just something the vast majority of Jews want to do because over here, it just feels right.

That is the difference between living as a Jew in England and as a Jew in Israel: here we can just BE Jewish and the calendar and the customs and norms push us into being culturally Jewish even if we don't want to study the Torah 9 hours a day.

Jews don't want anywhere else, we just want this one tiny little place to feel Jewish in.


No comments: