Goyim Hamentashen

goyim hamentasen

I was raised Jewish, and cherish the rich history. My kids know well, the family background and my love for some Jewish traditions.

Growing up, Purim was the tribe form of Halloween. We got to dress up and go trick or treating in the Temple (I was reform, so it was not called synagogue).

Of course, every girl wanted to dress up as Esther.

A few weeks ago, I decided to teach my little goyim how to made yummy hamentashen. As usual, I was missing a key ingredient – apricot preserves. We substituted with whatever jam was handy.

We tried to use Duff Goldman’s recipe, but were also missing the plain brandy and poppy seed filling ingredients. I used apricot brandy and decided I now love apricot brandy.

This was a wonderful opportunity to discuss religious persecution and its hidden benefits.

As a reform Jew in New York, my whole religious identity was bound to the holocaust, not so much worshipping God. Sunday school did teach about Jewish culture and some prayers, for which I’m forever grateful. I can still recite the Sh’ma.

Personally, my great-Aunt was part of the resistance in Poland, along with her husband. Both they and their toddler son were killed when the Nazis discovered that their pharmacy was aiding the resistance.

In 1930s Poland, much of the Jewish population was assimilated. Many were more Zionist than religiously Jewish. That was my family.

As you can see in the photo above, my daughter has red hair. It’s from my grandma. It seems to be a dominant gene in my family. 3 of our 7 kids have red hair, which is not a semitic trait. At some point my family must have assimilated with some red haired slavs.

The religious persecution against Jews in Europe, prior to the Holocaust, while traumatic and unfair, did have one big benefit. It kept them Jewish for the most part, whether they worshipped God or not. It kept the little tribe from a backwater Roman province alive and well for over 2000 years.

Every time persecution went away, assimilation quickly followed. Assimilation is the quickest possible way to kill a community. Ask the Babylonians. They wanted to destroy the Jewish identity of those northern 10 tribes of the Jewish people. They didn’t kill the people. They just treated them decently, but made them intermarry and settle elsewhere. Pretty soon, they were known as the Samaritans and no real Jewish identity.

Basing religious identity on terrible events 50 years prior, does not fill the need for God in every child’s heart. As St. Augustine said, “Our hearts are restless until they rest in you.”

Almost every Jewish teen I knew, who was raised reform, grew up and married a Catholic or became Catholic. Some became nothing. Some became unitarian. But those seeking God mostly found their way to Catholicism, in my anecdotal experience.

Why? Because the liturgy is the same. It’s familiar.

There’s a tabernacle.

There’s a cantor.

There’s readings from the Old Testament.

There’s an ever burning candle.

Even the prayers are identical…. Kadosh, Kadosh, Kadosh… Holy, Holy, Holy… same prayer.

There’s some Jesus dude. So that was a bit of a hurdle for me. Ok, almost a job stopper.

But there’s also something else that Judaism was lacking for me. One true authority. I’ll continue that in another post some day.

Getting back to persecution…

I was raised to easily recognize persecution and call it out. So here’s where it gets just plain weird. I never experienced religious persecution as a Jew. Maybe because I grew up in a land where I thought all people were Jewish or Catholic (New York). I didn’t know there was any other religion until I was 12.

But here I am, Catholic, and I experience it all the time. Even from other Catholics. But just like historical religious persecution, aside from the Holocaust, forced Jews to decide if they were going to assimilate or truly worship God as their ancestors did, today’s publicly-accepted Catholic bashing forces us to choose.

We can hide our religious belief behind political correctness. We can avoid topics that involve things such as absolute truth. We can be silent while our Facebook friends rail against everything we can hold dear. Or we can sacrifice our reputation for the sake of the Truth. We will soon likely be forced to choose.

I was raised by a Communist and a Socialist and taught to fight publicly accepted doctrine. I was taught to fight authority and challenge propaganda.

I stand before you, to the horror of my parents, putting their lessons in action.

I CHOOSE GOD.

Books to Read Before I Die

It started as a small shelf of classics. But my purchasing outpaced the speed of my reading. As the shelves grew, I named them. Books to read before I die.

Sounds morbid. I agree. So’s a bucket list. I don’t have a list of things I’d like to do before I die; nor a list of places I’d like to go.  I have wisdom I’d like to acquire.

I’m worse than a bibliophile. I’m a biblio-perfectionist. I’m re-reading earlier books I’ve read, simply to understand them in the context of newfound wisdom of later books. It’s a curse. So is trying to categorize them, but I’ll try.

In no particular order:

 Fiction

  • Gulliver’s Travels
  • Tales of Two Cities
  • Count of Monte Cristo
  • John Carter of Mars
  • 8 Cousins
  • Rose in Bloom
  • Anna Karenina
  • 1984 – George Orwell
  • Animal Farm- George Orwell
  • Dawn – Elie Wiesel
  • Of Mice and Men – John Steinbeck
  • Grapes of Wrath
  • To Kill a Mockingbird
  • The Great Gatsby – F. Scott Fitzgerald
  • The Canterbury Tales – Chaucer
  • The Death of Ivan Ilyich
  • Wuthering Heights – Emily Bronte
  • Faust – Goethe
  • Out of the Silent Planet – C.S. Lewis
  • Perelandra – C.S. Lewis
  • That Hideous Strength – C.S. Lewis
  • Pierced by a Sword – Bud McFarlane

Poetry/Plays

  • Inferno
  • Purgatorio
  • Paradiso
  • Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf
  • Much Ado About Nothing – Shakespeare
  • Our Town – Thornton Wilder
  • State of Fear – Michael Crichton
  • The Iliad/Odyssey – Homer
  • Brideshead Revisited – Evelyn Waugh
  • Walt Whitman
  • Sir Gawain and the Green Knight

 

Word

  • City of God – St. Augustine
  • Summa Theologica – St. Thomas Aquinas
  • The Sadness of Christ – Thomas More
  • Humanae Vitae – Pope Paul VI
  • The Rule of St. Benedict
  • The Splendor of Truth – Pope John Paul II
  • Light and Images – Adrienne von Speyr
  • Christian Liberty – Martin Luther
  • The Imitation of Christ – Thomas a Kempis
  • True Devotion to Mary – St. Louis de Montfort
  • I Believe in God – Paul Claudel
  • The Spirit of the Liturgy – Cardinal Ratzinger
  • The Faith of Our Fathers – James Cardinal Gibbons
  • The Rosary: Chain of Hope – Benedict Groeschel
  • The Screwtape Letters – C.S. Lewis
  • Mere Christianity – C.S. Lewis
  • The Abolition of Man – C.S. Lewis
  • The Great Divorce – C.S. Lewis
  • Filled with all the Fullness of God – Rev. Thomas McDermott
  • Where We Got the Bible – Henry Graham

Wisdom

  • How to Read a Book- Mortimer Adler
  • The Intellectual Life – Sertillanges
  • Meditations – Marcus Aurelius
  • The Republic – Cicero
  • The Servile State – Hilaire Belloc
  • Aristotle for Everybody – Mortimer Adler
  • The Morality of Everyday Life – Thomas Fleming
  • The Crisis of Civilization – Hilaire Belloc
  • The Art of Virtue – Benjamin Franklin
  • Plato’s Republic
  • Socrates Meets Sartre – Peter Kreeft
  • Philosophy 101 by Socrates – Peter Kreeft
  • The Philosophy of Tolkien – Peter Kreeft
  • A Refutation of Moral Relativism – Peter Kreeft
  • The Summa of the Summa – Peter Kreeft
  • Transformation of Christ – von Hildebrand

History

  • The Journals of Lewis and Clark
  • The Great Heresies – – Hilaire Belloc
  • The Crusades – – Hilaire Belloc
  • The Federalist Papers
  • Democracy in America – Alexis de Tocqueville

Biography/Autobiography

  • Confessions – St. Augustine
  • Story of a Soul – St. Therese
  • Thomas Jefferson: A Life – Willard Randall
  • Benjamin Franklin – Autobiography
  • Seven Storey Mountain – Thomas Merton
  • Story of a Soul – St. Therese of Lisieux

Motivation

  • SCORE for Life – Jim Fannin
  • The Way to Wealth – Benjamin Franklin
  • Woman Today – Josemaria Escriva
  • Living the Catechism – Christoph Schonborn
  • Full of Grace – Johnette Benkovich
  • A Mother’s Rule of Life – Holly Pierlot