by brian blum
jerusalem post service
Hosting a dinner party is an art. It takes careful planning and balancing. You’ve got to have the right number of men versus women, singles versus families, little kids, big kids, shy adults, dominant Type As and not too many teenagers obsessed with “Battlestar Galactica”.
Now, try hosting a dinner party every single week.
Well, that’s what it’s like for us when it comes to the traditional Jewish custom of inviting guests for Shabbat and holidays.
Fortunately, there are 52 weeks in a year and two main meals per Shabbat. So if every once in a while the guests don’t gel, it’s not the end of the world.
The holidays are different. They only come around once a year. And Rosh Hashanah night is one of the most important holidays of them all — guest-wise at least.
In our house, we have a tradition of inviting several singles we are close with for Rosh Hashanah evening each year. The group knows each other and everyone gets along.
Last year, however, for some reason the guest list grew. In addition to our regulars, we invited four others who needed a place to eat. It sounded great on paper.
But the mix didn’t work.
I can’t put my finger on what went wrong. Maybe because people didn’t know each other. Maybe because it was a change in our “tradition.” But it felt awkward. There were too many moments of silence.
I hate silence.
Now, there is a tradition on Rosh Hashanah of bringing out several symbolic foods and saying a blessing and short wish over each for the new year. My wife, Jody, thought it would be fun to try this and had prepared everything in advance.
I figured anything that might break the ice could help.
Jody started with the traditional apple in the honey. We said the blessing for fruit, then added, “May God renew us for a good and sweet new year.” The guests smiled politely, a couple of quiet comments were even made.
But still, there it was, that sticky but not sweet silence. Even our 16-year-old son, Amir, who’s usually quite garrulous, seemed to have lost his voice.
Next up were the pomegranates. I’ve always found pomegranates to be the oddest fruit. It takes forever to carve out the good stuff, and then what do you get? These hard tiny seeds that never fail to fall on your nice white shirt, resulting in a permanent stain on your record.
But I was willing to play along. I carefully raised a pomegranate and added the saying, “May our merits increase as the seeds of a pomegranate.” There were a few smiles, but still no measurable increase in conversation.
What the heck was wrong with this group? We continued, downing a couple of purple beets (ditto on the aforementioned stain danger), several honey-glazed carrots, a crunchy bunch of celery (where’s my peanut butter?) and a plate of truly luscious fresh dates.
When we got to the green onions, Jody described a Moroccan tradition where participants gather up the stems “like you’re gathering up all your troubles” and then toss them over your shoulders “to ward off the evil eye.” We raised our onions and prepared to fling.
As I looked down the table, Amir made a mischievous gesture, as if instead of flicking the onion toward the wall behind him, he was aiming forward, straight at me. I returned his gaze and sent a stern nonverbal rejoinder that said in no uncertain terms, “You wouldn’t dare.” Boy, was he shocked, then, when I let my onion loose and it landed dead center on his face! Without missing a beat, he flung a stalk back at me.
The guests looked at this father and son skirmish as if madness had taken root. And then everyone joined in.
For the next five minutes, there were onions flying back and forth.
Plop, there went one into a water glass.
Splat, another on the floor. Fourteen-year-old Merav bent over to pick it up ... whoops, now it’s in your hair, kiddo.
Nine-year-old Aviv tossed one straight up into the revolving fan that’s positioned directly above our table, resulting in a thunderstorm of finely chopped chives (OK, I made that one up, but it would have been fun if it happened).
Finally, the flinging and pelting petered out and the crowd settled down. But the ice had definitely been broken. The rest of the evening flowed; from that point on it was like a different holiday altogether.
When the chicken soup came out, though, I saw Amir eyeing the matzah balls as a naughty smirk spread slowly across his face. But I’ll save that story for next year.
Brian Blum writes the blog ThisNormalLife.com and runs the online publishing service Bloggerce.com.
CopyrightJ, the Jewish news weekly of Northern California