White Wave ([info]ayala920) wrote in [info]weirdjews,
@ 2008-05-12 22:23:00
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I received this in an email today and thought I'd share
Bageling by    Jessica Levine Kupferberg  

It all started when my friend Doodie Miller-- who wears a kippah -- was back in college and suffering through a tedious lecture. As the professor  droned on, a previously-unknown young woman leaned over and whispered in his ear: 'This class is as boring as my Zayde's seder.'

You see, the woman knew that she did not 'look' Jewish, nor did she wear any identifying signs like a Star of David. So foregoing the awkward declaration, 'I'm Jewish,' the girl devised a more nuanced -- and frankly, cuter -- way of    heralding her heritage. This incident launched a hypothesis which would henceforth be known as the Bagel Theory.

The Bagel Theory stands for the principle that we Jews, regardless of how observant or affiliated we are, have a powerful need to connect with one another. To that end,    we find ways to 'bagel' each other -- basically, to 'out' ourselves to fellow Jews. There are two ways to bagel. The brave or simply unimaginative will tell you straight out that they are Jewish (a plain bagel). But the more creative will concoct subtler and even sublime ways to let you know that they,    too, are in the know. (These bagels are often the best; like their doughy counterparts, cultural bagels are more flavorful when there is more to chew on.)

Bageled at Boggle

I suspect that Jews have been bageling even before real bagels were invented. And while my husband and I may not have invented bageling, we do seem to have a steady diet of bagel encounters. An early bagel favorite occurred when my kippah-wearing husband and I were dating, and we spent a Saturday evening at a funky coffee house with friends. We engaged in a few boisterous rounds of Boggle, the
game where you must quickly make words out of jumbled lettered cubes.  Observing our fun, a couple of college students at a nearby table
asked if they could play too. After we rattled the tray and furiously scribbled our words, it was time to read our lists aloud. One of the students, who sported a rasta hat and goatee, proudly listed the word 'yad.' Unsuspecting, we inquired, 'What's a yad?' He said with a smirk, 'You know, that pointer you read the Torah with.'    Yes, we were bageled at Boggle.

On our honeymoon in Rome, we were standing at the top of the Spanish steps next to a middle-aged couple holding a map. The husband
piped up in an obvious voice, 'I wonder where the synagogue is.' My husband and I exchanged a knowing look at this classic Roman bagel
and proceeded to strike up a conversation with this lovely couple from Chicago    After we took them to the synagogue, they asked to join
us at the kosher pizza    shop. As we savored the cheeseless arugula and shaved beef pizza -- to this day the best pizza I have ever had -- this non-religious couple marveled at traveling kosher and declared they would do so in the future. A satisfying bagel to be sure.

 Holy Bagel

In the years since, our bagel encounters have become precious souvenirs, yiddishe knick-knacks from our family adventures in smaller Jewish communities. Like the time the little boy at the Coffee Bean in Pasadena, California, walked up to my husband, pulled out a mezuzah from around his neck, smiled and ran away. (A non-verbal bagel!)    Or our day trip to the pier in San Clemente, California when an impish girl in cornrows and bikini scampered over to say 'Good Shabbos.'

We have been bageled waiting at airline ticket counters, in elevators, at the supermarket checkout. And I myself have been known to bagel when the situation calls for it, like the time I asked the chassid seated a few rows up on an airplane if I could borrow a siddur.  On a recent trip abroad, however, we did not get bageled even once. That was in Israel where, thankfully, there is just no need.  We bagel in a quest to feel whole.

Ultimately, why do we feel this need to bagel? Does it stem from our shared patriarchs, our pedigree of discrimination and isolation, a
common love of latkes or just the human predisposition to be cliquey? I maintain it is something more. Our sages say that all Jews were originally one interconnected soul which stood in unison at Mount Sinai to receive the Torah. Now scattered across the Earth, as we encounter each other's Jewish souls, we recognize and reconnect with a piece of our divine selves. The bagel may have a hole, but we  bagel in a quest to feel whole.

So the next time a sweaty stranger at the gym says to you, 'I haven't been this thirsty since Yom Kippur,' smile. You've just been bageled -- adding another link in the Jewish circle of  connection.


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[info]debsters1101
2008-05-13 02:44 am UTC (link)
haha how cute! this happens to me all the time, and once I was um, mallawach'ed? by an Arab on the NYC subway who thought i might be Muslim since my hair was covered with a scarf. (I straightened him out and we .. uh he... decided we were cousins and should love each other... uh yeah dude whatever)

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[info]ayala920
2008-05-13 02:51 am UTC (link)
Well, I guess that's better than the alternative. Lol.

I wear two necklaces; one is a hand in the shape of the sign "I Love You." The other is a Chai, and somehow people always think they're either A) Somehow linked or B) Arabic. Why people always assume it's Arabic, I don't know, but I guessed asked a lot if I'm Muslim. I was raised Catholic and come from an Irish background, so I'm not sure where people even get that idea.

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[info]ravrhi
2008-05-13 03:59 am UTC (link)
I was at a friend's house around Pesach, and you know those yellow topped cokes with the Hebrew on top to say it is Pesidic? Yeah, she couldn't read that. But she knows I'm Israeli, so she said to me, "Hey Ravie, what does this say? I don't read Arabic." *face/palm* So I explained to her that I read HEBREW. Which is NOT Arabic. I mean really, printed, they don't even look the same. I don't get it.

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[info]jaclynemily
2008-05-13 08:12 am UTC (link)
Whoa, are you saying there's kosher-le-Pesach Coca Cola? It must be way better quality, considering that it probably uses cane sugar instead of high fructose corn syrup (I'm guessing?). Is it more expensive?

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[info]ravrhi
2008-05-13 10:23 am UTC (link)
You know. I don't drink cola, so I have no idea if it is more expensive, but my best friend stock piles the yellow capped bottles because it is only available during Pesach and she LOVES it. The kosher grocery store near my house has piles of it left, so if you have a kosher grocer near you, they may have some.

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[info]theegeekygal
2008-05-13 03:59 pm UTC (link)
My non-Jewish friends have dubbed the yellow capped coke "Jew Coke" and they all love it.. Personally however, I hate it, and get annoyed when the grocery is still carrying it long after Pesach in lieu of the regular red capped ones :(

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[info]ladysmith
2008-05-13 01:20 pm UTC (link)
It's widely available during Pesach (as in, I could get it in local grocery stories in Baltimore, and I can now find it in Orlando, when I had trouble finding Maneschewitz(sp?) macaroons at the same store). And I didn't notice it being any more expensive than regular soda.

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[info]jaclynemily
2008-05-13 01:32 pm UTC (link)
That's interesting. I haven't seen it here in Sarasota, but then again, I don't drink soda and I don't go to the grocery store that often.

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[info]jerel
2008-05-13 11:21 pm UTC (link)
My sister-in-law lives in Largo, and she managed to find some "Passover Coke." We really like it, because when we were growing up, they still used cane sugar in Coke--so it's like we're having a flashback. Only with a less leavening. ;)

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[info]evil_authoress
2008-05-13 02:54 am UTC (link)
I was bageled, as it were, by the representative for the Chabad House as I walked through upper Sproul on the UC Berkeley campus. It was not the most, er, finessed bagel ever. The rabbi chased me most of the length of the plaza and after finally getting my attention (hey, I was listening to Against Me at top volume), asking if I was Jewish and if I'd shaken my lulav and etrog yet today. (This being in the middle of Sukkot, obviously.) I wasn't wearing any sort of Jewish identifier - just the usual backpack, Cal sweatshirt, tore up jeans, etc. Go figure.

Edited at 2008-05-13 03:44 am UTC

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[info]cx650
2008-05-13 03:01 am UTC (link)
Je m'excuse, why should declaring one's belief and culture to be 'awkward'? I don't understand this attitude in the 21st century.

I am a gentile who is pleased to be accepted on this forum.

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[info]ayala920
2008-05-13 03:13 am UTC (link)
I think the point was that sometimes it's a little odd to walk up to a complete stranger and say, "I'm Jewish!" This is a more subtle, yet still effective way of doing it. It's meant to be a cute anecdote, not a lesson on political correctness.

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[info]cx650
2008-05-13 03:34 am UTC (link)
I have no discomfort in declaring myself. Why should Jewish folk feel otherwise, especially to each other? After all, your heritage is far more creditable and reliable than that espoused by 'the holy roman church'.

p.s. 'I am a UK Baptist by the way'

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[info]evil_authoress
2008-05-13 03:40 am UTC (link)
Because, believe it or not, some people don't feel comfortable to go up to strangers at random and declare their religion in such an upfront manner. This essay is highlighting ways in which Jews can connect with each other in more nuanced ways that demonstrate their faith. It's very nice that you have no discomfort, but what works for you is hardly something that will work for everyone else, Jew or no.

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[info]cx650
2008-05-13 03:49 am UTC (link)
Very possibly correct, but that does not make it 'right'. We should all feel comfortable in being and stating who we are and what we feel ourselves to be 'in the great scheme of things'.

Luvanhugs!

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[info]evil_authoress
2008-05-13 04:01 am UTC (link)
Telling people how they "should feel" isn't right, either.

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[info]cx650
2008-05-13 04:12 am UTC (link)
My apologies, I intended no inference to that effect.

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[info]drgnsyr
2008-05-13 10:19 am UTC (link)
Umm ... no. I have to disagree here. I would not feel comfortable with a complete stranger coming up to me and saying out of nowhere "You know, I'm gay." Or "You know, I'm from Virginia." Or "You know, I really like dogs." And I wouldn't be terribly comfortable with them just coming up and saying "You know, I'm Jewish." My only real response in any of these situations would be "Umm... okay. Good for you. pleasegoawayyouarecreepy" And, as such, I don't particularly want them to be comfortable doing this. It's 1) rude, 2) awkward, 3) creepy as hell. Now, to translate the same idea by opening up a conversation or commenting on a shared experience (like the examples given in this post) is not rude or creepy. It gives the conversation somewhere to flow from. It makes clear the context under which you are bringing the information up. It is not an in your face declaration of an aspect of another person they feel obliged to make you know and force you to accept, but rather an attempt to initiate contact with you and establish a connection. By bringing the information up in context you allow room for the conversation to evolve and grow as opposed to making an awkward declaration that people don't really know how to respond to.

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[info]lavendersparkle
2008-05-13 10:16 am UTC (link)
Wait, you're British and you talk to strangers?

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[info]theegeekygal
2008-05-13 04:04 pm UTC (link)
You know I think the reason there is any thought of awkwardness is only because religion, along with politics, we are taught is one of those topics you avoid, unless you are amongst good friends. (Why we are conditioned this way beats me..but I think in this society we are.)
So for it to be your opener with strangers might touch on this supposed "taboo".

I get bageled lots and I love it :)

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[info]jerel
2008-05-13 11:26 pm UTC (link)
I think we're encouraged not to talk about religion and politics because, much of the time, people get emotional and argumentative to the point where sometimes they can't see reason. It's different if you're with friends, because we would (I think) work harder to understand a friend's point of view. We know what pushes her buttons, we know how to talk to her without her flying off the handle.

Actually, Charles Schultz reminds us there are 3 things never to discuss with people: religion, politics, and the Great Pumpkin.

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[info]chaiya
2008-05-13 03:06 am UTC (link)
I often bagel because I like playing Jewish geography. It's fun to figure out that I the rabbi I've bumped into at a rest stop used to go to shul with my adoptive Jewish family. :)

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[info]sir_graeme
2008-05-13 03:07 am UTC (link)
I like this essay, thanks for posting! So true!

I once sang in a show where everyone had at least a mild dislike of the conductor, whom I assumed was Jewish. During one of his particularly unpleasant moments, one of my castmates, who was unmistakeably Jewish, complained about his attitude. I replied, "He's one of those people whom I wish wasn't Jewish..."

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[info]wilperegrine
2008-05-13 03:21 am UTC (link)
This was great to read, because I had a fun conversation with a friend last Friday night about the best way to "out" herself to a kipa-wearing co-worker.

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[info]mommyathome
2008-05-13 06:02 am UTC (link)
I live in Israel - but last time I was in Omaha I saw an orthodox couple in the airport and was DYING to bagel them. I didn't - and I regret it.

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[info]chanaleh
2008-05-13 11:38 am UTC (link)
This is so cute! I have this impulse all the time. Well, not all the time, because most of the people I see in my everyday life (now) are in expressly Jewish contexts... but especially when traveling. Normally I don't carry it out because the people *I* recognize as Jewish are the outwardly more Orthodox (in airports or whatnot) and I am a little too self-conscious to run up and say, "Hi, cute young frum family! I'm Jewish too!" But I do get bageled myself a fair bit -- it helps that I wear a Hebrew name necklace, so people who come up, squint, and read it are totally bageling me. :-)

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[info]dumpsterdiva
2008-05-13 01:06 pm UTC (link)
Beautiful essay! Thanks for sharing.

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[info]ephraim_oakes
2008-05-13 01:17 pm UTC (link)
as a rule, i only bagel the elderly, and then only if i think they'll speak yiddish to me.

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a new verb!
[info]gushgush
2008-05-13 05:01 pm UTC (link)
I love this post and its explanation of something which I immediately knew exactly what you were talking about but had never before heard described in words -- nor had I heard it described as "to bagel" someone, but it works for me.
I, being very much of the "gee, you don't look Jewish" variety, am not usually bageled by others unless they happen to see my magen david or find out my last name. When I try to bagel other Jews I often get that "what you talkin' about, Shlomo" look of incredulity from those being bageled. Often I have to "prove" myself by saying something "Jewish" just to confirm that I'm not just blowin' smoke.

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[info]stickylatex
2008-05-13 06:19 pm UTC (link)
Very cool. Thanks for sharing.

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[info]pookiegroupie
2008-05-14 11:02 pm UTC (link)
Thanks for a cool moniker for the way The Chosen People connect.

My favorite book genre is Holocaust survivor biography, and I wanted to point out how nice it is to BE ABLE to bagel without fear.

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p.s.
[info]pookiegroupie
2008-05-14 11:04 pm UTC (link)
can i share this with my mommy?

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Re: p.s.
[info]ayala920
2008-05-14 11:07 pm UTC (link)
Absolutely. As I said, it's not my work. :)

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[info]simchaorah
2008-05-23 09:41 pm UTC (link)
I get bageled every time I am in the Kosher aisle in the local markets. I've gotten all kinds of good cooking tips and even been asked questions by others of Jewish faith for my opinion about certain products or asked how I spent my holidays...I am not Jewish by birth and it's so wonderful to have this connection.

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