Monday, July 28, 2014

Keep Calm and Eat Falafel

Before the NY Stands with Israel Rally: 
As a young woman in NYC I often get looks when I walk down the street on any given day. I get comments on beauty and quite a few blessings, or on a great day a combo; "God bless you gorgeous". How I feel about that is a separate post. But today, I wondered if the comments I would receive might differ because of the shirt I'm wearing. It says, "Keep Calm and Eat Falafel. Consuming Falafels since 1948." The irony is I don't mind Falafels but I do dislike chummus and tahini. Anyways, its as close to "I support Israel" on t-shirt I have, so I wore it for the rally supporting Israel this afternoon.

Regardless of what happens as I wear it and walk around the city, I cannot believe how nervous I am.

As a Jewish modern woman I don't have any physical markings of a "Jew". I wear shorts and tank tops so a long skirt and long sleeves don't make me stand out (that's not why I wear shorts it's just my preference. Again, a different blog post which you can read here) I don't have to wear a kippa like men do which differentiate them from their gentile brothers. And I don't think I look particularly "Jewish", whatever that means. No "Jew nose"? Check. So wearing a shirt that at all directly lets the outside world know that I AM Jewish is a fairly new experience, especially with such a tense situation going on overseas. People have opinions but would I feel or hear any of them today? I hope I don't. That way I can tell myself how silly I'm being for being afraid or at all apprehensive about wearing this shirt."

This is the said shirt worn on Yom Haatzmaut 2013


After the Rally:... I am so proud about what I am going to share, and what I experienced, it shocks me. While there were some second glances, of which I didn't experience any outwardly anti Semitic (maybe they were thinking it) what I did get was amazing. Once I was at the rally I not only got second glances but smiles. Then I got questions about where I got this shirt. I got laughs and the most amazing was asked by random strangers to take a picture of the shirt (more than once). I was hesitant and nervous this morning, now I was proud. Not only is it a pro Israel shirt, but a humorous one which made me happy and proud to wear it. And the shirt I brought as a back up to change in to? It stayed right there, in my bag.






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