D ining / Room
ARYEH COHEN
1bought after we moved into our house ten
years ago was a beautiful cherrywood din-The first real furniture my partner and I
ing room table. The table came with dreams of
Shabbat meals, sedarim, family gatherings,
communal festivities, classes to be taught, and
Torah to be studied. Most of this has come to
pass around that table — the meals, conversations, Torah study, and family gatherings.
Though much has happened to rock our world,
our community, and our lives over these past
ten years, on most Friday evenings, I still believe
that I hear the good angel praying that it should
be thus next week and the angel’s companion
reluctantly saying amen.
“All who are hungry come and eat” — but if they
knocked on the door would we actually let them in?
2Walpole State Prison: I visit K on Sundays —
that is, when he’s not confined to solitary.
When the weather is nice we sit at a rough
wood picnic table in a grassy visiting area surrounded by families — children in their Sunday-going-to-prison clothes, wives and girlfriends
dressed in the modest fashion regulated by the
prison. In the field is a little carousel for the children; they push it around and then jump onto it
and scream in joyous fright. Sometimes K and I
eat; sometimes we talk. Sometimes he tells me
about his fellow prisoners: rape, murder, armed
robbery.
3Center City, Philadelphia: Steam rising from
the grates adds to pedestrian misery in the
summer; it also provides a bit of warmth that
blunts the edge of the bitter winter nights for
those for whom the streets are home and the
grates are bed. Every night on Walnut Street I
see a man sitting on a milk crate. Tonight I invite him to dine with me in McDonald’s.
Hesitant, he asks that I get him something and
bring it back to him, outside. I insist that we
both go indoors. He orders some kind of burger
and fries; I order coffee, the universally kosher
beverage. All the workers seem to know him
from his usual perch outside the door. They
June 2009/Sivan 5769
look at him with surprise as we sit in the booth.
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He grows progressively more and more un-
www.shma.com comfortable. Finally, he tells me he’d rather not
Aryeh Cohen, a Sh’ma Advisory
Board member, lives in Los
Angeles with his partner
Andrea and their children
Shachar and Oryah. He
teaches Talmud at the Ziegler
School of Rabbinic Studies,
davens at the Shtibl Minyan,
and writes about Talmud,
justice, Shabbat, and gender,
among other topics. He is
currently writing a book, Justice
in the City: Thinking the Just
City out of the Sources of
Rabbinic Literature.
stay here anymore. We leave and finish dining
on the street.
4“All who are hungry come and eat. All who
need to partake of the Paschal sacrifice come
and join with us,” so declaim 20 people around
a beautifully set table. The door is locked. “All
who are hungry come and eat” — but if they
knocked on the door would we actually let them
in? Would we go out and find “them” and bring
“them” home?
5The halakhic definition of “common space”
is “people who eat at the same table.” This
may be an abstract or potential “eat” symbolized
by an unopened box of matzah. The matzah
constitutes an eruv; it is a manufacturing of common space, a yachad, which consists of my
home and yours, and every other Jew’s home.
What of those Jews who would not eat at
my table? What of those Jews at whose table I
do not eat? What of those Jews whose culinary
customs are far removed from the Eastern
European palate of my ancestry or the California
palate of my contemporary life? Are they part of
my yachad?
6The first time my parents came to my home
and told me they could not eat our cooking
I had to make a choice.
The first time we went to my in-laws’ home
and I told them I could not eat their cooking
they had to make a choice.
I could have become offended and angry; I
could have shattered the deep and loving relationship we have.
My in-laws could have been offended and
angry; they could have nipped in the bud our
relationship before it had a chance to blossom.
Fortunately, I chose to treat my parents’ decision as though it came from a different religious tradition, one that had no claim on me.
Fortunately, my in-laws made accommodations, now affectionately dubbed the “kosher box,”
which includes kosher pots, plates, and cutlery,
and they let us kasher a part of their stove.
Many of the mezuzot appearing on
these “doors” are available through
Kolbo Fine Judaica www.kolbo.com.