Not a Fish (provincially speaking)



The meaningless chatter of your regular split personality Israeli mother trying to make sense of current insanity

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Sample chatter
Dear Amanda.
On life and death.
Smash the Jewish State.
The way it is.
Matildas.

Stories
Why was this night different?
Walid.
The Witch and Prince Charming.
The Birthday Boy.
The Brit.
Avraham's Honor.

On Israeliness
Those who pay the price.
Nice.
The Hevr'e.
Ma'amouls.
The Shtetl Collective.
Women in Israeli politics.
Different 'M's.
Being a Jew in Israel.
Sponja.
Shofar Meditation.

On Provincialism
1. Elqana
2. Tel Aviv
3. Oslo
4. Israelis
5. Americans
6. Palestinians

On Zionism
This is where it ends.
Israel is not all about abusing.
Listening.
To a Jewish Non-Zionist Friend.
Hannah Senesh.

Why blog?
A mushy explanation

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Breakfast

Liverpool Tales from the Mersey Mouth

Exploring Peoples & Cultures through Stories & Connections

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Israelity

An Unsealed Room
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Israellycool
treppenwitz
Alisa In Wonderland
WHAT-O!
SavtaDotty
Dutchblog Israel
Civax
Just Jennifer
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Neither Here Nor There
Sha!
on the face
Good News from Israel
Chayyei Sarah
Inner Balance
Gil in South America
This Normal Life
Karen Alkalay-Gut
Yishay Mor
Rishon Rishon
2HaTs (in Canada)
anglosaxy
If I forget thee...
FactsOfIsrael
My Obiter Dicta
diary of an anti-chomskyite
The Fool's Page
Hatshepsut

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Meryl Yourish
Is Full Of Crap
dejafoo
Mersey Mouth (not actually a blog)
In Context
PooterGeek
The Head Heeb
IsraelPundit
The Protocols of the Yuppies of Zion
Harry's Place
Strawberry Chips
Heretics' almanac
Silent Running
Melanie Phillips
Renegade Rebbetzin
JeW*SCHooL
AtlanticBlog
Tallrite Blog
Jewish Current Issues
Blissful Knowledge
Miriam Shaviv
Doves and Pomegranates
Segacs's World I Know
Crossing the Rubicon2
Eric the Unread
Boker Tov, Boulder!
normblog
Kesher Talk
Roger L. Simon
USS Clueless
zaneirani
Haggai's Place
Brian Ulrich
Occam's Toothbrush
Mutated Monkeys
Manolo
I Dream, Therefore I Am
growabrain
One-Sided Wonder
What's Brewing
Shark Blog
Tim Blair
Wizbang
Just World News
Peter Levine
Which surprised her
a small victory
Little Green Footballs
Israpundit
soxblog
Amitai Etzioni
Rhythms of Grace
Soul Food Cafe
SteynOnline

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imshin at bigfoot dot com

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Saturday, March 05, 2005
Man and the Desert - the fun begins!
We finally went on our first real excursion with Avner Goren yesterday, in our
Man and the Desert course, after it was cancelled last month due to rain. Bish chickened out at the last minute. I reckoned it was the early wake-up that broke him. So it was just R.T. and me. And a bunch of other people of course.

Listen, if any of you ever get an opportunity to listen to this person speak, in a language you can understand, do not hesitate. He’s wonderful. He brings the distant past to life in such a vivid, exciting way.

We visited two sites on the edge of the desert. One was a hole in the ground called Beer Tzafad on the outskirts of Beer Sheva.

Beer Tzafad

It’s an interesting archeological site dug in the 1950’s that sadly has been neglected over the years.

The other was Tel Arad, which is desert today, but is believed to have had more rain 5000 years ago and therefore was on the edge of the desert.

Tel Arad city wall

See how green it all is. Hard to believe it will all dry up soon, and if you visit there in the summer all you’ll see is yellowy-brown land. The white stuff is flowers, by the way.

Naturally, the batteries of my camera finished just after I took this and before we had actually entered the site. So I’ve googled. There are plenty of photographs, although everyone seems more interested in the Israelite fortress with its temple, than in the Canaanite city which absolutely blew me away.

For one thing this was a big place, considering how long ago it was built (3100 BC).

reconstruction of Canaanite Arad by L. Ritmeyer

A planned city with a great city wall, complete with watchtowers, some rounded and some square. The communal area includes buildings believed to have been a palace and a temple area. The roads were planned and there was even a primitive water system (Not the well you can see in some of the photos. That was from the Israelite period, 1400 years later). In Tel Arad you can see the typical Canaanite dwelling of the time, which is called the Arad house by archeologists.

reconstruction of a Canaanite house by L. Ritmeyer
(The reconstructions are by L. Ritmeyer, from the Israel Nature and Parks Authority leaflets. I hope Mr. Ritmeyer will not mind my use of his drawings here. They're too small to be copied and used elsewhere)

After Arad was abandoned and ruined between 2000 – 2400 BC probably as a result of economic changes that were going on in Egypt, Arad’s main market, it wasn’t built again as a city. The Israelites later built the fortress, as I’ve said, on one corner of it. This apparently made it an interesting dig, because the findings from that period were not buried under generations of later constructions.

Contrary to popular belief, Avner says that Jericho was not the oldest city in the world. The wall, dating back to 5000 BC, that had thought to have been a city wall turned out to have been a protective barrier to stop the water from the Jordan River from flooding the village that was there. The town came much later. Even the archeologist who had made the original claim accepted her mistake. The Palestinians continue to market Jericho as the oldest city though, for tourism reasons, and who can blame them?

Arad was one of the earliest cities though, and the site is very impressive, especially when consumed along with Avner’s explanations, and even though only a small part of it has been excavated.

I must say I’m looking forward to an evening lecture we’re having with Avner as part of the course, the week after next.
posted by Imshin 10:05
Wednesday, March 02, 2005
:-)
My first little story appeared on
Cafe Diverso today. It's called Sponja.
posted by Imshin 23:25
Tuesday, March 01, 2005
Happy Birthday SHOOSHA!
We're not certain that this is really her birthday, seeing as she was born in someone's backyard or under a bush or something. But this is the date on her innoculation card and that's good enough for us.

She seemed very happy with her special birthday tuna fish treat.I know she wasn't interested why she got it, just as she had no inclination to pose for a birthday photo, but the girls were very excited and they have been extra attentive to her all day.

posted by Imshin 17:05
Monday, February 28, 2005
Prayers needed.
posted by Imshin 20:28
Sunday, February 27, 2005
Baghdadi Tortilla
After my Spinning class every Sunday morning, I spoil myself with some posh sandwiches for my lunch from the CafeNeto coffee shop near the underground car park. Today I noticed they had nicely wrapped tortillas. I’d never had a tortilla before that I could remember, so I thought I’d try that. There were different kinds and I opted for the Baghdadi Tortilla, which looked good and was the least expensive.

Well, it was absolutely scrumptious, but I was amused that they’d called it a tortilla. This was none other than an Iraqi pita (also called a Laffa). It was a yuppie, gourmet, snobby, Ashkenazi version of an Iraqi pita, but an Iraqi pita nevertheless.

Ah, but would I have bought it if the snazzy little wrapping had had Iraqi Pita written on it, rather than the more exotic Baghdadi Tortilla? I think not. An Iraqi pita is popular, down-to-earth street food, not something for which you pay a lot of money in a snooty coffee place that doesn’t even serve an ordinary ‘Ness’ (that’s instant coffee, short for Nestle, although the cheapish
Elite powdered instant coffee in a can is still unbelievably popular here).

You should have seen the pitiful looks they gave a young man who came in asking for a ‘Ness’ at this place, while I was there last week. Poor guy, he was completely mystified. Even more so when he discovered that they didn’t serve ‘Botz’ either. (‘Botz’ - literally ‘mud’ - is Turkish coffee that hasn’t been boiled in a finjan but just mixed with boiling water, sugar added for the froth, and then allowed to settle).

(Cross-posted on Israelity)
posted by Imshin 22:48



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