City residents hold variety of views on holiest day in Jewish calendar
Yaakov Lappin
Tel Aviv's bustling Dizengoff shopping center showed little signs of
the impending arrival of Yom Kippur, Judaism's holiest day. Come
Saturday, however, this sprawling complex of shops and cafes in the
heart of the city will come to a silent standstill, along with the rest
of the country. Roads will be empty of cars, crowded streets will
resemble a ghost town, and even the " non-stop city " will bow its head
to Yom Kippur.
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So how do Tel Aviv's diverse residents feel about the day? Sophie Levi,
an animal rights volunteer, says she has fasted on Yom Kippur every
year. "It's a tradition that goes back to my family - we came from
Bulgaria," she said. "My grandfather would place his hand on my head
and bless me, wishing me many years of life," she added.
Levi said that ironically, in Israel she feels she has become less
observant when it comes to Yom Kippur. "Here in the Holy Land, it's not
as intimate. In the Diaspora, we were like one family," she said.
Not everyone in Tel Aviv keeps to the Yom Kippur fast. Yogev, 24, says
he has never fasted.
"I come from a secular home, we didn't keep this," he explained. Yogev
said he has his own spiritual ideas and does not feel a need to conform
to established Judaism. "I believe in my own God," he said. "I believe
in positiveness. Donning a kippah and religious clothes doesn't make a
person more righteous," Yogev added. "I don't need a specific day to
make amends, I can do it any day I choose," he said.
'Tel Aviv has turned into Tel Babylon'
In a clothes shop situated on the upper floor of the Dizengoff mall,
Sidi, an aspiring reggae singer, distributed sample songs from his
forthcoming album. One of his songs, "Fire in my eyes," protests what
Sidi said was the out -of -control Tel Aviv culture. "There are no
words of wisdom, just curses, here comes another one who desecrates
holiness... Tel Aviv has turned into Tel Babylon, how have my children
left me? Our God asks," the song's lyrics say. "The day of judgment is
coming and no one will be liberated!"
Sidi, like his friends Liron, and Geula, will fast on Yom Kippur, they
tell Ynetnews. Asked if he planned to apologize for past grievances as
Jewish tradition calls for, Sidi said, "I have not fallen out with many
people, but I will make amends with the few people I need to."
Three women sitting at a cafe in the mall each had a different answer
to the question of what they planned to do on Yom Kippur. Orit said she
did not plan to break the commandment to fast, which she said she has
kept since the age of 12. Her friend, Aviva, said, however: "Not
everyone believes, including myself. I won't be fasting."
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