Showing posts with label Rome. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rome. Show all posts

Sunday, January 31, 2010

When in Rome, eat like the Jews


Haartz.com
By Leah Koenig, The Forward

Inside the kosher bakery, a corner storefront no larger than a college dorm room, a jumble of customers jostles for service. It's Friday afternoon, so the shop's front window is stacked with loaves of fresh challah. Two display cases hold an array of tantalizing sweets: molten-centered macaroons, cocoa biscotti, and wedges of sweet cheese and sour cherry tart, which three shopkeepers slip into bags and release into the eager sea of outstretched hands.

The bakery's swirl of sugar and good-natured chaos could easily be found in the depths of Brooklyn or down a Jerusalem side street. But this bakery, the 200-year-old Pasticceria il Boccione, is on Via Del Portico d'Ottavia - the main drag in Rome's Jewish ghetto neighborhood. And it is not alone.

Two doors down, a casual eatery called BeteAvon presses panini with mozzarella and zucchini concia, an ancient Roman Jewish preparation that marinates vegetables to the edge of disintegration in garlic, olive oil and herbs. Across the piazza, Kosher Bistrot Caffe doubles as a
spot for sipping espresso, as well as a kosher grocery store stocked with vinegar and Parmigiano-Reggiano. And down the block, La Taverna del Ghetto serves deep-fried zucchini blossoms and sweetbreads, salt cod simmered in tomato sauce and Rome's most famous Jewish side dish: carciofi alla giudia, salt-kissed fried artichokes.Every day except for Saturday, when most of the shops close for Shabbat, Via Del Portico d?Ottavia is a bustling main street. But the vibrancy found along the stone streets was not always there.

Rome's Jewish community - Europe's oldest - dates to the second century B.C.E. By the early 16th century, the city's ancient Jews, called Italkim, were joined by Sephardim fleeing the Inquisition in Italy's Spain-ruled south. They unfortunately did not find the solace they sought; shortly after their arrival, Pope Paul IV established a cramped, walled-in ghetto where, for the next 315 years, all Jews were forced to live.

In comparison, the latter half of the 20th century was kind to Rome's Jews. But as recently as 30 years ago, the community was on the verge of fading away. The ghetto had long since been torn down, and the Tempio Maggiore (Great Synagogue), built in 1901, stood as a majestic marker of the city's Jewish presence.

Outside of the ghetto's confinement, Jewish residents dispersed across the city and assimilated heavily into secular Roman life.

"The younger generation was all getting intermarried and participation in Jewish life dwindled," said Roy Doliner, who co-founded the cultural association, Rome for Jews. A handful of
restaurants in the ghetto continued to serve the amalgam of Italkim and Sephardic dishes that define Rome's traditional Jewish cuisine. But even these restaurants are mostly owned by non-Jews and are geared toward tourists, not the community.

Unlike many other vanishing European Jewish populations, however, Rome has experienced a significant upswing during the last few decades. One could argue that today, Rome's Jewish population is as vibrant as it has been in centuries - if not more so. And according to Doliner, the change can largely be attributed to two "Ls:" Lubavitch and Libyans.

The arrival of Lubavitch Jews can be controversial for a city not accustomed to Ashkenazi culture or interested in higher standards of religiosity. But while not all of Rome's Jews care for their Lubavitch neighbors, their influence has been largely positive. In addition to providing such services to the area as mashgichim (kosher supervisors), Lubavitch presence has put a healthy pressure on Roman Jews to reclaim and revitalize their own customs. And in the early 1970s, in the aftermath of Israel's Six-Day War, several thousand Libyan Jews emigrated to Rome. In addition to boosting the overall Jewish population (now close to 16,000), the Libyans' reverence for tradition has helped spark a larger revival of Jewish activity.

The majority of Rome's Jews remain secular, but some are beginning to adopt observances that indicate a growing interest in their heritage - celebrating holidays, wearing yarmulkes, and sending their children to the Jewish day school, which accommodates nearly 800 students in a converted building in the heart of the ghetto.

While only 400 Jews still live in the ghetto neighborhood, it remains a vital community hub.

Micaela Pavoncello, a Roman Jew who founded the company Jewish Roma Walking Tours, describes the ghetto as an "open-air JCC," where elders chat and students congregate at lunch. Similarly, Doliner said, "If there is an engagement or a family illness, the news cycles through the bakery," referring to Pasticceria il Boccione.

Above all, the return of traditional food - arguably the lifeblood of all Italian culture - to the ghetto stands as an important indication of community health. In the last five years, a series of new restaurants has opened, like the Roman-Libyan fusion restaurant, Ba"Ghetto, where diners can order their grilled lamb with either pasta or couscous, and end their meal the Libyan way: with a glass of sweetened mint tea steeped with peanuts. The dairy restaurant Nonna Betta serves the ancient flan-like Roman dessert cassola. And nearby, Yotvata's wine list includes a handful of new kosher wines produced in Italy.

Jewish families opened most of these restaurants, and virtually all of them are kosher - catering to tourists as well as signaling the growing interest in kashrut amongst Rome's Jews.

Food scholar Claudia Roden once wrote: "Every cuisine tells a story... Jewish cooking tells the history of a people and its vanished worlds." While Roden's point is well taken, it does not represent the situation in Rome. The classic Jewish dishes found in the ghetto, whether Italkim, Sephardic or Libyan, tell the story of a community that is ever in flux but decidedly strong.

As Pavoncello said, "Despite the hardships, we are not wandering Jews - we are proud to call Rome our home."

It is this steadfastness, coupled with a growing pride in tradition, that has served the Jews of Rome well throughout its storied past, and, with any luck, for centuries to come.

Sunday, January 17, 2010

Pope Benedict criticised for Holocaust silence

ABC NEWS
Emily Bourke reported this story
on Monday, January 18, 2010 08:18:00


ELEANOR HALL: Overnight in Rome, an Italian Jewish leader confronted the Pope and told him that the Vatican should have spoken out more forcefully during the Holocaust.

But Pope Benedict defended the Vatican's wartime actions saying the Holy See worked quietly to save Jews from extermination by the Nazis.

Emily Bourke reports.

EMILY BOURKE: Pope Benedict's landmark visit to Rome's main Synagogue provided another chance heal the wounds caused by the wartime actions of the Vatican.

Vatican Spokesman, Reverend Federico Lombardi.

FEDERICO LOMBARDI: We are very happy of this invitation by the Jewish community of Rome and in this occasion the Pope will demonstrate the continuity with the past visit of John Paul II to the synagogue 24 years ago.

And this is a confirmation of an important way of harmony, of dialogue, for the peace and for the harmony in our society.

EMILY BOURKE: While one Jewish community leader praised Catholics who sheltered Jews from the Nazis, he said that the "silence" of Pope Pius "still hurts as a failed act".

Pope Benedict defended the Vatican's actions in the face of the Holocaust, saying it used quiet diplomacy to save lives. He also apologized for Christian responsibility for anti-Semitism.

POPE BENEDICT XVI (translated): Despite the problems and the difficulties between the believers of these two faiths there is a climate of great respect and dialogue, a testimony to how the relationship has grown and to the common commitment to value that unites us.

EMILY BOURKE: While 15 Holocaust survivors attended the ceremony, others boycotted it, saying they were angry over the steps taken to advance Pope Pius's beatification and possible sainthood.

The Jewish community remains deeply split since Pope Benedict signed a decree last month praising the wartime pontiff for his heroic virtues.

ELEANOR HALL: Emily Bourke reporting.

Thursday, December 24, 2009

Vatican Defends Status of WWII Pope


By RACHEL DONADIO
Published: December 23, 2009

ROME — In an effort to calm growing tensions with Jewish groups, the Vatican said Wednesday that Pope Benedict XVI’s decision moving the wartime pope Pius XII closer to sainthood was not a “hostile act” against those who believe Pius did not do enough to stop the Holocaust.

The Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi, issued a statement saying that the beatification process evaluated the “Christian life” of Pius, who reigned from 1939 to 1958, and not “the historical impact of all his operative decisions.”

Moving Pius toward sainthood “is in no way to be read as a hostile act towards the Jewish people, and it is to be hoped that it will not be considered as an obstacle on the path of dialogue between Judaism and the Catholic Church,” Father Lombardi wrote.

Benedict confirmed the “heroic virtues” of Pius — along with those of John Paul II — on Saturday, opening the door to beatification once a miracle is attributed to each. A second miracle would be required for sainthood.

The move created anger among many Jewish groups, which have argued that Pius did not speak out vocally enough against the Nazis or intervene to save Jews during World War II, and that the Vatican helped many former Nazis escape to South America after World War II.

The decision by Benedict — a German who was an unwilling member of the Hitler Youth — to move Pius closer to sainthood was the latest in a series of controversies. It came less than a year after he revoked the excommunication of a schismatic bishop who had denied the scope of the Holocaust, an act that caused the pope and the Vatican to issue a series of extensive clarifications. Benedict also upset many Jews when he did not directly mention the Nazis or Germany during a visit to the Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial in Israel in May, as John Paul II had done, although Benedict has denounced the Holocaust on many other occasions.

Even as the Vatican sought to separate the religious aspects of the beatification process from Pius’s historical record, observers said that Benedict’s decision to move Pius toward sainthood sent a strong message, effectively endorsing his actions.

Jewish groups had asked Benedict to delay Pius’s beatification process until the Vatican opened the archives from his papacy to scholarly scrutiny. Father Lombardi said that the Vatican “understood” the request to open the archives, and that the copious number of documents from Pius’s papacy were expected to take several more years to process.

Defenders of Pius, who was the Vatican secretary of state in the 1930s, say that his reticence was sound diplomacy, and that speaking out more directly against the Nazis would have caused more deaths in Rome and beyond. Benedict has said that Pius worked “secretly and silently” to save Jews.

In his statement, Father Lombardi said that confirming Pius’s “heroic virtues” was not intended “to limit discussion concerning the concrete choices made by Pius XII in the situation in which he lived.”

He added that the Vatican hoped the pope’s expected visit to the Rome synagogue next month would reaffirm ties between Judaism and the Roman Catholic Church. After days of tension, Roman Jewish leaders said that the visit was still expected to take place.

The legacy of Pius is particularly sensitive for the Jewish community in Rome. More than 1,000 of its members were rounded up in 1943 and deported to Auschwitz. Documents in the Vatican archives indicate that Pius knew of the deportation and did not act to stop it.

In a statement, the chief rabbi of Rome, Riccardo Di Segni, said he welcomed the Vatican’s statement. “Certainly the historical evaluation remains open and controversial,” Rabbi Di Segni said. “But the Vatican’s understanding of requests to open all paths to research is significant.”