Our family has established our own Jewish tradition
for Christmas, inspired by my childhood in west Jerusalem in the early sixties.
We are the outsiders, looking in.
We take a walk on Christmas Day, beginning in the late
afternoon. As the sun goes down, the Christmas lights go up. Front lawns
twinkling, colored lights on trees placed by windows, and an occasional
neighbor who’d gone Santa-wild with bobbing reindeer on the roof and
illuminated giant Mr. & Mrs. Claus waving mechanically. We come home,
chilly but jolly, to hot chocolate and the calm harbor of our Jewish home.
No, I didn’t have any of these winter lights displays
in my childhood. If fact, west Jerusalem streets, pre-1967, didn’t have a single
overt sign of Christmas. The Jewish part of the city, then cut-off from its
older parts, had neither church bells nor a whiff of a hint of any but the
Jewish Holidays.
My mother was a member of the local YMCA. We treated
it as a health club and a good place to park me, the daughter of a single
working mother, for summer camps. Its Christian character was so subtle that
you’d blink and miss it.
But one Christmas day, when I was seven, my mother
decided we’d take the bus and go to the YMCA on King David Street to see the
Christmas tree in their lobby. The YMCA had the only Christmas tree in town. She
felt I should at least know much of the world was experiencing something that
day.
There is nothing like the first time of something. My
first glimpse of the towering green pine, a real tree in the corner of an
indoor space, all adorned with twinkling colored lights, was the stuff
imprinting memories are made of.
It was so beautifully exotic.
To this day, my viewing of others’ holiday decorations
has the same intriguing and fabulous effect on me. It isn’t mine, it is of the
other, and it is lovely.
I have no wish to bring it into our own living room. I
like being an outsider looking in. I like that you wish to share it by putting
the light so it is visible to us.
Merry Christmas, friends.