196 Holiday Classic Christmas in Palestine with Mai Kakish
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The Handwritten Heritage Cookbook
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Welcome back to the Christmas Around the World Series on The Storied Recipe Podcast!
This series began as a crowd-sourced post titled Christmas Desserts Around the World. As the Storied Recipe community shared their cherished Christmas recipes and the memories surrounding them, I really wanted to hear MORE. So I decided to expand on a few of these with a little mini series about Christmas traditions all around the world. You can find the entire series here.
Welcome Mai!
There wasn’t much question about which episode I would release first – of course, we had to begin in the Holy Land of Palestine, the very land where the birth of Jesus took place. Today I’m grateful to welcome Mai to the podcast (again!) to share her memories celebrating the Christmas tree lighting at the sacred Church of the Nativity in Manger Square in Bethlehem.
She also talks Chrstmas celebrations in the rest of Palestine, including in Ramallah, where the Muslim-majority government hosts annual Christmas parade, full of drums and music, as a way to include Christians and promote Palestinian unity.
Of course, we’ll hear more about Mai’s Teta (grandmother) and the other women and recipes that created the amazing Arabic feasts for their Christmas tables.
Finally, Mai shares how Palestine is choosing to celebrate the peace and joy of Christmas in the midst of decades of checkpoints, arrests, death, and struggle amid the Israeli military occupation.
I am just delighted to share the delightful Mai and her Christmas memories with you today – welcome to the podcast, Mai, and thank you all for being here!
Highlights
- The Christmas tree lighting in Bethlehem
- The unity between Christians and Muslims in Ramallah
- Weather at Christmastime in Palestine
- Mai’s memories visiting The Church of the Nativity for the Christmas Tree lighting
- Christmas music in Palestine
- Christmas markets in Palestine
- How Christmas in Palestine brings hope and resistance in the face of occupation
- Special treats available at Christmastime in Palestine
- Her Aunt Ida’s goodie bag
- Christmas presents in Palestine (and Father Christmas)
- Wreath decorating parties at the church
- “Christmas presents weren’t a thing”
- ALL the Palestinian Christmas foods!
- The importance of visiting in Palestinian Culture
- Two Christmases: December 25th and January 6th
- Celebrating epiphany at the Jordan River
- Cooking with "Nafas"
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Mai's Storied Recipe: Ghraybeh Cookies
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Related Episodes
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Related: Listen to Mai's Original Episode, Honoring the Women of Palestine
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Partial Transcript - 15 of 60 Minutes
Becky
Hey Mai, how are you?
Mai
Hey hey hey how are you?
Becky
I'm good. I'm so happy to be talking with you again.
Mai
Hey listen, we could do this whenever you want. It's always a pleasure. Yeah, I'm really excited about it. It's my favorite time in Palestine and actually thinking about it when you sent me the questions yesterday made me want to go. I haven't been home during Christmas time for years and years and it really made me long even further to kind of like be there during the holiday season.
Becky
I mean 'cause yeah, yeah you go. During the summer?
Mai
You know what? Because I don't have enough vacation days with my children to go in the wintertime. I mean I'm paying all this money I'm not going to go for 10 days or week, it's it's barely enough. To get over the jet lag and drive my mother nuts. It's almost like now I'm starting to answer your questions. Here we go. The story. The Christmas scene had changed through times and I you know when I lived in Palestine when I was born and raised there those first you know, 18 years of my life, or actually maybe 21 years of my life, it's changed over the years and it kind of brings me in a way a little more joy and and that makes me want to go back and be there.
Becky
OK, so if you if you did, like let's just say in two months it's October 24th when we're doing this, so let's say you landed on Christmas Eve in Palestine in two months.
Mai
Let's go.
Becky
What would you... let's imagine it. Walk me through it.
Mai
It yes, OK if I would go to Palestine in two months and land.... Actually the preparations for Christmas start long before the weekend, the weekend before Christmas. For Christmas Eve, so there would be lots of preparation, starting with the tree lighting in Manger Square in Bethlehem. So that's a huge event that actually marks all the holidays and it's assigned to light up all the trees across the big cities in Palestine. Honestly, that brings me pure pure joy to see this gigantic tree in the middle of the square - we call it [phrase in Arabic] Church of the Nativity, right into Manger Square. They light the wall at the tree and people from all over - whoever can obviously, based on permissions and based who lives where and checkpoints and curfews and all that stuff. But it's a filled town at that moment and there's choirs of Palestinian people usually from all over Palestine. There are choirs, international choirs that come and perform at Manger Square, so it's a really quite an event. Uhm, yes, that that marks the beginning of Christmas season, which actually is the Advent. So it's the beginning of Advent season in Palestine.
Becky
So does that happen? Does that happen 4 weeks before? Like when does? When does Advent begin?
Mai
I don't. I don't know exactly when the church lights up because that's the Catholic Church that lights up the candle.
Becky
Ah yeah.
Mai
There's two Christmases in Palestine, maybe, maybe 3 even between all the denominations, but I grew up in the Anglican church so the Protestant, uh, the Protestant, the way I grew up is that we would c