JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTER OF METROPOLITA N: DETROIT EdItoR's NoTe The Smell Of Almonds To become a host and/or volunteer for the JCC Maccabi Games, please call (248) 661-7722. cc 5/1 1998 76 D. Dan & Betty Kahn Building • 6600 W. Maple. Road • West Bloomfield, MI 48322 Jimmy Prentis Morris Building • A. Alfred Taubman Campus • 15110 Ten Mile Road • Oak Park, MI 48237 am not certain, but I think it is something particular about Israel. In just one moment, it all seems to come back. When I was younger I loved to tray- : el. I went to the Soviet Union, England, Italy, France, Greece. Today, the taste of a certain mint reminds me of England, and a particular scent — a too- 1 sweet smell, heavy and pun- gent — reminds me of the subways in Moscow. But always the most defined, the most vivid, are those passing moments that bring to mind my years in Israel. I used to love to wander in Mahane Yehuda, the market in Jerusalem that terrorists recently bombed. It was a kaleidoscope of fruits and vegetables, second-hand treasures, fresh fish and dates. I had a friend who lived there, the daughter of a famous Soviet-Jew- ish dissident. She kept a turtle in her bathtub and served me jam, straight from the jar, when I came to visit. Her name was Sonia. Whenever I was in Mahane Yehuda, I stopped to drink thick, white almond juice, which I I found only there. Even when I was not thirsty I would drink it, and now I look for it wherever I go, but I cannot find it. So embedded is this taste, this sweet fragrance, that whenever I smell almonds I think of Mahane Yehuda. I made another friend named Avra- ham. He was an older man, distin- guished looking but rough, and frag- ile, too. Once I chanced to sit next to Avraham on the bus. For reasons I still do not know he asked if I would read a copy of his yet-to-be published life story and I said yes. He wanted to know whether I had been to Yad Vashem, the Holocaust memorial. -"There's a picture there, three men in a bunker at Auschwitz. Do you know it? "I do," I said. "It% famous." "That's me in the middle," he said. "I took my son to Yad Vashem and I showed him the pic- ture and he couldn't believe. it was me. And after awhile I found myself staring at the photo and I, too, couldn't believe it." And so, whenever I see that picture, I think of Israel, of Avraham. There was a certain smell, Turkish coffee with cardamom, in the Arab --- market in the Old City — I can find this now in certain shops here, and I go, and I linger. I am there to drink in the smell. Its the same with the taste of sachlav, an orchid-flavored dessert, soft as a cloud on the tongue. I still have a few tapes that I used to listen to — Shalom Hanoch, my favorite Israeli rock star back then, when I was in my 20s. I have played one tape so many times that it skips in spots. All I have to do is play a song or two and it all comes back. But to see Israel I have to close my eyes, and then I imagine the cool, quiet forest, and the little stationery and tourist and coffee shops on Ben Yehuda Street in Jerusalem, and the warm sea in Tel Aviv, where the smell of salt preserves memories for eternity. I miss Israel each day. Always, I think, you leave with an ache, a pal- pable sense of loss, a kind of sadness — vivid, yet indescribable — that hurts your heart. ❑ I/ Elizabeth Applebaum AppleTree Editor (7'