To Life! No Apples & Honey from page 21 ing of a portion of the crop with them. Beta Israel, being a holy people, would not eat any food they picked (no matter what time of the year) until it was blessed. Simchat Torah, which is cele- brated in the rest of the Jewish world, is unknown to the Beta Israel. This is because the holiday was created well after the writing of the Torah, and Beta Israel lacked knowledge of Oral Law. Tours of Shalom Street's "With Stone Shoes: An Ethiopian Jewish Journey" rounded out a fun-filled family day of learning, which was sponsored by Federation's Alliance for Jewish Education, Jewish Experiences for Family, Shalom Street, the Jewish Community Center of Metropolitan Detroit and the Detroit Jewish News. the Alliance and JEFF-sponsored Apples & Honey. Clockwise: Jordyn Cranis, 6, of West Bloomfield builds an edible sukkah. Tal Siegman and his daughter, Maya Siegman, 3, of Oak Park make figurines out of clay in the Ethiopian Village. - Aidin Horwitz, 7, of Windsor and Yoni Weiss, 7, of Southfield build an Ethiopian- style drum. Molly Horwitz, 4, of Windsor eats injera, a spongy Ethiopian flatbread INFORMATION ON THE HIGH HOLIDAYS Berhan Saraka — "The Rising Light" — falls on the first day of the seventh month. Despite the fact that it is described in the Torah as an Yom Teruah, a "Day of the Awakening Sound," and Jews throughout the world blow the shofar, Beta Israel interpret the verse differently. The Jews of Ethiopia do not blow the shofar. They say that they have forgotten the way to sound it and how to prepare it from a ram's horn. Instead, they beat drums and cymbals to make a loud noise. A special tradition is to dip lamb into honey to taste the sweetness of the season. This was done for two reasons: to remember the sacri- fices listed in the Torah and because apples did not grow in Ethiopia. 22 September 29 2005 4311