By Gail F. Nalven
Yeruham (Hebrew: יְרוּחָם, יְרוֹחַם, Yeroham) is a town (local council) in the Southern District of Israel, in the Negev desert. It covers 38,584 dunams (~38.6 km²) and had a population of 9,400 in 2006. It is named after the Biblical Jeroham. Modern Yeruham was founded on January 9, 1951 as Kfar Yeruham (Hebrew: כְּפַר יְרֻחָם). It was one of Israel's first development towns, created to settle frontier areas in the early days of the state. It was located near the Large Makhtesh, an area thought at the time to be rich with natural resources.
Yeruham (Hebrew: יְרוּחָם, יְרוֹחַם, Yeroham) is a town (local council) in the Southern District of Israel, in the Negev desert. It covers 38,584 dunams (~38.6 km²) and had a population of 9,400 in 2006. It is named after the Biblical Jeroham. Modern Yeruham was founded on January 9, 1951 as Kfar Yeruham (Hebrew: כְּפַר יְרֻחָם). It was one of Israel's first development towns, created to settle frontier areas in the early days of the state. It was located near the Large Makhtesh, an area thought at the time to be rich with natural resources.
For
many years, Yeruham was economically depressed and suffered from image
problems, but major efforts to improve the quality of life are under
way.
--- Wikipedia
Yerucham is a story that goes much deeper than its Wikipedia description.
It was our second day in Israel with the Leadership Institute. We arrived after sundown and spent the first night at Kibbutz Mashabei Sadeh. http://www.m-sadeh.org.il/ewelcome.htm under and almost full moon.
We then met Rachel, from a religious school for girls. This school is providing high level education for 130 students from different communities. The curriculum includes religious studies and modern studies. Students go from Talmud to the sciences, physics, and biology. They use the shared laboratories for the high schools in town and engage in art, drama and the study of Israel. There is even family
What we didn't know was that the highlight of our day was still to come. We were invited into homes in the community for lunch. Atid Bamidbar established this program as a way for these women to earn some extra cash and to share their stories. One group went to the home of Mazel and Jojo. http://leadershipinstitutetheblog.blogspot.com/2012/02/culinary-queens-of-yerucham-put-sallah.html. My group went to the home of Leah who insisted that we eat before we talk. After a wonderful meal of many courses, she told us of herTunisian father and her Libyan mother. They met in a camp for new olim -- immigrants to Israel and helped to establish a moshav and lived on Kibbutz Tirat Ziv, a religiously kibbutz. Leah spoke lovingly of her parents who were nurturing and encouraged her and her siblings to grow. She was one of a family of 9 sisters and 4 brothers, all of whom became "academics." Leah said that she was a teacher.
She told us of her husband was mental illness. And knowing that she had to leave the marriage, she called her husband's brother, a doctor in America. Afterwards, we discussed how we were all speculating on what she would ask for. I thought she would asked her brother-in-law to take him to America. Others thought she would ask for money for a divorce. What Leah did ask for was money to go to therapy, because she knew that with therapy, she could gain the strength to leave her husband and move on with her life. Her son and then daughter were there to hear the story and even a grandchild appeared. She has 4 children.
At the conclusion, Leah asked for questions. I asked for recipes. And she was thrilled to share.
Red Cabbage Salad
Sauce
Balsamic Vinegar, Soy Sauce, Olive Oil, Sugar
Make the sauce two days in advance
Cut cabbage and cover with sugar in fridge for two hours.
Rinse off the sugar, and mix with the sauce. Add sesame seeds and nuts.
"Whatever you have in the house."
Tirsme (I think this is what it was called.)
This was a tasty orange dip.
Cook and mash (I think you could process)
1 pumpkin -- I think she meant butternut squash
white potatoes, 1 kilo
Mix with 2 sweet peppers (red, orange, yellow), a little hot pepper, kimmel, garlic, and oil.
Add lemon to taste
Orange Peel
Rachel added the most wonderful orange peel to her cookies. She put the orange peel in the over to dry. When it was completely dry, she ground it into a powder. She sent me off with a wonderful sample of the powder.
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