{"id":35140,"date":"2013-03-11T17:19:36","date_gmt":"2013-03-11T17:19:36","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.ou.org\/holidays\/?p=35140"},"modified":"2016-09-19T08:53:25","modified_gmt":"2016-09-19T08:53:25","slug":"sandwiches","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.ou.org\/holidays\/sandwiches\/","title":{"rendered":"Sandwiches"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>A young construction worker lies in bed, the shrill shriek of his alarm still echoing in his room.\u00a0 He groans.\u00a0 He doesn\u2019t want to get up to confront the day.\u00a0 He\u2019s comfortable under the blankets, with the early morning sun streaming in through the crack in the drapes and landing across his face.\u00a0 Another few minutes\u2026 that\u2019s all.\u00a0 When the alarm\u2019s \u201csnooze control\u201d wakes him from his renewed slumber, he reluctantly pushes aside his blankets and begins his daily routine of shaving, showering, brushing his teeth.\u00a0 Once dressed, he goes into his kitchen, ready to make his lunch.\u00a0 He opens the refrigerator and quickly decides on the various ingredients \u2013 a roll, lettuce, tomato, turkey, mustard \u2013 that he will need to make his sandwich.<\/p>\n<p>After working hard all morning, his lunch break arrives.\u00a0 He finds a seat on a stack of roof shingles and removes his lunch from its wrapping.\u00a0 He pauses and takes a moment to gaze out into the distance.\u00a0 From his vantage on the roof, he enjoys his expansive view of the town and its surrounding hills and forests.\u00a0 He considers his own labors in helping to build the building upon which he now sits, contemplating the world about him.\u00a0 Then he takes his first bite of his sandwich, and for that moment, all is right in his world.<\/p>\n<p>The sandwich, a universally cherished food item, may be plain or elaborate, bland or delicious, but it is too rarely considered more than part of a meal; too rarely appreciated for its symbolic weight as well as its calories.\u00a0 For a sandwich can be so much more than its parts; it can represent freedom and independence.<\/p>\n<p>Lunch is seldom more than a brief break from the monotony of a working day and most don\u2019t bother to consider anything more than taste before it is gone.\u00a0 One is hard-pressed to imagine a ten-year-old earnestly considering his own liberty while enjoying his peanut butter and jelly sandwich on the playground; he is more likely to gobble it down to allow more time to play with his friends.\u00a0 But the fact of the matter remains that the essence of the sandwich, the concept of placing various fillings between two pieces of bread, lies in a practice meant to reinforce a memory of slavery and hardship and, therefore, emphasize a sense of autonomy.<\/p>\n<p>It was Hillel who, to honor the gift God presented to the Jewish people in redeeming them from their bondage in Egypt, combined the <i>Pesach<\/i> offering<i>, matzah, <\/i>and<i> maror<\/i>, at the Temple to remind himself of the blessing of <i>geulah <\/i>without losing sight of the bitterness of <i>galut.\u00a0 <\/i>For Hillel, it was not enough to eat the <i>Pesach<\/i> meat and <i>matzah<\/i>, both of which signify God\u2019s miracles in releasing the Jews from slavery, and <i>maror<\/i>, which serves as a reminder of those difficult times, separately; they must be eaten together so as to make sure that the happy and sad memories are as united as the separate sandwich items.<\/p>\n<p>For how could one truly appreciate <i>geulah <\/i>without <i>galut<\/i>?\u00a0 And how could one possibly survive <i>galut <\/i>without the promise and hope of <i>geulah<\/i>?<\/p>\n<p>History, however, does not assign Hillel the honor of \u201cinventing\u201d the sandwich.\u00a0 That honor falls to John Montagu, the 4<sup>th<\/sup> Earl of Sandwich.\u00a0 History teaches that Montagu popularized the item by requesting roast beef between two slices of bread so that he would be better able to eat while continuing to play cards.\u00a0 And so, in the popular mind, the \u201csandwich\u201d was created.\u00a0 A convenience to allow John Montagu to indulge in games and gluttony simultaneously.\u00a0 According to his example, men of the upper class began to order sandwiches while gambling.\u00a0 However, over time, the sandwich became more acceptable and spread to more \u201crefined\u201d venues among aristocrats in the 18<sup>th<\/sup> and early 19<sup>th<\/sup> centuries.<\/p>\n<p>Then, with the explosion of industry in Western Europe in the 19<sup>th<\/sup> Century, as well as the advent of pre-sliced bread, the sandwich\u2019s popularity rose significantly as its simplicity and portability made it a staple in middle- and working-class households.\u00a0 Its convenience and accessibility was key to its popularity.\u00a0 Soon, lands and cultures outside of Europe, including the United States, caught the \u201csandwich bug.\u201d\u00a0 \u00a0As bread, long the \u201cstaff of life\u201d but not always so convenient and abundantly available, became a more essential part of the European and American diet, the sandwich became a quick, easy part of a meal \u2013 oftentimes the entire meal itself, or sometimes nothing more than a snack.<\/p>\n<div>\n<p>While most associated with European and American culture, the sandwich soon became a worldwide phenomenon, taking on many shapes and sizes.\u00a0 Almost every culture embraced its own version of the sandwich, using its own type of bread and filling, usually ingredients common within that culture\u2019s customs and traditions.\u00a0 For example, in Mexico and Central America where bread takes the soft, flat and pliant form of the <i>tortilla<\/i>, the sandwich is called the <i>burrito <\/i>\u2013 with the <i>tortilla<\/i> grilled or steamed and wrapped around fillings such as beans, rice, and meat.\u00a0 Or, in Southeast Asia, where flatbreads called <i>roti<\/i> or <i>chapati<\/i> accompany most meals.\u00a0 Though they are not normally used to make what we might commonly think of as a sandwich, diners often make use of <i>chapati <\/i>to get every last bite of food by wrapping them around each morsel of the dish.\u00a0 If that is not a sandwich, what is?<\/p>\n<p>Also, a <i>b\u00e1nh m\u00ec<\/i> is a Vietnamese sandwich made with a Vietnamese baguette and native Vietnamese ingredients like coriander, hot peppers, fish sauce, pickled carrots, meats, and tofu.\u00a0 Falafel, a fried ball or patty made out of chickpeas and spiced fava beans, is often served sandwiched in the \u201cpouch\u201d of pita bread and has become a principal food in the Middle East.<\/p>\n<p>The universality of sandwiches and their significance to regional cultures \u2013 and world culture \u2013 cannot be overstated.\u00a0 McDonald\u2019s, following its introduction in 1940, quickly became the most successful restaurant chain in history \u2013 all thanks to their signature sandwich, the Big Mac!<\/p>\n<p>Yes, sandwiches are universal and universally enjoyed.\u00a0 But they are not often \u201cmore than the sum of their parts.\u201d\u00a0 The Torah teaches that man does not live by bread alone.\u00a0 It is with the wisdom of this insight we return to the significance and importance of that first \u201csandwich\u201d \u2013 Hillel\u2019s.<\/p>\n<p>Perhaps not as well known or universally enjoyed as the Big Mac, with its \u201cbillions and billions\u201d served, the Hillel sandwich is much more than its parts; is much more than mere taste and calories; carries with it much more than the mere object of feeding the belly.\u00a0 The Hillel sandwich must also feed the soul.<\/p>\n<p>As with the entire Passover Seder and meal, which is not designed solely to gather with family and enjoy one another\u2019s company, have a satisfying meal and engage in conversation, the point of the Hillel sandwich is not simply to eat but to <i>think <\/i>and to <i>feel<\/i> <span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\">as well.<\/span>\u00a0 It is not to deny the pleasures of eating.\u00a0 Judaism does not deny or turn away from physical enjoyment.\u00a0 However, to reduce any action to <i>mere <\/i>physical satisfaction is to drain it of meaning and to diminish our understanding of God\u2019s role in our lives and in the world.<\/p>\n<p>To revel in the luxuries we have accumulated is our obligation, but it would be pointless and inherently disrespectful if that is all we did.\u00a0 So, when we celebrate the blessings of our freedom, it would be disrespectful if we did not also make sure to honor our ancestors\u2019 hardships in Egypt.\u00a0 Noting how the Jewish people won their independence from slavery is as important as, if not more important than, taking pleasure in that independence.\u00a0 This complexity, this intricate idea of honoring the past and living in the present, of embracing two divergent feelings to create a single whole, is realized in the simplicity of the Hillel sandwich.<\/p>\n<p>You do not need meats, cheeses, vegetables, and sauces piled a mile high.\u00a0 No, since the<i> Pesach<\/i> meat cannot be eaten, only <i>maror<\/i> is necessary to stand for the bitterness of enslavement and only <i>matzah<\/i> to both recall the austerity of slavery and also to symbolize God\u2019s miracles. The Jews did not have time to allow their bread to leaven because God decreed that the time to be saved was immediate.\u00a0 With the minimal combination of <i>maror<\/i> and <i>matzah<\/i>, you are reminded that God is always with the Jewish people.\u00a0 Full faith is in God, that He is watching in prosperous times and in miserable times as well, is necessary.\u00a0 He certainly challenges you but will always be there to strengthen you and to help you overcome those challenges.<\/p>\n<p>What is the most significant part, though, is that after God has helped you overcome, after He has redeemed you, you cannot accept that redemption as an assured state.\u00a0 Salvation must always be looked upon as a precarious condition, one that could be taken away at any moment.\u00a0 By eating <i>matzah<\/i> and <i>maror<\/i> together we are reminded of this.\u00a0 Without all of the proper ingredients, freedom could not possibly taste as sweet.\u00a0 One could not exist without the other.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Symbol or Meal?<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":296,"featured_media":41683,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[350],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-35140","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-passover"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v24.9 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>Sandwiches - Jewish Holidays<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"A sandwich can be much more than its parts; 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