Jewish and Muslim, Bonding Over Dieting
So went the question, part of a nutrition-themed game inspired by
“Family Feud,” during a meeting of a women’s weight-loss group here the
other night.
Charlotte Badler, 23, lunged forward to answer.
“What if you asked if you could wrap up the rest of it for tomorrow?”
she offered, and then addressed an imaginary mother-in-law: “Because I
would love to take it to lunch at work tomorrow.”
“I love it,” cheered her teammate, Adebola Yakubu-Owolewa, 29. The two leaned in for a high-five.
Ms. Badler is Jewish; Ms. Yakubu-Owolewa is Muslim. They and eight other
women — five Muslims and five Jews — meet on Tuesday evenings at a
Boston-area high school for lessons and activities around healthy eating
and self-esteem. The group is the United States introduction of Slim Peace, a nonprofit organization that brings Israeli and Palestinian women together around the universal theme of weight-loss support.
Yael Luttwak, a documentary filmmaker, founded the first group during
the second Palestinian uprising, more than a decade ago, hitting upon a
formula of using women struggling with their weight as a tool for
Israeli and Palestinian connection. She was in a Weight Watchers group
in Tel Aviv and wondered if the leaders at the time, Ariel Sharon,
Israel’s prime minister, and Yasir Arafat, the Palestinian Authority
president, might be more likely to talk peace if they tried to lose
weight together.
When Ms. Luttwak, who made a documentary film about the first Slim Peace
group, visited American Jewish communities to talk about her work, they
told her they had problems in their own communities with anti-Muslim
sentiment and anti-Israel sentiment, and it occurred to her that the
Slim Peace model could be brought here. After a talk and screening of
her film in Boston, she was approached by Emma Samuels, who said that
she would like to help start such a group here and that she had just the
partner to run it with: Aminah Herzig, a close friend and fellow
dietitian who is Muslim. They now lead the Boston group, facilitating
conversations on healthy eating and cultural differences.
The plan is to expand Slim Peace to four other American cities —
Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit and Washington — all of which have
significant Muslim and Jewish populations. Groups are open to members of
other faiths, and in Detroit, for example, the organization will be
reaching out to the city’s large Arab-American Christian community.
“We are not a peace-dialogue group and not a conflict-resolution group,”
said Ms. Luttwak, 40, who now lives in Washington. “But we are bringing
dialogue and exposure.”
Mrs. Herzig and Mrs. Samuels said they were surprised by how quickly the
women’s questions to each other revolved around their backgrounds and
communities.
“They were hungry for that,” Mrs. Samuels said. “Here we were talking
about fiber, dairy and water intake, and they wanted to talk about
religion.”
Mrs. Herzig, 30, and Mrs. Samuels, 37, confide in each other about work
and motherhood and take turns bringing dinner on Slim Peace nights. For
the recent session, Mrs. Samuels brought steamed broccoli and chickpeas
in a curry sauce atop a bed of baby kale.
The women swapped strategies for coping with cravings for food they find hardest to resist.
“I find it semihelpful to go to a substitute like an 80-calorie cookie
bar,” said Debra Wekstein, a 45-year-old lawyer who is Jewish.
Hafsa Salim’s eyes widened under her brown hijab as she asked: “Do you really just eat one of those?”
“Yes,” Ms. Wekstein said. “I buy the ones that are individually wrapped.”
Mrs. Salim, 28, a part-time human resources manager, has become close to
a Jewish member of the group, Julie Bailit, 41, who works at a health
care consulting firm. Each has invited the other to worship services,
and they check in between meetings.
Recently Mrs. Bailit was having a stressful day, and it was Mrs. Salim
she reached out to, dashing off an e-mail, to which Mrs. Salim sent an
empathic response.
Mrs. Salim’s skirt skims the ground, and she covers her hair in public.
“When people see me they think I’m superreligious, but I have my
struggles,” she said. “I feel I’m put on this pedestal, and it’s hard to
live up to that.”
Mrs. Bailit told the group: “I had never spent any time with any Muslim
people before this group. I feel like my whole life is Jewish.” She went
on: “I’m really invested in my synagogue. I send my kids to a Jewish
school. I hunger for diversity.”
Ms. Wekstein told of a Christian friend who asked if she was afraid
attending these sessions. She replied that she was not. The friend, Ms.
Wekstein recounted, went on, “But you would be more afraid if it was
meeting with their husbands.”
“Yet another stereotype of Muslim men being violent,” said Anne Myers,
23, a Harvard divinity student who converted to Islam. “I hear it so
many times, but it does not hurt any less.”
They discussed the popular assumption that Muslims and Jews are incapable of getting along.
“It’s insulting,” Ms. Myers said. “It’s not correct. I wish people didn’t think that way.”
They will continue to meet for monthly dinners at one another’s homes
and possibly for workout sessions once their initial program ends. A
recent meeting closed with each woman choosing one word to express how
they were feeling. Words like “moved,” “joy” and “grateful” filled the
quiet room.
“Sameach,” announced Ms. Yakubu-Owolewa, her face lit by a wide smile. “It means ‘happy’ in Hebrew.” muslimtoysanddolls.com is a charity site to help Muslims in need and it sells over 2,600 products for the
whole family.it makes a great homeschooling resource to. The American
Muslim Journal wrote a full page ad on my charity work.The United State
Department interviewed me and wrote an article about my charity work
with Muslims and published it on their website america.gov.Ponn Sabra
owner of americanmuslimmom.com the largest online Muslim magazine in the
world with one million unique views a year did two podcasts on my
charity work with <Muslims.shop here and get great Islamic gifts and
help Muslims in need. we sell over 750 Muslim dolls with hijab all
different,200 Muslim handmade doll clothes with hijab,250 Eid
decorations,250 Islamic decorations,Islamic and Arabic electronic
toys,games,and puzzles.500 Islamic and Arabic childrens books,and
much more.toll free business number 8663901559 please leave a message if
noone answers.info@muslimtoysanddolls.com fee aman Allah,Sister Debbie Al-Harbi. [al-Rahmaan 55:60]
No comments:
Post a Comment