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Judaism

Did Adam have a taste for mince pies?

An ancient rabbinic text suggests an intriguing link between Chanucah and other midwinter festivities.

December 18, 2008 11:34
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By

Rabbi Ariel Abel,

Rabbi Ariel Abel

4 min read

As a child, I always wondered why mince pies were on sale in kosher supervised bakeries in my native Manchester. Was this food not themed on a strange custom — the celebration of festivals of non-Jewish origin? Why would this be “kosher” on a Jewish table?

These were the days before my rabbinic ministry. On Merseyside, I was to discover fruit loaf and yes, kosher hot cross buns at the Penny Lane Bakery.

Aside from the question of whether eating foods at a particular time of the year may or may not constitute chukat akum, foreign custom forbidden to Jews, a more fundamental issue lies at the heart of December and January: is December 25 a specifically idolatrous date in the calendar?

Perhaps the answer lies in a little known holiday described in a baraita, an early talmudic text, reported in the talmudic tractate called Avodah Zarah (Laws concerning Idolatry, 8a), which revolutionised my understanding.

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