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When will we get a Jewish Disney Princess?

When it comes to Jewish fairy tales, all we have are scraps

January 11, 2024 15:41
Copy of Film wish starring Ariana DeBose as Asha, (10)
Jewish? Asha in Disney's Wish

ByJosh Howie, Josh Howie

3 min read

On the way home from the cinema I realised the problem. There aren’t any popular Jewish fairy tales. Having watched Disney’s latest animation, Wish, the younger kids were excited that the lead could’ve been Jewish. Asha calls her grandad “Saba” and was well placed to be Sephardic, but was I trying too hard to bake a cake out of a few crumbs?

A few years ago there was Princess Rebecca lighting a Hanukkiah in an TV episode of Disney’s Elena of Avalor, and Sarah Silverman states her character in Wreck-It Ralph is Jewish, but again, we’re talking scraps. Not that this is Disney’s fault, but where are all the wondrous yarns of mystical adventure and bravery that feature Jewish characters? Tales to fill our children with wonder and awe from their own culture? Oh yeah, the Torah.

The Talmud and Midrash are also chock-a-block with bizarre encounters, we’ve even got our own talking donkey, so you’d think there’d be at least some some fairytale offshoots and ensuing cartoons. Well it turns out that entertainment which scares and delights kids about the dangers of the wider world is somewhat different to allegorical teaching tools for achieving spiritual enlightenment. Feel free to read Taanit 25a:6-10 at your children’s next bedtime and see how well that goes down.

Jewish? Asha in Disney's WishJewish? Asha in Disney's Wish(Disney)

Looking into it when I got home, our problem seems to be that Jews just can’t resist a teachable moment. We love ’em. Turns out there are loads of Jewish folktales, but it’s telling that with so many Jewish storytellers across time, so few have crossed over to wider culture. Essentially, there’s the Golem, and the 36 hidden righteous, and neither involves children.