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Perhaps it’s healthy to have no inhibitions - but you need to have the Israeli mindset

My life has been punctuated with how I have reacted to my relatives' uninhibited comments

April 5, 2022 11:37
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A large assortment of luggage on white background.
5 min read

Israel’s recent decision to allow UK tourists in leaves me with mixed feelings.  On the one hand I would love to go there on holiday again, feel the warmth of the sun on my body, swim in the Med, soak in the atmosphere of the bustling markets and streets and see my friends and relatives.  On the other hand, unless I get myself some kind of ultra-tight, corset-like, vice-gripping, girdle-esque burkini, then the prospect of my relatives seeing me absolutely horrifies me. 

My mother emigrated to the UK from Israel, leaving her vast family behind, when she was but a teenage bride. This meant that every year or two she took me and my siblings on extended summer holidays to see the family.

Arriving at the old Ben Gurion Airport, back in the day, dozens of the Israeli family members would turn up to greet us.  There used to be a glass wall to the baggage reclaim hall, and people from outside the airport could peer in and watch the arriving passengers claim their baggage. 

Whilst we were waiting around the carousels for the eventual appearance of our hefty and bulging suitcases - literally packed to bursting with gifts for everyone (my mother would even take gifts for my grandmother’s neighbours) - we would be spotted by our excited relatives who would scream our names and bang on the glass, desperate to draw our attention. At that moment I would first see my grandparents, uncles, aunts and cousins.

Topics:

Israel