Hanna waited excitedly at the front door to her parent's Teaneck shul for Jovita on a Thursday afternoon. At the start of their relationship, Hanna was reluctant to introduce her girlfriend to her family, but today Jovita was finally going to meet her parents. First they would attend Simchat Torah services. Then they would go to her parents' house for dinner and spend the next two days there. Hanna's eyes lit up when she saw Jovita approach the shul. Jovita was wearing a modest white shirt that went up to her neck and down to her wrists. A black broomstick skirt covered her legs all the way down to her ankles. Hanna's own broomstick skirt was tie-dye and her shirtsleeves stopped just below her elbows.
"You look great," Hanna said when Jovita reached her.
"I wanted to make a good impression with your parents," Jovita replied. As the couple hugged, Hanna could feel the crucifix that Jovita wore beneath her shirt.
Hanna lead Jovita by the hand through the front doors of the synagogue. Once inside, Jovita's eyes drank in the lobby decorations. There was a metal bas-relief tree on one lobby wall. The leaves were engraved with the names of donors who contributed in honor or in memory of loved ones. A glass encased bulletin board hung nearby. Jovita read the notices as Hanna silently gave her space to explore this new surrounding. The first paper was about a pledge drive for a local day school. The second paper was a letter from the congregation's president supporting Israel and the right of Jews to build in Judea and Samaria. Below those pages was a notice about a protest in front of the Metropolitan Opera for the next Monday. The rally was to object to the Met's performance of The Death of Klinghoffer.
Jovita turned to Hanna with questions about what she read. "Where is Judea and Samaria?"
"That's the Israeli name for the West Bank. Jordan dubbed the region the West Bank after conquering it during the Israeli War of Independence, and the rest of the world followed Jordan's lead ever since."
"Why is it necessary to stand up for the rights of Jews to build there. Can't anyone build on land if she buys it first."
"You would think so, but most nations don't agree. They condemn Israel whenever it lets Jews build in Judea and Samaria. They won't even allow for construction to accommodate natural population growth. Without new homes, young couples can't start new families. The international community insist that the area must be cleared of Jews in order to have peace. Since those who oppose construction are motivated by a desire to keep the Jewish population low, their opposition boils down to a mild form of ethnic cleansing."
Jovita quietly changed the subject. "Why are people protesting The Death of Klinghoffer?"
"That opera is about Palestinian terrorists who killed an disabled elderly Jewish man on a cruise ship. It glorifies the terrorist and demonizes the Jews. It's disgraceful that the Met would put on such tripe. The West Australian Opera won't show Carmen because the characters in it smoke tobacco, but an anti-Semitic opera is fine. To the cultural elites, smoking is beyond the pale, but killing Jews is a legitimate position." Hanna glanced at the date on the protest notice. "Hey, the protest is this Monday. Do you want to go to it together."
"I've got to work late every day next week to make up for taking today and tomorrow off," Jovita declined. "How about I send a donation to support the cause."
"I don't think there's a charity associated with the protest. It was put together kind of ad hoc."
Jovita looked again at the notice. "It says Congressrep Peter King will be there. I'll send him a campaign contribution with a letter thanking him for attending the rally," Jovita promised.