10 Surprising Jewish Facts That Will Delight and Distract You
10 Surprising Jewish Facts That
Will Delight and Distract You
By Maddy
AlbertNov 5, 2020
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With all that’s happening in the
country and the world this week, we all need some distraction. One of my favorite
ways to forget about the chaos of the present is to learn fun facts about the
past. Nerdy? Perhaps. But interesting? You bet!
Fortunately, perusing the archives
of Jewniverse — a collection of fun and sometimes shocking dispatches about Jewish
culture, tradition, and history published by our partner site, the Jewish
Telegraphic Agency — has been an excellent exercise in anxiety reduction. As I
fell down the Jewniverse rabbit hole, I found myself delighted by everything
from the Jewish history of the Crock-Pot to Betty Boop's
Jewish background to the existence of a tampon brand in Japan named Anne Frank. (I kind of wish I
was joking about that last one.)
If you need a brain break today — or
anytime, really — check out these ten uplifting and surprising Jewish tidbits I've
recently discovered. And if you'd like more offbeat Jewish gems like these,
sign up for Jewniverse's weekly newsletter here.
1. Three Jewish women have
been crowned Miss India.
While the Jewish population in India
numbers roughly 4,600, a teensy sliver of
the country’s total population of some 1.38 billion, there have been multiple
Jewish winners of the Miss India beauty pageant. Esther Victoria Abraham — better
known by her stage name, Miss Pramila — won the first-ever Miss India pageant
in 1947. Later, the crown went to Jewish model Fleur Ezekiel in 1959 — she then
went on to represent India in the Miss World pageant — and dancer Salome Aaron,
the daughter of a Jewish couple credited with bringing the samba to India, won
the title in 1972. Mazel tov!
2. There was a fish called
the jewfish.
Yes, it certainly sounds vaguely
antisemitic, but the origins of this Atlantic saltwater grouper's name are a bit of a mystery. Some theories
include that it evolved from the Italian “giupesce" ("bottom fish") or that it's a
mispronunciation of "jawfish" because of the fish's large mouth.
Today, however, the jewfish is no more. While this fish still swims our waters
today, after complaints of cultural insensitivity, its name officially changed
to the goliath grouper in 2001.
3. Seinfeld caused
Nancy Sinatra to miss the death of her father.
On the afternoon of Frank Sinatra’s death, his daughter,
Nancy, was preoccupied — with watching the series finale of Seinfeld. Nancy Sinatra had planned to visit her father
— he lived only five blocks away — but she got sucked into the
highly-anticipated finale, learning he had suffered a heart attack only after
he had died. Nancy has since described the ordeal as her "greatest
sadness," the news is all the more devastating considering that the series
finale was panned by just about everyone, including Jerry Seinfeld himself.
4. Hank Greenberg fought
racism in baseball.
Hank Greenberg wasn’t just one of the
first prominent Jewish players in Major League Baseball — his legacy also
includes making waves as a manager. Greenberg chose
players for his team based on talent, taking no account of
race. His team, the Cleveland Indians, won the American League pennant in 1954
under his management, and it happened to have more Black players than any other
team in the league then. Greenberg is also known to be one of the first players
outside the Brooklyn Dodgers to welcome Jackie Robinson to the league publicly.
5. Portuguese Jews
invented fish & chips.
Fish and chips is considered a classic
English dish, but its origins may surprise you. Jewish refugees from Portugal brought the dish to England in the
early 16th century; the delicacy, based on a Sephardic dish, pescado frito, or fried fish. Fish and chips were
popularized in England by another Jew, Joseph Malin, who opened the first
chippy in London in 1860.
6. Louis Comfort Tiffany
designed Judaica.
Louis Comfort Tiffany may be most famous
for his stained-glass lamp designs, but the artist was also responsible for
numerous Jewish-themed stained-glass windows and mosaics. These jewel-toned
creations appeared in synagogues and Jewish cemeteries throughout the 19th and
20th centuries. Perceived by some as an effort toward assimilation and Jewish
pride, the designs can still be viewed in many Jewish sites today, including
Temple Emanu-El in New York City's Upper East Side.
7. An Iranian official in
France created a fake religion — saving Jewish families from the Nazis.
In France in the 1940s, the Iranian
Consul, Abdol Hossein-Sardari, did something extraordinary: To save Iranian
Jews from the Nazis, he invented a fake religion, Mosaique. “Some of the sixteen million
Iranians…are converts to the Mosaique faith,” he said. “…They are descendants
of the Aryan Indo-European race, with no relationship to the European Jewish
race.” Using the Nazi’s bureaucracy against them, Hossein-Sardari reclassified
100 Iranian Jewish families and secured their deportation, likely saving their
lives. This generous and creative act earned him a reputation as the “Schindler
of Iran.”
8. Bob Dylan learned to
play guitar at a Jewish sleepaway camp.
Robert Zimmerman—later known as Bob
Dylan—spent his childhood summers at Hertzl Camp, a
Zionist sleepaway camp in Webster, Wisconsin. According to some stories, that's
where the young bard penned some of his first lyrics and learned to play the
guitar, harmonica, and piano. Dylan returned to the camp in the late 1970s when
his son was a camper.
9. Jews invented Mr.
Potato Head.
Henry, Herman, and Hillel Hassenfeld,
later known as the founders of Hasbro, sold the first Mr. Potato Head facial
parts kit after seeing potential in the invention by George Lerner, a Jew of
Romanian descent. While the kit initially recommended that kids use natural
fruits and vegetables, Hasbro invented a plastic potato head in 1964 after receiving
complaints from parents about rotten produce. Yuck!
10. Albert Einstein was a
civil rights activist.
Though he was well-known for his
Zionism, Jewish theoretical physicist Albert Einstein was also
outspoken against racism throughout his career. After receiving an award from
Lincoln University in 1946, Einstein spoke out against racism and segregation, announcing that he
"did not intend to be quiet" about racism, a "disease of white
people." He was also an ally to Black leaders at the time, serving as a
character witness for W.E.B. DuBois and working with singer-turned-activist
Paul Robeson on the American Crusade to End Lynching. What a mensch!
Header Image via JTA Jewniverse
Article Archive
Maddy Albert
Maddy Albert is the editorial assistant at Kveller.
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