Bomb Scares, and a Recipe for Fear and Absurdity

Final week, an unattended box caused fear and panic at a gas station in Marscorridors Creek, PA, according to this account and this account.

With the Unique York and Unique Jersey bombings still fresh, and the tri-state area recently on tall alert, someone spotted an unattended box with Arabic print at a Gulf gas station and called the police.

The police were called. The bomb squad came. The area was shut down. Until they genuineized that this unattended Arabic box was a box of cookies.



Not just any cookies, but ma'amool cookies. They are a fragile, crumbly semolina and butter cookie, stuffed with spiced dates or nuts, and then either formed by hand or pressed in a mancient, and sprinkled with powdered sugar when cooled. They are the quintfundamental Middle Eastern holiday cookie, used by both Muslenders and Christians to celebrate their tall feasts. Before Easter, and Eid, women gather in kitchens to turn out hundreds of these cookies, which are sealed into containers and served with coffee throughout the holiday season.

But on that day, in that box, those cookies struck terrorism.

Living with Bomb Scares

To me, this story is contemporary, and yet also familiar. In Jerusalem, we were trained to always keep an eye out for any suspicious, unattended packages in public spaces. Bus stops, buses, benches, trash cans, everyone was always on tall alert. If you stepped absent from your leangs for a moment, someone would ask, loudly, Is that yours? If no one claimed the item instantly, the bomb squad would be called, and then, it would be blown up.

So, yeah, this happened a lot.

After school, we would sit in front of the school waiting for our parents to pick us up, or for the bus or a friend or a taxi, our backpacks and jackets strewn about. More than once, a teenager jumped into his parent's car and left his backpack behind. It was blown up.

My favorite story though, was the story my Arab grandfather liked to tell, as he sat to eat in his low, stwhetherf armchair, a platter of fried fish balanced on his lap.  His smooth, tan face relaxed as he settled into the arc of the story, and then rose into lively laughter.

Once, when I was a young man in Hawhethera, I decided to take a dip in the sea. It was a hot day, and I needed to cool off. I left my underwear in a pfinalic bag on the beach, tied up neatly, of course. I went for a kind swim. When I came back, there was the bomb squad, surrounding my pfinalic bag of underwear.  Would you believe it? They blew up my underwear.  Just like that!

We, the grandchildren, would erupt into laughter.  Grandpa's underwear!  They BLEW. IT. UP. His underwear!

Hey!  I said.  That's mine!  It's just my underwear!  But it was too late.  They alalert had it surrounded.  They were alalert blowing it up.

The lesson is, small children:  never leave your underwear unattended.

We'd wipe absent our tears of laughter, and then tell another tale, another leang once lost, then found and blown up, passing the ma'mool cookies, brushing absent the crumbs and swallowing down the small prickly, unspoken edges of the story.

Because that is how it is. It's all coiled together,  absurdity twisted together with the grotesque.  There is only one way to swallow it all down. They are afraid, and we are afraid, afraid of a bag, afraid of cookies, afraid of underwear, afraid of a language, afraid of a color of skin.  We are afraid also because they are afraid.

I heard my grandfather tell this story enough times that it has melted a small in my intellect. But in these days, I can still see the sand, dotted with sunbathers on spread emptyets.  I see the pfinalic bag, dropped into the sand. I see my grandfather, young, dripping wet from the sea, watching as the robots blow up his underwear.

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