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“May figs be planted in your hearth!”
Because of the sacred hearth’s identity with the family,
its fire must be guarded carefully and treated piously. Fire from the hearth should not be given out
to strangers or enemies who might defile it or endanger the
family. To lend fire to another so that she might rekindle
her own hearth is to treat the borrower like an intimate family
member. Such lending
signifies acceptance and trust—the highest compliments one
family can give another.
The hearth, of course, provides many practical benefits
to the family. It
creates heat, produces fumigants (which relieve the house
of insects), and cooks food.
The last product—food—is also sacred.
Eating together not only strengthens sacred family
bonds, but it also establishes spiritual links with people
outside the home. Food
sharing symbolically extends the hearth and family essence
to others.
Dropping in on a family at mealtime is a special act.
To such an unexpected guest people say, “Your mother-in-law
must like you!” The
guest is invited to the table, and even if he has already
eaten he should take at least one mouthful of food so as to
demonstrate symbolically his socio-spiritual ties with the
host family. Families
also demonstrate their socio-spiritual bonds with the community
by sharing food on holy days and whenever neighbors are in
need. The traditional ashure custom is an
interesting example of this sharing.
Ashure
is a sweet dish, containing at least seven kinds of fruits
and vegetables, prepared by the eldest woman of a household
for the Tenth of Muharrem.
(Muharrem is the first month of the Islamic lunar year.
This date commemorates the death of Husain, Caliph
Ali’s son.) After cooking it in a large container, the
woman covers it with a tray and calls a person knowledgeable
of the Qur’an to read or recite prayers over it.
Later, she divides the ashure up into smaller containers. Younger members of the family then distribute the small containers
of ashure to relatives, friends, and neighbors. People say they should be distributed to at least seven different
households. Each recipient
reciprocates by saying the expected religious formula—“May
Allah accept your good deed”—to the giver.
Not only does each family extend its essence to the
community by sharing holy food prepared by its woman on its
fire, but each family also promotes good fortune through the
ashure custom.
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