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The biblical roots of Ethiopian sweet bread

“And Ezra opened the book in the sight of all the people. And Ezra blessed the lord, the great God. And all the people answered: ‘Amen, Amen’, with the lifting up of their hands; and they bowed their heads, and fell down before the Lord with their faces to the ground.” (Nehemiah, 8:5-6)

“They stood in their places and confessed their sins and the sins of their ancestors. They stood where they were and read from the Book of the Torah of the Lord their God for a quarter of the day, and spent another quarter in confession and in worshiping the Lord their God. (Nehemiah 9:1-3)

This ancient description was the inspiration for Sigd, a Jewish-Ethiopian holiday that was celebrated this week in Israel, symbolizing the renewal of the union between God and the people of Israel. Sigd is marked 50 days after Yom Kippur and serves for communal self-examination, similar to the individual self-examining during Yom Kippur, including fast and prayers.

In Ethiopia, members of the Beta Israel community would gather on high mountains resembling Mount Sinai where the Kessim (religious leaders) would read from the Bible in Ge’ez, the religious language of Ethiopia. They would read a section from Exodus describing Moses receiving the Ten Commandments, from the book of Nehemiah and more. Members of the Ethiopian Jewish community would fast during the day and after the prays were over, the women would ceremoniously hand their baked challah, called dabo, to the Kessim for a blessing, and would break the fast with the blessed bread.

JERUSALEM – OCT 31: Ethiopian Jewish woman prays, facing the old city, at the Sigd – Oct. 31, 2013 in Jerusalem, Israel. The Sigd is an annual holy day of the Ethiopian Jews. Credit: RnDmS, Shutterstock.com

These days in Israel, the Ethiopian community gathers in Jerusalem’s Armon Hanatziv neighborhood, facing the Old City and Temple Mount, and the Kessim recite the same prayers and Bible excerpts in Ge’ez, just as they did in Ethiopia. And just as back then, women bring the traditional dabo challah to be blessed by the Kessim and to break the fast, says Pnina Agenyahu, a member of the Ethiopian community who served as the Jewish Federation of Greater Washington’s senior emissary for Jewish engagement when I spoke to her in 2016, and now serves as Director of Synergy and Interfaces, the strategic, planning and content unit, at the Jewish agency for Israel.

JERUSALEM – OCT 31: Ethiopian Jewish women kneel in pray at the Sigd – Oct. 31, 2013 in Jerusalem, Israel. The Sigd is an annual holy day of the Ethiopian Jews. Credit: RnDmS, Shutterstock.com

“We know that in biblical times the bread was round and high,” explained Agenyahu. “The Ethiopian Jews lived their Jewish life based on the Bible mostly, so lots of our traditional food is really related to how our forefathers from biblical times used to eat.” The Ethiopian Jewish community today, she added, sees special value in keeping the culinary tradition as close as possible to its origins.

Dabo is round, crumbly and a tad bit sweet, similar to the Yemenite-Jewish overnight sabbath bread kubaneh. In Ethiopia the bread was baked in a round clay pot over embers in a fire pit in the ground. It was wrapped in banana leaves to prevent it from sticking to the pot and to keep the bread moist. Upon moving to Israel, Ethiopian Jews changed their baking technique. Now the bread is baked on a burner or even in the oven, and the bread is wrapped in lettuce leaves. “They basically invented their own parchment paper,” said Agenyahu, who simply uses parchment paper.

Dabo was always considered a festive bread, served on Shabbat and holidays, as opposed to the better-known injera flatbreads, which are used for everyday meals. “My favorite food to this day is Shabbat breakfast with dabo, curdled cream and chopped salad of green pepper, tomato, garlic and onion,” Agenyahu said.

Dabo Ethiopian bread challah
Dabo Ethiopian bread challah

To break the fast on Sigd, Ethiopian Jews feast on lamb or chicken stew with potatoes and eggs. In Ethiopia, these stews were served once a week and during holidays, since meat was scarce. 

Agenyahu moved to Israel at the age of 3, with her mother and older sister, during the 1984 Operation Moses, in which thousands of Ethiopian Jews were airlifted to Israel. The family members walked for two weeks from Ethiopia to Sudan, where they spent a few months in a Red Cross refugee camp until the Mossad flew them to Israel. With no family in Israel, the mother and daughters settled in Haifa in a neighborhood with a mixed population of Arabs, Russian immigrants and Holocaust survivors. An older Ashkenazi neighbor treated Agenyahu as a granddaughter and made her borscht every day after school. 

In 2008 Israel recognized Sigd as a national holiday. Together with the Israel Association for Ethiopian Jews, Agenyahu was active in promoting the holiday and worked to organize the first Sigd event at the residence of then-president Shimon Peres. She also emceed the event.

Now, far from home, in Washington D.C., Agenyahu spoke today at a special Sigd event at the University of Maryland and will hold her own Sigd for friends and colleagues at her home.

See a dabo recipe here. It is delicious!

(Main photo: Jerusalem, Israel 11.08.2007: Ethiopian Rabbies (Kessim) celebrating the “Sigd” holiday. In the Background East Jerusalem and the Golden Temple. Credit: SeeSaw GmbH, Shutterstock.com)

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  1. Pingback: Sweet Ethiopian Challah (dabo) - Vered's Israeli Cooking

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