The Living Local Harvest Festival this year excludes a significant portion of the community, people who would want to be part of the activities.
The Living Local Harvest Festival this year excludes a significant portion of the community, people who would want to be part of the activities. The website describes itself as a community event. The dinner is called a community supper. From their website promoting the Oct. 3 to 4 activities: “We strive to bring together the unique community of Martha’s Vineyard . . . ” Unfortunately, this is not true.
Holding this year’s anticipated community festivities on Oct. 3 to 4, coinciding exactly with Yom Kippur, is the epitome of poor planning and thoughtlessness. Observing the holiest day of the year, a sunset-to-sunset 24 hours of atonement and fasting for all Jews, means that the Jewish part of the community is left out, not only from eating at the Living Local supper, but from attending it and the all-day Saturday workshops, family events and the Friday opening night (during the Kol Nidre service) free screening of the film Open Sesame.
It obviously was not done on purpose. The point is, when these events are planned, months in advance, it wouldn’t hurt to look at a calendar to make sure the date doesn’t fall on a day when a good number of people cannot attend. Even the most generic calendars have the days of all Jewish holidays marked, so it is astonishing to me that no one looked.
Seriously, even if you know nothing about Judaism and don’t care to know, if you want to hold a great big, 24-hour party (which is what this is) but do not want Jewish families to come, just schedule it on Yom Kippur.
Jackie Mendez-Diez
Chilmark

Comments
Well said Thank you
Lori S Herman EdgartownWell said
Thank you
Thank you for taking the time
Ken Esq EdgartownThank you for taking the time to write this. I guess we can only hope this was a mistake and that it would have been impossible to move this event to their scheduled rain date.
"Even the most generic
Dee Ouchman Isles of Langerhans"Even the most generic calendars have the days of all Jewish holidays marked, so it is astonishing to me that no one looked." I see your point but not everyone uses a generic calendar, I use Christian calendars with weeks that start on Monday and end on Sunday. The Jewish holy days of obligation are not listed on it.
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