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A Day in Dagania

Kibbutz Degania Members Gather for Dinner in the Local Dining Room

1 Minute, 1937
Genre:
Moment

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Directed by: Unknown
Photographer: Lasar Dunner
Language: English
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Subtitles: English, Hebrew
The communal dining room where kibbutz members would assemble at least three times a day was used as the collective’s main gathering hub. The dining room complex which, in most cases, was located in the heart of the kibbutz and was by far the largest, most impressive building, was more than just a culinary port of call. The dining room played host to kibbutz assemblies and spirited ideological exchanges; it was home to many entertainment shows and gigs, and in a time when radios and TV sets were hardly a household commodity, the dining room became the place where those rare appliances were available for residents’ enjoyment, who would gather together to watch or listen to the hourly news programme.In secular kibbutz society, established by the movement’s founding members, the dining room stepped in – both communally and culturally – for the house of worship. Despite eating being taboo for any other reason but to nourish the body of the Jewish pioneer building the country, kibbutz members – ever loyal to their values of self-sufficiency – were entrusted with all things cooking and baking related and as such, in every kibbutz, based on members’ backgrounds and the local produce available, certain cuisines became staples and symbols of this communal society. Towards the end of the 20th century, at the height of the kibbutz privatisation wave, these now-abandoned buildings – some of which were designed by the most prominent local architects of the day – became the symbol of the kibbutz dream’s demise. And whilst some still maintain a limited tradition of communal eating, these surviving communal dining halls are now run by external caterers who charge for every meal served. But when all is said and done, the kibbutz’s communal dining room and the dishes served there still became an integral part of Israeli cuisine’s culinary range and imagery: from sparkling water on tap and the endless stream of fizzy drink pints, through the food trays, metal rubbish collection stations on the tables (aka the ‘kolboinik’), and the colourful melamine serving dishes, to the DIY salad every member would chop up for themselves using whole vegetables, and the iconic kibbutz breakfast (made up of salad, egg, wholemeal bread, and Greek strained yoghurt) which, over time, became synonymous with the quintessential Israeli breakfast.

A girl rings the kibbutz bell, and members of Kibbutz Degania gather in the dining room to have dinner together. After dinner, kibbutz members wash dishes while listening to the radio.

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