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Geva Newsreel 172, 1959

End of the Austerity Announced

1 Minute, 1959
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Moment

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Directed by: Unknown
Subtitles: English, Hebrew
Shortly after the creation of the State of Israel, the nascent country found itself having to take in hundreds of thousands of Jewish immigrants who came from all over the world. The state of the local economy that had taken a severe beating during the War of Independence, coupled with the shortage of foreign currency prompted Ben Gurion’s government to announce a series of austerity and rationing measures; however, the main impetus was the need to help and support new immigrants who had arrived penniless and destitute, and the fear of starvation and class inequalities. Austerity, the common name given to the rationing measures implemented by the government between 1949 and 1959 meant equal consumption and nutrition for all citizens. The daily menu was made up of wholemeal bread, 60g of corn, 58g of sugar, 60g of flour, 17g of rice, 20g of pulses, 20g of margarine, 8g of noodles, 200g of skimmed yoghurt, 600g of onion, and 5g of biscuits. Meat was rationed at a monthly 75g per person. “Special” populations, e.g. pregnant women or the poorly were given additional meat or cheese. The provisions were purchased in exchange for points handed out in food stamp booklets and indeed, everyone of that generation will forever recall the endless queues, the black market that emerged despite the aim for equality and above all else, the craving for what there was so little of, if that – meat, butter, eggs, and chocolate. Austerity, whose ghost continues to haunt Israeli society despite it now being the age of alleged affluence, is rooted in the Zionist-pioneering movement. In the first two decades of Israel’s existence, any culinary discourse was borderline taboo. According to the Israeli ethos, food – perish the thought – was not meant for pleasure or multisensory delight, but strictly for the nourishing of the Hebrew pioneer’s body as he embarks on building the new land. In the absence of many basic provisions, new immigrants struggled during austerity to recreate a lot of the traditional dishes they grew up on in their native countries. Indeed, many of the dishes we have come to know today as traditional family staples of yore had to go through major revisions during austerity: refined butter, olive oil, and sesame oil were replaced with margarine and low-grade plant oil. Even cooking techniques took a beating as a result of austerity. One of the finest examples of that are the kerosene burners which, to this day, are still used to make kibbeh soup and other traditional Iraqi and Kurdistani Jewish dishes. The German-made burners were given out to new immigrants in the 1950s by the Jewish Agency for Israel – and though other heating sources may have been used in the old country – they have nonetheless become a symbol of Jerusalemite Kurdish-Iraqi cuisine.

The minister of commerce and industry, Pinchas Sapir, announces that the austerity is over. During his speech, video shots present food coupons, markets, and grocery stores.

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