Fox Family Blog

Family Weekend 2023

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Up and Down in Jerusalem   -  23 January 2026
In this part of the world there is not much rain, and the little there is falls only during the winter months. This year the rains started late, but by early January they were well under way, with strong winds, loud thunderstorms, and day after day of heavy downpours.

The leaden skies of rainy days are not so photogenic, but when towering clouds mix with pure blue the effect is beautiful and you can’t help looking up to admire it.

But then you need to look dow . . .(more)
 
Naxos   -  31 December 2025
Avi and I just got back from three days on Naxos, the largest and most fertile of a group of Greek islands called the Cyclades. Naxos has been inhabited for thousands of years, and was a center of a Bronze Age culture. Today the island has important marble quarries and a vibrant agricultural sector. The center of the island is an undulating plain ringed by mountains which catch the rain and keep the land lush and green. There are groves of beautiful old olive trees. Flocks of sheep and goats . . .(more)
 
The National Portrait Gallery   -  21 December 2025
The National Portrait Gallery in Washington is one of my favorite places in our capital, and the museum with the same name in London is just as beautiful and engaging. It was the first place I went when I arrived in the city a week ago, and, as always, there were new things to see. Here are just of few of the portraits that caught my eye this time.

  • A double miniature portrait of Gerlach Flicke and the pirate Henry Strangeways which Flicke painted in 1554 when the two of . . .(more)
 
King and Constitution   -  30 October 2025
My mother took me to Europe when I was nine years old, and we spent most of our time in England. Every day we visited castles and cathedrals, and I loved them, though I didn't have an overall context for them. But then a few years later I found an introduction to the history of England in our Junior High School library, and reading that (more than once, I think) helped me understand how all those things that I had seen fit together. I still especially enjoy British history, and so when the N . . .(more)
 
Hagar and Ishmael   -  28 September 2025
Every year in the fall we start reading the Torah in the synagogue, and we go on reading one section every week until we have finished it, just in time to start over at the same time the next year. In addition to this annual cycle, on our (many!) holidays we do special, out-of-sequence readings. Generally these are sections of the Torah that discuss the holiday concerned, so it’s clear why they were chosen.

But on Rosh HaShana, the New Year, the reading is a bit surprising a . . .(more)
 
Coming Home from Serendib   -  24 August 2025
Tonight I head home after almost a month here in Sri Lanka. As always, I have learned a lot, though I have barely scratched the surface of what there is to know about this beautiful place.

The pictures here show a few different sides of the experience of being here. The first one is from a courtyard near the Temple of the Tooth in Kandy. Next is a very large butterfly that was hovering over the flowers near my room. Third is a picture from a school group that came to see a tra . . .(more)
 
Kandy Wildlife   -  11 August 2025
I arrived yesterday in Kandy, the main city in the highlands of Sri Lanka. Long after the rest of the island was controlled by European countries, an independent kingdom held on up here. The last king of Kandy, Sri Vikrama Rajasinha, built a beautiful lake beside his palace, and it remains one of the jewels of the city.

On the two mile long walk around the lake you typically see lots of birds, and I wasn’t disappointed today, but there were some less usual animals as well. . . .(more)
 
The Years Pass More Quickly   -  2 August 2025
It’s truly hard to believe that it’s already August second again. On this day in 1917 my father, Arnold Fox, was born in the Bronx. On the same day of the year in 1953, Beverly Fried was born in Dayton, Ohio. The picture I have attached here shows us together (with Mom, Reva, Deena, and Tamar) in London in the summer of 1985. My father was two years younger than I am now, and Bev was a youthful and beautiful thirty-two.

I always miss them both, but seeing our family toget . . .(more)
 
Renana and Brooke's Wedding   -  24 June 2025
On Sunday Renana and Brooke were married in the presence of more than a hundred family and friends. The ceremony took place at a startlingly beautiful location far out in the country in New Mexico. (Though Renana and Brooke live in Washington, Brooke has close ties to New Mexico, and it is a beautiful place to be married.) A number of us came in on Friday and spent Shabbat relaxing, talking, eating, swimming, and playing lawn games with the couple. The next day the rest of the guests arrived . . .(more)
 
Members' Night   -  16 May 2025
Last Wednesday was members’ night at the Field Museum. The museum is housed in an enormous, beautiful building on the Chicago lakeshore. It has a wonderful collection of exhibits about all kinds of plants and animals and a wide variety of human cultures. The elementary school I went to in DeKalb did a field trip to one of the Chicago museums every year, and often we went to the Field Museum. I loved it then, and I still do. It’s worth a visit at any time, but members’ nights are a spe . . .(more)
 
Winters   -  21 March 2025
A poem about winter, as spring takes its place:

Winters

Because they had the very latest deadline there
procrastination steered my mother to grad school
in Iowa. The cold of Indiana where
she grew had not prepared her for the cruel
sharp prairie winds that blasted her with frigid air.
    While struggling through the elements she felt all brave and strong.

Years later when she landed with my dad and me
. . .(more)
 
Jerusalem Sunset   -  18 March 2025
Avi and I are coming to the end of two months in Jerusalem. Avi has been volunteering as a pathologist at Hadassah Ein Kerem hospital, and I have been spending mornings studying Talmud at the Conservative Yeshiva.

Besides studying Talmud, I read a collection of short stories in Hebrew, and worked on improving my speaking ability. This year I also took lessons in spoken Arabic, an addition to my yearly program that I liked very much. In college and graduate school I learned to . . .(more)
 
Another Generation   -  18 February 2025
In 1980 Bev and I, together with a small group of friends who were dissatisfied with the alternatives in West Rogers Park where we lived, formed a new minyan (prayer group). It was lay-led, and men and women took equal parts in conducting the services. That group, which is now called Mah Tovu, still exists and is still my religious home.

Very early on, Bev designed a beautiful cover for our Torah reading table. It is embroidered with the design of a tree, and all around the edg . . .(more)
 
The Mesila (the Jerusalem rail trail)   -  28 January 2025
The old Jaffa to Jerusalem railway dates to when Jerusalem was part of the Ottoman Empire. It was built by a multi-ethnic consortium in the 1880’s and started service in August 1891. The route is very scenic. From Tel Aviv it crosses the coastal plain as far as Beit Shemesh, and then enters a wadi which winds up through the hills to Jerusalem.

On my first trip to Israel in 1974 I took the train up to Jerusalem, and then in 1990 when our whole family spent the summer here, I . . .(more)
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