As a college student abroad, GabKaplanMayer wasn't planning to observe Yom Kippur. That changed when she got to Munich. 'I woke with a hunger for synagogue so deep inside my bones that nothing else mattered,' she writes.
The sun streamed through the flimsy window shade in our Munich hostel room, waking me. I grabbed for my water bottle, dehydrated from the night before. My best friend slept soundly in the bunk above me; the room was filled with other friends from our semester abroad in the Netherlands. It was 1990, and we were theater students taking classes four days a week, riding bicycles around southern Holland’s small towns, backpacking on long weekends.
We traveled in groups for safety and fun, sleeping on night trains. Everyone had decided on Munich for Oktoberfest, and I went along. My parents had reached me on the shared dormitory phone the night before we left for Germany. “You’ll be there on Yom Kippur,” my mother reminded me. They knew that I wasn’t planning to observe the holidays while I was abroad. I could barely tolerate High Holiday services when I was in high school in Central Pennsylvania. I had been a kid who loved Hebrew school, but as I got closer to college, I felt the call to separate from the traditions of my childhood. My ideas of God were becoming more Earth-based and expansive than “The Lord” we prayed to in our Reform siddur.
But that morning in our hostel room, I woke with a hunger for synagogue so deep inside my bones that nothing else mattered.I tore a page out of my journal and wrote a friend a note:I stepped outside into the crisp morning air. I didn’t speak German and had no map of Munich.. He understood me enough and drove off. Within minutes, we arrived at a shul.
Armed guards stood at its gate. In English, I told them that I wanted to go in for services. They frisked me and looked inside my bag.
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