I moseyed on out of the bus station and down the block, until I saw a restaurant with a sign above the door saying (can you guess?) "Steakiat Habirah." Hungry from my extensive moseyings, and hypnotized by the twirling stick of meat just inside, I decided this would be a good place to rest my weary legs. Now, to be honest, I remember very little about the shawarma I ate there. All I remember is leaving the place and thinking to myself that that was the best shawarma I've had in this wondrous shawarma-filled land. It was truly the shawarma of kings.
Since that day, any time I heard someone was going to visit Israel, I demanded they pay a visit to Steakiat Habirah. For their own good. So when I returned to Israel, what choice did I have but to do the same. So after we arrived, I decided to pay a visit and become reacquainted with my long lost, beloved steakiyah, and to be reminded why I loved it so much. So I hopped on the #4 bus to Central Station. And with the ghosts of perfectly spiced flakes of meat dancing on the back of my tongue, I made my way to the shop.
To my disbelief, the sight I arrived at was very different from the one that greeted me four years before. The man behind the counter was replaced with a different, more bearded, man behind the counter. But more disturbingly, the warm stack of juicy meat turning in the shawarma oven was replaced by a listless pizza turning in a pizza oven (or whatever it is pizzas do in there). The name on the sign was different too. I can't remember it, something with the word "strudel" in it; "Sal's Pizzas and Strudels," or "Strudelman's Pizza." Something like that. I had to find out what happened. I could only shuffle inside, as when one's shock is so profound, one can't muster any gait more than a shuffle. I asked the bearded fellow behind the desk what happened to my beloved steakiah. I have no idea what he said. In my grief filled daze, his response just sounded like gibberish to me (or maybe Hebrew, they sound very similar). But it didn't matter. Steakiat Habirah was no more. Yankel's Strudel Emporium was there in its place. All I can do now is grieve and promise to do everything I can to ensure that no shawarma place will ever go out of business again.
You Maniacs! Damn you Strudelman! Damn you to hell! |
*an appropriate word for the situation, no? Brings up images of people hustling for a bus. Plus, people who are hustling for a bus don't have time to say "I'm hustling for a bus." So they just say, "I'm bustling." I'm pretty sure that's where the word comes from.
-photo courtesy of Veev
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