I wandered into Zuzu Café 3 years ago when I was visiting my
two sons in Madison, Wisconsin. Located next to the zoo (free admission), we
went in to get coffee and a sandwich. Their menu, though, caught my eye—North
African breakfast and other specialties. Of course, I was curious and had to
try the breakfast, lablabi, a bowl of beans topped with a fried egg and harissa
(chili) sauce. Delicious!
I approached Zuzu very differently this time I visited
(April 2017). I drove up just to spend the Easter-Passover weekend with sons.
We had a wonderful day and a half of going to their favorite vegetarian
restaurant, watching movies, and talking. Then, on Sunday, instead of the
anticipated trip to a meadow where my oldest had been working on ecological
restoration projects, we took him to the hospital instead. It’s been 7 days
now, and he’s still here, stabilized, but still weak and in pain.
During the times that I’m not sitting by his bedside, I’ve
gone over to Zuzu several times for coffee, breakfast, and a sandwich. Instead
of the curiosity that first took me there, it was the familiarity and friendly
welcome that brought me back. Life feeds into scholarship, and vice versa. This
time I have with me the book on Comfort Food that I recently edited with
Michael Owen Jones. I showed it to Sabri, and he started musing about how
Algerian food—and traditional food in general—was always comforting. It’s only
with modern conveniences and modern stresses that we eat food out of season,
from factories, and without thought of it being comforting. I add my own
thoughts that at least some of that stress is due to the current
administration’s attitudes towards anyone different from their own narrow
conception of who can be an American. Zuzu displays a sign next to its door
stating that everyone is welcome and that there is no Islamaphobia—and any
other phobias—inside. That welcome makes the food even more comforting to me,
to know that I am eating food that was once “foreign” to me, but now familiar,
and that it was prepared by like-minded people who also want to approach others
with compassion, respect, and understanding. That comforts!
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