View Message

This is a reply within a larger thread: view the whole thread

[Opinions] Re: Salome, Sabbath and Odessa /names that feel Jewish but are not used by jews
There's plenty of overlap among so-called Jewish and Christian names; makes sense, since the Torah is the New Testament and there is a lot of common history/mythology.Salome's never been used with any real regularity. Probably the idea of a girl who did a sexy dance for her stepfather and his friends, urged on by her mother, and again, as Mom instructed, asked to be rewarded with a man's hed on a plate, is not a positive association.Odessa feels very old-fashioned US to me. Neither Jewish nor Christian, but just an old-fashioned sound. There's a city in Texas called Odessa, and a tiny town here in Delaware called Odessa, and probably more Odessas in other places I don't know about.Sabbath feels very Puritan; the Puritans set a lot of importance on the Sabbath day; it just happened to be a different day than the Jewish Sabbath.Before you criticize a man, walk a mile in his shoes. That way, when you criticize him, you're a mile away and you have his shoes!
Steve Martin
vote up2

Replies

Salome hasn't been used in the US, but it's been well-used elsewhere. And the Torah isn't the New Testament - the Torah, Quran, and Old Testament are similar, but not the same.

This message was edited 9/28/2023, 5:35 PM

vote up4