Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Examined Feast: What We Consume Together

Making conscious the hidden meanings and assumptions embedded in food rituals that structure celebrations.

Nas
Why It Matters

Hodja often appears at feasts, using food as teaching: abundance revealing greed, hunger revealing community, meals revealing who we truly value. Every festival contains implicit food theology—what we offer guests, what we consider celebratory, what we exclude, what abundance means. An examined feast makes these assumptions visible. Before serving, a community might ask: What does this menu say about our values? Whose traditions does it honor? Whose do we ignore? What's genuinely available rather than artificially imported? What costs—environmental, economic, relational—does this abundance carry? Rather than guilt, this examination enables intentional choice. A festival might serve truly local food and tell stories of those who grew it, acknowledge when 'traditional' foods represent recent innovations, or celebrate together through fasting rather than feasting as a counter-practice. Hodja's wisdom includes recognizing that scarcity teaches different lessons than plenty. By examining our feast's assumptions, we transform eating from unconscious consumption into conscious communion—where every meal becomes a statement about what we value and who we truly are together.

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