A festival dining practice where food sharing becomes paired with question-asking, treating curiosity itself as nourishment.
Food and celebration are traditionally paired in every culture, yet Hodja's tradition suggests another pairing: eating and inquiring. Feasting on the Question transforms festival meals into dialogues where each course arrives with a genuine question for the table. What do we truly need? What have we taken for granted? Why do we gather? These questions don't interrupt eating; they accompany it. This practice reflects Hodja's demonstration that the examined life and joy are not separated but interwoven. Breaking bread while breaking assumptions creates a unique form of nourishment: the body is fed while the mind awakens. Participants taste both food and inquiry, both satisfaction and puzzlement. By ritualizing question-asking within celebration, festivals acknowledge that wisdom hunger and belly hunger are related. The examined joyful life requires sustenance of both kinds, and festivals become spaces where intellectual curiosity and physical pleasure enhance rather than compete with each other.
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