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  • Space At The Wall

    SPACE AT THE WALL
    By Sarah Shapiro

    Jewish Action
    September 18, 2008
    NY

    Sibling rivalry is not just for siblings, and family's not just the
    nuclear kind. Yesterday at 5 a.m., wanting some quality time alone
    with my Creator, the fact that the #2 to the Western Wall was packed
    full of my brethren didn't seem like anything to celebrate, nor did
    the sight, when I stepped off the bus, of two long lines already at
    the turnstiles, waiting for the security check.

    It's always like this in the weeks before Rosh HaShana, and shouldn't
    that make me happy? Happy it's not some end-of-season sale which has
    Jews of myriad persuasions rising in great numbers before the break of
    day, but rather, a desire to address G-d at this particular spot, and
    think one's innermost thoughts before these particular stones. Don't
    ask me how, or why - after all, it's been going on for centuries --
    but there's something about this place that inexplicably arouses our
    real selves. If you want to face yourself, face the Wall. If you want
    to see your life more clearly, come here and close your eyes.

    In the gray half-light of dawn, a shrill shofar was piercing the air,
    and on the wide plaza stretching out adjacent to the site, about a
    hundred singing, flag-wielding children in a Bnei Akiva youth group sat
    cross-legged in a huge circle, arms draped over each other's shoulders,
    swaying back and forth to the beat of Zionist folk songs. Turning
    right into the women's section, I saw that my access to the Kotel
    was hindered not only by whatever petty thoughts were going through
    my mind at the time, but also by a tourist group in yellow T-shirts
    and matching beanies, and women in headscarves Mea Shearim-style,
    and teenagers in long funky dresses a la Shlomo Carlbach. One long
    row of plastic chairs was occupied by about a dozen American women in
    yarmulkes and Reform tallisim. There were mothers with carriages,
    little kids running and talking, and an elderly Moroccan being
    pushed in a wheelchair. A fragile-looking Yemenite in her twenties -
    suffering from some debilitating illness - supported herself on a
    walker as she searched for an empty crevice in the stone to insert a
    handwritten note. There were schoolgirls in navy-blue pleated skirts;
    beggars circulating with palms outstretched; clusters of pony-tailed
    soldiers in IDF uniform.

    All this might be a heartwarming sight, good for one of those
    "We Are One" ads put out by the Jewish Federations or for Israel's
    PR at the UN, another futile attempt to convince the world we're
    not racists. We are in fact a many-raced nation from many lands,
    disparate individuals drawn inexplicably to this particular spot
    and bonded in spite of ourselves by the ancient covenant which the
    majority of us find so hard to take seriously. Surely as individuals
    we have our fleeting private moments of epiphany and insight, and
    during war and emergency, do find ourselves more unified than usual,
    as in any country at times of danger. But what would it take for us
    to understand that from G-d's perspective, we are, actually, one?

    Eventually I spotted an opening and wended my way through the
    crowd. But no sooner had I touched my hand to the Wall than I was
    already distracted by the gesticulations and exclamations of the
    person on my right.

    Garbed in the traditional white garments of Ethiopia, with a turban
    wound up high on her head, a woman in her seventies was leaning
    forward from a chair with eyes shut tight, elbows propped on knees,
    face up close to the stone. The gesturing of her hands was that of
    a person absorbed in a vivid argument with a friend - uninhibited
    disagreement and affectionate chiding, persuasion, impatient protests -
    and I couldn't help but listen in to the intimately murmured, insistent
    monologue carried on in her foreign tongue.

    The vehement tête-a-tête went on, and on, and my own prayer began to
    wilt. Unfettered belief such as hers was an unwelcome reminder, just
    then, of the tricky existential questions that nibble away at the back
    of Western minds. This woman obviously had no doubt that the Master of
    the Universe was paying close attention to every word she said; that He
    took her complaints seriously (more so, by far, than we take ourselves)
    and loved her as she was, with her weaknesses, even while continuing to
    send her the problems she was begging Him to solve. It was obviously
    no concern of hers who else might be talking to Him at the same time,
    nor did it present any sort of conceptual problem that everyone else
    was also clamoring for her Father's undivided love and individual
    attention. It was a given that listening to two human beings at once
    - or ten, or two billion - posed no problem for our Creator. Wonders
    incomprehensibly greater than this does He perform unceasingly.

    When it came time for me to rise and say the Amidah -- the portion of
    dovening which must be audible only to one's own ears, recited standing
    with both feet close together, without interruption or movement --
    I found myself hamming it up (for her benefit, if not His.) I took
    those three nifty little steps forward and back with pious precision,
    rising up on my toes like some kind of professional gymnast and bowing
    this way and that as if Queen Elizabeth were around.

    My final bow was especially deep, and long. But I myself was not
    convinced.

    * * *

    Afterwards, walking backwards -- as is the custom, so as not to turn
    one's back to the Wall -- I noticed Malka on the plaza's edge.

    Malka, of indeterminate age, is a seventh-generation
    Yerushalmi. Pausing to drop a shekel in her upheld cup, I saw that
    she'd changed since the last time we'd met. The features on one side
    of her face were strangely distorted and twisted downwards in the
    distinctive manner of Bells Palsy, the sudden-onset neurological
    disorder.

    "You know, there are people," she said wryly, "who pretend not to
    see us, the poor people begging. They want Hashem to look at them,
    but from us they turn away their eyes." She smiled as if at a private
    joke. Then, in her melodic, Hebrew-accented English (and as humorist
    Dave Barry says in his Miami Herald columns, I'm not making this up,)
    she then said: "Sometimes it happens that we cannot pray."

    "Funny you should say that, right now," I said, trying not to look
    into the drooping eye on the affected side. "With all these people
    around, I wasn't --"

    "Yes, at night sometimes I go up on the roof, with the stars, and I
    think Hashem, I am the only one with You in the world! But the Jews we
    should not separate ourselves one from the other. This is our strength,
    to put together our souls like one soul. To pray, we must all of us,
    everyone, make ourselves small."

    It was at this moment that I recalled the one and only time - in
    three decades -- that I'd had the Wall almost all to myself.

    * * *

    On the first day of Rosh HaShana in the year 2000, I woke early
    and decided to daven at the Kotel. A recurring theme in Judaism is
    the importance of beginnings, and this was the start not only of a
    new year but also - by the Gregorian calendar -- a new millennium,
    Actually, Y2K was on its way and for all we knew, civilization was
    about to self-destruct.

    My husband and children were still asleep as I slipped out into the
    pre-dawn darkness. In Jerusalem on a major holiday such as this, the
    buses don't run, all stores are closed. And at half past five in the
    morning, it wasn't surprising to find that the whole world belonged
    to me. Walking along Rechov Shmuel HaNavi, continuing up Shivtei
    Yisrael as the sky turned a pale coral and pink-tinged clouds sailed
    fast overhead, autumn's earliest coolness was carried on the breeze.

    Not a car could be seen. Passing under Jaffa Gate and entering the
    Old City, I paused. Should I take the shortcut through the Arab
    shuk or play it safe and go by way of the Armenian Quarter? I heard
    footsteps at my back and turned - a little scared, then relieved --
    to see a former neighbor. We'd forgotten each other's names but joined
    up together and decided to take the shorter route.

    Our heels clicked merrily on the stone steps descending into the Arab
    market. It was now 6 am. My companion and I talked as we walked,
    but about halfway through, she said, "It's strange we're the only
    ones here, isn't it?" Even the usual men with their donkey carts
    were nowhere to be seen, and by this hour, at least some of the Arab
    storekeepers would have usually opened up for business.

    We continued on.

    When we emerged from the shuk's cavernous dimness, we stood at the
    top of the staircase overlooking the Wall - with the blue and gold
    dome of the mosque glimmering high in the background - and my heart
    rose like a bird. On the men's side, there were perhaps two or perhaps
    three worshippers, but the women's side was mine for the taking. Not
    even in the first years after making aliyah, long before Israel's
    population explosion, had I ever seen it so empty.

    My companion took one half of the women's section and I the other. My
    Rosh HaShana davening lifted me on wings, where I'd been longing to
    go, and with remarkable aim -- in spite of having so few targets --
    one of the pigeons nesting in the Wall managed to crown my head that
    day as only they know how.

    Only later did I find out why this peace had been ours. Having been
    so busy cooking and cleaning in preparation for the Holiday, I hadn't
    listened to the news. The day before, Palestinian rioters had thrown
    rocks from the Temple Mount onto the Jews praying down below, and a
    curfew had been clamped down on the Arab quarter.

    It was the opening round of the cruelest, most murderous, most brutal
    of all the intifadas.

    That's how I learned to love the crowded bus, and be glad at the Wall
    when there's no room at all.

    Sarah Shapiro's most recent books are "Wish I Were Here" [Artscroll],
    and "The Mother in Our Lives"[Targum/Feldheim]. Sarah Shapiro teaches
    writing in Israel and the United States. This article was reprinted
    with permission.

    --Boundary_(ID_O3GdPqWOxviTaLfUNIDdVQ )--
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