Where Heaven Kissed Earth
"Ultra-Orthodox Taking Over Jerusalem, Seculars Unwelcome," or
"Jerusalem: Where Your Gelt is Accepted, But You Are Not" might
well have been the headlines in several publications, both
here and abroad, that in wake of the world's focus on
Israel's jubilee have reported on the increasing presence and visibility of fervently
Orthodox Jews in the City of Gold. But it may be that the
desired effects hysteria and anger are somewhat premature.
As a youngster, I was greeted at my Jewish day school in suburban
Washington, D.C., by a poster of an ancient map detail depicting
Jerusalem as the world's center. The drawing, of course, was
geographically inaccurate, but it sent a powerful message to
generations of impressionable children living as a minority in a country envisioned by its own
founders as the "new Jerusalem."
Years later, as a rabbinic candidate studying in the Holy City, I found the idea
of Jerusalem's centrality taking on a far more tangible meaning. It was
the summer of 1989; and my father called me with a request. Distant
cousins would be in town shortly. Would I be willing to forego
part of my week-and-a-half vacation to act as their tour guide?
"Certainly," I said. It sounded exciting.
The Kayes were from Northridge, California. Mr. Kaye had grown up in an observant home and
attended a
modern-Orthodox day school. The family, though, was living a more
secular lifestyle. Aspiring to be the consummate host, I
sought out places I reasoned the family would find of interest.
We met a few days later at the LaRomme Hotel. When the conversation
began to falter, I whipped out my list of must-see tourist sites, bus
arrivals and departures, and costs: "Israel
Museum, Center One Shopping Mall..." Mr. Kaye, though, soon grabbed my
hand and smiled.
"We've been in the country for over a week. It's been an almost endless
parade of museums, restaurants, kibbutzim and the like. We came to
Jerusalem to see Jerusalem, not more of American exports and not more
Western culture."
It was a response I had not expected.
For the next several days, a yeshiva-mate, Avrumi Sitko, and I took the
cousins on a tour of Jerusalem as seen through the eyes of the
"ultra-Orthodox." We traveled by foot and when
necessary by bus, tuning our senses to the vibes of the city and the small
details lost on large, fast-paced tour groups. We visited the holy sites
and shared a Sabbath meal at the home of a famous rabbi, where all were
impressed with our host's accessibility and humanity. We joined in the
joyous dancing as a new Torah scroll was paraded through Jerusalem's
labyrinthine alleyways. We watched Chasidic children pray and play and, to
top it off, went on a shopping spree in Mea Shearim.
Although Mrs. Kaye's revealing clothing it was summertime and hot
undoubtedly violated the protocol of the Chareidi neighborhood, she was
not stoned, spat at, or cursed, contrary to the warnings given in America by
secular Israeli friends, yordim who had given up life in
the Land of Milk and Honey for the Country of Steak and Money.
Weeks later, I received a parcel from my cousins containing several
photos and a letter. Of their three weeks in Israel, the note read, it
was the time we spent together in Jerusalem sans the glitzy
nightlife and more earthly distractions that was the most memorable.
It was the one stitch of their trip that made them forget they were
tourists and reminded them they were Jews. Indeed, the experience helped
solidify their understanding of why Jerusalem, despite Jewry's seemingly
endless exile, has always remained central to Jewish life.
It is the reason, I suspect, why someone, somewhere created that
ancient map of my childhood.
NOW THE CHARGE that the "ultra-Orthodox" have "conquered" Jerusalem and
are holding its secular residents and visitors hostage to a minority's whims should be
dismissed; we should re-evaluate the supposed ills brought to the city by
its fervently-religious population, including the "tragedy" of Chareidim
raising large families (thereby offsetting the skyrocketing Arab
birthrate); the "scandal" that their children actually need schools and
governmental agencies to accredit and fund them; the "outrage" that when
those progeny marry, they buy homes and tend to settle in enclaves, as
do both secular Israelis and Arabs; that due to limited space, real
estate prices have begun to soar and, in turn, have forced factories to
relocate; that the community has created a service market tailored to
its needs; that the group puts its collective electoral power behind
candidates sympathetic to its causes; that a generation later, the
process begins yet again.
Certainly we should dismiss these "ills" and the complaints of those who
would be satisfied with nothing less then ghettoizing, far from the eyes
of tourists, Jerusalem's black-hatted "primitives."
BUT OF COURSE, whether the ultra-Orthodox like it or not, the truth is that the Holy
City over the last half-century has gone cosmopolitan and is likely never to turn back. What is
most troubling, however, is that tourists from the Diaspora whose
grandparents might have voluntarily sold their life's possessions for the chance to go
"home" to the Land of the Bible or secular Jerusalemites would today choose to
advance agendas to alter the character of the one city in Judaism that
more than any other epitomizes Jewry's historic claim to its
homeland. Why, having crossed seas, would visitors want to wile away the
time at outdoor cafes or watch Forrest Gump with Hebrew subtitles
on the Sabbath instead of discovering, in a city so fertile with ideas,
why life is so much more than a box of chocolates?
Secularism and hedonism are alive and well elsewhere in a Jewish state that more and more has
become
merely a state of Jews. Jerusalem, however, is Jerusalem only because it
remains Jerusalem, the center of the universe or, as the Talmud describes
it, the place where Heaven first kissed Earth.
Binyamin L. Jolkovsky,
Publisher and editor-in-chief