"Seeing Jerusalem," Collage by Varda Branfman |
Well-known
verse from Tehillim (Psalms): “If I forget you Jerusalem , my right hand will forget its
skill. My tongue will cleave to my palate.” (137:5-6)
Logical
corollary to that, in my own words: “If I remember you Jerusalem , my tongue will uncleave and I will
speak. My words will be my right hand, forging the way to more of you, Jerusalem .”
You realize that, simultaneously with
your thoughts being clearer, your right hand regains its skill and
you are beginning to remember how to implement what you are now becoming aware
of.
Once I tried remembering Jerusalem for a day.
With everything I did and every place I went, I kept repeating, quietly on my
lips, “Jerusalem .”
That day had its good moments, but the word was only on my lips like a mantra,
and not yet in my heart. Remembering is meant to be much more.
Just
remembering that you want to remember is a sign that your cure has begun.
What is this remembering of Jerusalem ? It’s
a vision. It may begin by remembering that Jerusalem is the inheritance of every
Jew. It’s known and remembered by every Jew, even if they’ve never physically
been here. We all have a vision of it, which is one of the reasons we have
yearned for it throughout history. Jerusalem can
only be remembered when standing within it, within its vision, much as
remembering the Shabbos day means observing it while standing within it. You
can enter it when you look out your window in Jerusalem, or look at a picture
of Jerusalem from wherever in the world you may be standing, or bring to your
mind’s eye a view of the city, or a part of it that you once saw, or would like
to see.
We are given, at birth, a vision of Jerusalem , deep within
our souls, our subconscious awareness. We want to awaken it because we
want to be whole.
For that, we have our holy days and
our holy places, both within us and outside of us. And we have Jerusalem. We
just have to learn how to envision it and move into that vision, living within
it. Jerusalem stands in front of us wherever we are, waiting for us to see
it from wherever we are. That is a very powerful kind of
remembering. When the eyes are open to that, the mouth follows. When
the vision is on the eyes, it’s not hard to bring it in the
eyes, and further in.
Along with that come some
gifts which are inseparable from it: “Nine-tenths of the world’s beauty
was given to Jerusalem.” Beauty like that is not the norm, and it has its
own unique language. “The stones of Eretz Israel -–the
Land of Israel --
shine like gold.” And they are shining here,
visibly, also with their own language. When you enter Jerusalem , you learn
these languages effortlessly, and you learn things you never knew before,
things that need to be heard. Your tongue is uncleaved and you are
ready to speak.
Plug: For more about Varda's collages, please contact her at vardab23@gmail.com (until
we put up a blog of her pictures).