I think Tzfat is probably my favorite city in Israel. When I’m there, I feel how I imagine
most people feel in the Old City of Jerusalem—elevated somehow—like the Schechina has truly chosen Tzfat as
His/Her resting place. I love the
rich history that it has to offer, and how so many different sects of Jews live
together in such a small space. I
love the artists’ colony, each shop selling a new and different expression of
love and hope, different entirely from the souvenirs of Ben Yehuda Street. And I associate Tzfat with my Bat Mitzvah, which was a very meaningful
time in my adolescent life. It is
in Tzfat where I purchased my Bat Mitzvah
Tallit (prayer shawl) and where I developed a deep and meaningful
connection with my Bat Mitzvah parsha
(chapter of the Torah) through a beautiful piece of artwork still hanging in my
childhood bedroom.
I love the blue accents on each building, and I love the old
synagogues at every turn. When I
enter the synagogues I feel transported.
To me, the synagogues are an honest expression of a man’s love for G-d,
his fellow Jews, and his religion.
The colors and designs of these old synagogues express a loyalty and
devotion lost on the modern day synagogue. Each is honest and true, a place that invites sincere
personal growth and reflection. I
love the old streets, and discovering something new everywhere I go. So basically, yeah, I love Tzfat.
Andy and I spent a couple days up North during Hanukkah
break, and we spent one of these days in Tzfat. The weather was cold (I had to buy a sweatshirt from a local
store because I was woefully under dressed) and overcast, but I was still
thrilled to be in such a beautiful city.
As Andy and I began the ascent from the artists’ colony to where we had
parked our car (at least ten flights of stairs higher), we encountered a group
of young teenage boys, and one adult.
I witnessed one boy drop a plastic bag on the steps and walk away,
without even a second glance, and I reacted as if this boy had personally
offended me by dropping trash on my front lawn while I was out there
gardening.
“Did you just see that?” I asked Andy.
I was appalled.
How could someone carelessly litter such a beautiful city? Andy asked the boy to pick up the trash
in Hebrew, which he did, and then dropped it in the same spot after we passed
by. Andy again asked him to pick
up the trash, and this time his friends encouraged him, too. For some reason, the boy refused to
pick up the trash, and as the boys walked away, another boy picked up the
bag. We became aware that the boys
were watching us depart, and when we turned around, sure enough, they
were. Things escalated very
quickly, and soon the young boys were throwing around catcalls and insulting
me.
Andy said something very powerful to the boys, which was
completely lost on them, and on the adult who was with them who had refused to
get involved. He told them that
they were living the lives of religious Jews, and that the way they behaved did
not reflect the values they were supposed to be espousing. We learn from various sources in the Jewish
tradition that it is not enough just to study Torah, but that you must go out
and live it. What good are rules
about fair business practice if you don’t have a business? Why should we learn
to love our neighbor as ourselves and treat each other with kindness if we
never have an opportunity to interact with anyone else?
There’s also a teaching that says that one should not pray
in a dirty place. It may be that
the boys we encountered took their home for granted, but I had been praying all
day, even if I wasn’t reciting T’filot,
and I did not want my place of prayer to become overrun with dirt and
trash. Nor did I want it to house
the ugliness of a negative interaction between one person trying to do a mitzvah and another who refused to do t’shuvah. I have to believe that this is why I took the dropped
plastic bag so personally even though it was simply a careless act.
But I won’t let this negative interaction affect the way I
feel about Tzfat—it just goes to show that teenage boys are teenage boys, no
matter where they live or what religion they are.
We had to buy sweatshirts last time we were in Tsfat too! :)
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