Saturday, August 28, 2021

Shabbos BeMidbar

When the Shtiebel started in-person services last year in the pandemic,

They asked that people bring their own siddurim.

I brought my Chumash with Shabbes prayers in the back

(with Tehillim in my shirt pocket).

 

The rabbanit, when she met me in person for the first time, said,

“Tim, you have a lot of frum books!”

 

Now we have our own building and lots of siddurim and chumashim,

The people passing out the chumashim smiling that the gentile has his own

But I keep bringing my own.

This page is wrinkled a little from that Friday night service next to the Acme when it rained.

The Shabbes liturgy is easy to find from the finger-worn stains.

I know where to look for the Yigdal on Friday night where my siddur has Adon Olam

And where to find Adon Olam on Saturday morning at the end where the siddur has none.

 

The ribbon travels through the Torah portions each week, moving toward the back of the chumash

Like the Israelites wandering in the desert

Like the Shtiebel moving from place to place to daven – eight places in a year

Like my wandering from the Egypt of my parents toward a Promised Land I haven’t yet found

 

But I get my double portion of manna each week – my soul fed by the psalms and Torah and singing Etz Chaim Hi and friendship and words of inspiration and jokes – my body fed by the cholent and lox and kugel and egg salad - and the Dr Pepper I have introduced into the shul

 

Sometimes I read each word of the reading, not always understanding every word

Sometimes I am stopped in awe and wonder – or anger and discomfort – or curiosity and questions – over a phrase, a verse, a word

Usually, I stay in the week’s portion – sometimes I go elsewhere (do I really care about the details of leprosy?) – sometimes I go to multiple portions at once

 

But the page, with its square letters of Torah and round Rashi script letters of commentary, takes me on a journey outside of myself – and deep into the center of myself – and I know, wherever I am in the desert, I’m in

Exactly. The. Right. Place.

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