Simply,
Shabbat Shalom.
שבת שלום
Jerusalem, Israel – what is really happening
Jerusalem, Israel,
what a week!
Heavy rains fell over Shabbat,
strong enough to wash away layers of ad posters.
Effects of a municipal strike were being felt,
but I went looking for something good.
After the winter rains,
buds were popping out on branches.
In the Valley of the Cross there were
signs of new growth and small pools of water,
and a favorite sight,
rakefet, cyclamen, growing in rock structures.
Gan Sacher, Sacher Park, had puddles and
unattended, uncollected garbage bins.
The Old City was not affected,
as the municipal strike went on for another day,
but in most neighborhood bins were overflowing.
Only the street cats and birds were happy.
Overflowing trash on the streets
near Machane Yehuda Market, the shuk,
was not only an ugly sight,
but unhealthy and dangerous as well.
A friend saw these photos and
thought it was the aftermath of a terror attack.
On Agrippas Street, people waited for buses that did not come,
since buses could only pass through the ugly mess in one direction.
In addition, the mess by the shuk which overflowed on to the streets
caused the light-rail trains to stop running.
Jaffa Road became a pedestrian mall,
perfect for the occasional skate boarder.
Thousands trudged along to find transportation.
However, by walking along Agrippas Street,
I did find a new and colorful piece of graffiti,
and poorly translated signs
are always good for a smile or laugh,
like this one posted across from Cinema City
near the Supreme Court Building.
The strike is finally over.
It will take awhile to clear the mountains of trash accumulated
while the mayor and finance minister feuded.
But at least children are back in school,
so parents can go back to work.
Now back to normal?
It has rained again, and the sun has come out again.
It’s that time of year when the water from the tap
is colder than the water in the refrigerator.
Hope we can go back to complaining about the cold.
But if reality gets too ugly again,
we can go to Beit Avi Chai to see a movie.
It’s free.
January 27, 1945,
the Auschwitz Concentration Camp was liberated.
In 2005, the UN set the day of January 27
to remember the victims of the Holocaust.
What better place to remember than Yad Vashem.
In the Vad Vashem Synagogue are remnants of the past.
Displayed artifacts from Romania,
including part of an Aron Kodesh, the Holy Ark
where the Torah scrolls were kept.
A Torah from Mantte, Transnistria,
covered by a mantle from Salonika, Greece,
stands on exhibit in the back of the synagogue.
This tiny diary holds memories,
of those who so much wanted to live,
expressions of the human spirit.
Stored in Yad Vashem are photos and memories
of those who survived and those who perished.
Not all have names.
Children, so many children murdered.
They left no diaries.
Child survivors are growing older and dying.
Soon a doll collection and memories
will be all that remains.
Holocaust Remembrance Day falls on a Friday this year.
But as the sun sets it will be Shabbat,
and Rosh Chodesh Shevat,
the new month that ushers in the spring.
From the darkness of the Holocaust,
it is time for a new season and renewal.
שבת שלום
חודש טוב
Chodesh tov.