I don’t know if it’s anywhere in the Bible or if it’s just
“conventional understanding” amongst the Believers. But I imagine there is a nasty afterlife “payback”
exacted for deliberately stiffing a nun.
And I’m gonna get it.
Because I did that.
I am hoping this confession will mitigate the prescribed
penalty. But I don’t know. The “Confessional Drop-Down” is unlikely to
traverse ecumenical boundaries, applying only to “team players”, not to culpable outsiders, notwithstanding
the fact that the predominant character in that celestial scenario was
originally one of us, before things took a startling, inspirational “turn for
the better.” See (the definitive): “How The Jews Lost The Lead”, written by Earl
Pomerantz.
1970.
I go to Israel with my grandfather. He’s affiliated with a tour; I’m not. We fly there and back together,
reconnoitering regularly during the two-week excursion. The rest of the time I am entirely on my own,
following an itinerary tailored to my personal specifications. (It is unlikely I would embark on such an
independent undertaking today. You get
old, you want to tour guide and a bus. Due
to an predictable dip in “adventuresome-osterone.”)
I like history, including Biblical history. I visit “Abraham’s Tomb”, hoping it is actually
Abraham’s tomb, not some randomly selected hole in a mountain they slapped an
“Abraham’s Tomb” sign in front of. It
looked believably “tomblike” to me, but, hardly an archeological authority, I
could have easily been hoodwinked.
I visit, more confidently, the Sea of Galilee because it is demonstrably the Sea of Galilee and not
a giant hole they filled up with water and said, “Jesus walked on this.” At least I don’t think they did that. The
place is basically a desert. Where would
they get all that water?
Here’s how small the country of Israel is. My self-styled itinerary called for me to fly
to the northernmost region of the country to visit a never-met cousin who lived
in kibbutz Kfar Blum since the
earliest days of Israel’s existence. When
inclement weather conditions caused my scheduled flight to be cancelled, I was surprised
when they offered to drive me there instead.
Imagine! A plane
flight to the northernmost boundary of the country, replaced by a doable four-hour
car drive. It’s over a six-hour drive
from Los Angeles. to San Francisco, and you are still deep in California. You drive north six hours in Israel and you’re
in Lebanon.
Anyway, I am “foot-dragging”, dreading my unpardonable “Moment
of my Shame.”
All right, said the Nike
slogan swallower, let’s Just Do it! Swoosh!
While staying in Jerusalem, I found accommodation at the
East Jerusalem YMCA (which they
anagramically called “Eemka.”) Our
trip’s timing was fortuitous. We went
three years after the 1967 war. With
Israel’s victory, the captured Old City of Jerusalem was now available to all travelers.
Unlike, say, the New York YMCA, which looks like a building – and a somewhat seedy building
at that – the East Jerusalem Y of
that period – Internet pictures reveal a less evocative replacement – reflected
the architectural configuration of a traditional Turkish palace, replete with
wicker window treatment accessorizing and multiple, spiring minarets. Nothing grand, like a potentate’s
residence. A diminutive replica, housing
the potentate’s gardener.
Anyway, the primary appeal of the place, beyond its Y-appropriate pricing, was its incomparable
location, two blocks from the Ancient City of Jerusalem, adjacent to which
stood the redoubtable “Western Wall”, a two-millennial-old construction, which,
along with “Stonehenge”, are the only landmarks I have ever visited generating
a palpable, electrical “Force Field.”
There is little that is more exhilarating for me than to walk
in a place people walked in in Antiquity, a place that, minus the neon, felt intrinsically
unchanged.
So there I am, exploring the Old City. And I hear a voice say,
“Excuse me, sir.
Would you like to visit the ‘Stations of the Cross’?
I turn in the speaker’s direction,
And it’s Sally Field, from The Flying Nun.
Except it’s not. It is
instead the genuine article. Speaking to
me, from the Cradle of Religiosity.
So, as it was Biblically foretold:
“He wandered aimlessly
in the Land of his Ancestors, and lo, a voice from the multitudes offereth a
tour.”
To Be Continued…
God willing.
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