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IN-DEPTH FEATURES
I'm sitting in my kitchen, in my third-floor apartment,
drinking my coffee. The wind outside is howling, trying to
break through the window. We need to insulate better I tell
myself, and proceed to check the condition of the window.
While I'm standing really close to the window I hear a car
announcing a funeral by loudspeaker.
I open the window a smidgen, just enough to hear who was
deceased but not enough to allow the cold to enter my heated
house. When the loudspeaker approaches my house, I hear the
announcement, "The boy's funeral . . . "
A little boy is no longer alive. He must have been a gift to
his parents and they probably loved him and cared for him
dearly. Who's able to understand the meaning of a child to
his parents as well as I can? I waited fourteen long years
until my eldest was born; I waited fourteen years for my
dear, precious Chaim'ke.
I think of the boy's parents, of his family, his brothers and
sisters, his friends in school. What a tragedy! A boy. A pure
soul.
I hear the loudspeaker repeat the announcement. When I catch
the name of the deceased boy — Moshe ben HaRav Shlomo
Yudelevitz — I cease to feel the biting wind coming
through the open window.
I grab hold of the window to stop myself from falling. I feel
my head spinning and my heart beating rapidly. Moishele! I
know him!
Know him? How can you say that you know a boy that you've
only met a few times in your life?
But how can you not say that you know a boy who turned your
life around, who cared about you and renewed your faith in
man?
"The funeral procession will depart from the funeral home at
9:00 p.m. . . . "
I can't stop my tears. I grab my hat and jacket, say a few
words to my wife and head for the door.
"It can't be him! Maybe someone else has a similar name."
"It can't be; it could be; anything can happen."
Regardless, I find myself hailing a taxi on the street. I
don't know how the driver knew where to take me or even if I
paid him or how much. I arrived at the funeral parlor and the
funeral procession began. More people came. I saw thirteen-
year-olds break down in tears and then I knew that it was he.
That's how he had looked — his curly payos flew
in the wind; his shining eyes reflected the goodness of his
heart. There was always a smile on his face. You could always
see the kindness in him. It was a rare type of goodness. It
seemed like all the goodness in the world was pooled into
those two brown eyes. They were full of empathy and the
desire to help others. Never in my life had I seen eyes like
his.
I can't control myself. I burst out crying. It's the kind of
crying that racks the whole body that releases wave after
wave of emotion. A cry of pain and torment. These are the
kind of tears that you shed when you part with someone who
helped you, someone who cared about you so much. This is the
anguish you feel over the loss of someone who did everything
that they could for you despite the fact that he didn't know
you. Or maybe Moishele helped so much simply because he
didn't know me.
Didn't know you? How could you say that Moishele didn't know
you?
Moishele knew me and delved into the depths of my soul and
touched my sorest spot in just a few brief moments. He knew
what to say and how to relate to the pain, how to empathize.
He knew how to do what a lot of people, even better people,
didn't. Moishele.
Knew me, didn't know me — it doesn't matter.
Whether he did or whether he didn't, he's no longer here.
I feel that I'm melting because I've cried so much. The sobs
become stronger. Tears flow and I have no control over
them.
An elderly man with meticulously curled payos, a long
beard and graying hair approaches me. He hands me a package
of tissues. I thank him with a nod.
"Would you like a drink?" he asks and I refuse. How could
someone drink now? What's he thinking? He doesn't know that
Moishele . . . oy . . . Moishele.
The tears well up in my eyes again. I break down again.
I don't know how they eulogized him or who spoke. I had no
need to hear eulogies. I knew him.
I owe him a lot. Everything. A lot more than a human being is
able to give. After all, he was the shaliach who
helped bring all the joy into my life.
*
It's the first day of the shiva and I can't wait any
longer. I find myself wandering around one of Jerusalem's old
neighborhoods searching for Moishele's house. That is, what
used to be Moishele's house. Oy!
I'm pushing my Chaim'ke in the stroller.
I know that it isn't done. Who brings a four-month-old baby
to pay a condolence call? But I have to bring him. I have no
choice.
The sound of children learning mishnayos wafts out of
a nearby window.
It is so beautiful. Children are so sweet, especially sweet.
You could just stand still and listen to their beautiful
voices. It's pure pleasure. You can smell the sweetness in
the cool Jerusalem air. The mist rises up from between the
old, peeling cheder walls and the benches, which
several generations of sweet children sat upon and learned
mishnayos. The atmosphere uplifts you. It transports
you to a different world, to a place more spiritual, more
elevated.
And I see only one thing in front of me: Moishele.
Moishele learns exceptionally well. He's dedicated. His voice
is sweet and resonant.
"Chaim'ke," I tell my little son, "listen. You have to be
like this one day. You must be like this, if not for me than
for Moishele."
Walking in the narrow, windy Jerusalem streets while
searching for Moishele's house, we lose our way. Finally we
arrive. Large bereavement notices are pasted on the outside
walls of the building.
"The pure child that passed away at a tender age . . . "
We enter the small, crowded house that used to be
Moishele's.
It was here in this house that Moishele was taught to give
wholeheartedly. It was here that the seeds were planted for
Moishele's greatness to sprout. Here he acquired a love for
Torah and yiras Shomayim. This is where Moishele grew
up.
We sit down silently. Chaim'ke is on my lap. And then I can't
stop myself again. I cry, brokenhearted. I grieve over a dear
child that is no longer. Chaim'ke gets scared and begins to
cry also.
I encourage the baby. "Cry Chaim'ke, cry. If you didn't get
to know Moishele, at least cry for him."
The two of us, father and son, sit in the small Yerushalmi
house, mourning Moishele.
The members of Moishele's family look at us
uncomprehendingly. I understand them; if I were them I would
also like to ask what a Sephardi avreich with a little
baby is doing in an old Yerushalmi house on the first day of
the shiva for their son. And why is he crying so much?
Why doesn't he stop?
But they don't ask. I hear other people wiping away their
tears. I feel that I can't hold it in any longer. I have to
tell them.
That's why I came.
*
It was a year and a half ago. It was a boiling hot day in
Jerusalem in the throes of summer.
As usual, I was returning to my quiet home for lunch and a
short rest after kollel. I headed for the bus stop at
one o'clock.
I take the long way home every day so that I can pass by the
cheder on the next street over. I like to watch all of
the children walking home from cheder, sweet children
with flapping payos discuss their day in cheerful
tones. Children: Do your parents know how to appreciate the
treasures that they've received? Do they know how to say
thank you?
So much beauty is inside these children, so much happiness
and pleasure.
I take the long way on that scorching summer day, as usual,
and wipe the sweat off my forehead. I won't give up the
scene, no matter what.
At the turn in the road I meet a sweet boy, one of the many
who are leaving school at this time. He looks familiar. He
nods in greeting. He's polite. We've been seeing each other
on our way home now for a long time. Every day we nod hello
to each other and continue walking.
I don't know him and he doesn't know me. But when a Jew sees
someone day in and day out, he says hello. The boy smiles as
he nods; I remain serious, trying to hide what I feel inside
my heart.
But he stops me, unlike previously. "May I ask you a
question?"
I'm taken aback. What could he want to ask, I wonder. I don't
even know his name nor does he know mine. But if he'd like to
ask a question, why not?
He speaks to me respectfully, "I see you passing by here
every day and you always look sad. Is there a way that I can
help you?"
He's sincere, pure, kind.
At first I'm surprised — how can a boy who's about ten
years old see in me what others can't? He looks beneath the
surface, understands and isn't embarrassed to offer help.
It's something rare. How many children are like this? How
many adults?
This is a boy that knows how to look inside a person and to
understand.
I look into his eyes for the first time and I see goodness,
the kind that you don't encounter every day, the kind that
you may have never encountered.
Our eyes meet. The goodness radiates through a pair of pure,
penetrating Yerushalmi eyes.
On second thought, I'm surprised at myself. What good can a
ten-year-old Yerushalmi boy do? What can he do that many
others who are older and wiser than him couldn't?
Of course I didn't say any of this.
But I can't refuse those eyes that so want to help, to make
things better. Those eyes want to share my pain.
Then I find myself leaning on an old Jerusalem fence at one
o'clock in the afternoon on a boiling hot summer day.
Suddenly I'm telling the boy about my life, my sorrow and
myself.
I poured out my heart to him in a way I haven't done in
years. I told him how much I long for a child, how much I
yearn for one and how much I'm lacking without one to fill my
house. I tell him what it's like to go everywhere alone
— to family celebrations, to shul, everywhere.
It's a void I always feel on Shabbos and holidays when the
table is so empty. The house is too quiet, too neat. It
yearns for a child's voice to fill it, for a child to spill
toys all over, for someone to make a mess, to cry, to laugh,
to bring a little bit of joy home.
I never brought my own son to cheder. I never asked a
child to leave me alone for a little bit. I was never woken
up in the middle of the night by the sound of my child
crying.
The years pass one after another. We've already waited
thirteen years and . . . nothing.
I see that he understands; I see his large brown eyes looking
straight at me. They share my pain.
"That's all," I finish my story and plan to ask him how a ten-
year-old Yerushalmi boy can help.
He looks at me for another minute. Then he opens his bag and
pulls out a pencil and note pad. He asks that I write down
our names.
"Everything will be fine," he says. "G-d willing."
I look at him and don't understand. What will be fine?
Nothing's fine. Where does his confidence come from? What can
he do?
But I don't say anything. I carefully write down our names
and add, `yearning for children.' Then I return the tidy
notebook to him and say good-bye to him with a nod. I don't
have anything else to say. I take a few steps and then stop.
Wait a minute. He knows everything about me and I don't know
anything about him. I don't even know his name.
"Hey," I call after him. He turns around.
"What's your name," I ask him. He smiles.
"I forgot to tell you; my name's Moishele — Moishele
Yudelevitz."
I etch his name into my memory. You can't forget the name of
a kid like this.
"Bye," I say and start walking in the direction of the bus
stop.
My wife must be worried. I'm never late in the afternoon.
What reason would I have to be late?
I've never had a reason to hop into a toy store to pick up a
prize that I promised or a book that a child needs. I only
wish that I had to do such things.
While sitting in the bus I find myself thinking about
Moishele, the first child who ever really showed an interest
in me, who ever wanted to help me.
But then I start to doubt that Moishele could make a
difference.
I'm hot. I open the window.
"Excuse me," I hear from the seat behind me, "the air
conditioning is on."
I mumble "Sorry," and close the window. I wipe the sweat off
my forehead. I'm boiling. How can air conditioning alleviate
a heat wave that originates deep inside the heart?
I see Moishele again the next day. "Hello," he says, "A group
of us kids are staying after school to say Tehillim,"
he explains as if it were the obvious thing to do. I'm
surprised. Delighted. My spirits begin to soar.
"Do you have any news?" he asks with the innocence of a
child. I shake my head no.
"Bye," he says and we each continue on our way.
Two weeks later I bump into Moishele again. "Well?" he asks.
His eyes shine with emunoh .
I look back at him and don't say a word. "We'll continue," he
informs me, "and everything will be fine, G-d willing."
Then he adds, "They're waiting for me," and heads back to
cheder. I continue walking toward the bus stop,
thinking about what he said. `Everything will be fine, G-d
willing.' That's the faith of children. It's so simple and
obvious to him. He stays after school every day with his
friends and says Tehillim, to ask Father,
Hashem, to help and he believes that everything will
work out, just like that.
*
Nine months later I walk down the familiar back streets once
again. No, I'm not walking, I'm dancing. My legs feel
weightless, I feel like I'm floating. I can't contain my joy.
I stop at the cheder and wait.
Soon I'll also be able to send my son to cheder, soon
I'll be able to listen to my own son learn Mishnayos
out loud.
What joy! I am so grateful. I run towards Moishele when I
spot him in the distance. I can't wait for him to come.
I grab Moishele and hug and kiss him. Children gather around
us to watch.
"Moishele," I shout, "We had a boy!"
Moishele's eyes beam with joy. We almost danced right there
on the spot.
"Mazel Tov! Mazel Tov!" Moishele says.
We just look at each other. We can't say anything more.
There's nothing else to be said.
Our hearts overflow with happiness. I say both of our hearts
because someone who shares the pain, who understands, who
helps is also a full participant in the joy.
"I have to tell my friends," Moishele says.
"Of course — how could you not share the news with the
people that prayed on our behalf?"
"Wait a second," I call after him, "The bris will be
on Sunday, G-d willing, at nine o'clock in the hall next to
the kollel."
"Great," he says.
*
"And this is my Chaim'ke," I finish telling the mourners my
story and hug the baby.
This is the Chaim'ke for whom I waited fourteen years. This
is the baby that brought so much joy into our lives.
Chaim'ke is hungry. He begins to cry. I join him.
Everyone cries along with the baby. We all sit in the small,
crowded house and cry. We mourn for Moishele.
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