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City Of Prayers And Dreams

     Israel's late and much-loved poet, Yehuda Amichai, said it best:

 

    "The air over Jerusalem is saturated with prayers and dreams

     Like the air over industrial cities

     It is hard to breathe."

 

I felt it, too, when I first came to live in Jerusalem more than 30 years ago. I was born into the laid-back lifestyle of Australia, land of sunshine, wide-open spaces, beaches and barbecues. Jerusalem, by contrast, was oppressive. The people were somber; laughter was rare. Life was so serious.
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It frightened me. I could stand on the corner of a street and hear half-a-dozen languages spoken. I could see old ladies shuffling by, still wearing the faded costumes of lost communities. Soon I'd see a tourist, a soldier, a school child, a monk in a brown habit, a Hassid in a black hat, with his long payot (side curls) swinging as he walked. Nobody was ordinary. I saw every category of saints and sinners, beggars, artists and poets. I too found it hard to breathe.
 
It took many, many years before I felt part of the landscape, one of the passing parade. There were wars and terror attacks, demonstrations and parades. Everything that happened somehow bonded me slowly to this unique city. When I first came I didn't understand the oft-quoted: "Ten measures of beauty came to the world, and nine were taken by Jerusalem."
 
Where were they? Not evident like the snow-clad peaks in Switzerland; the lakes in Wordsworth's daffodil county; the gondolas and the canals of Venice; the Eiffel Tower in Paris. There was nowhere that made you suddenly gasp at a spot so beautiful it was forever etched in your memory.
 
Today I see the beauty. It is in the pearly dawns. It is in the grey stones, gilded when the sun shines. It is in the Western Wall, where sorrowful hearts pour out their hopes and dreams and fears to their Creator. It is in the modest homes, however poor, that nevertheless house silver Sabbath candelabra and shelves of holy books. It is in the eyes and faces of people in the street who have made a commitment to live in this spiritual city.
 
Only in Jerusalem do I fall under this spell. Nothing here is trivial. Everything one does is significant. We feel the full weight of history as we tread stones once trodden by kings and martyrs and warriors. Jerusalem is not just a city it is an emotion. It saturates every fiber of our being. It captures our soul and never lets us go.
 
Now, should someone ask: "Where would you most like to live?" the answer lies ready on our lips: "Only in Jerusalem."
 

Dvora Waysman is the author of 10 books, includingWoman of Jerusalem; The Pomegranate Pendant (soon to be a movie) and its sequel Seeds of the pomegranate; and Esther - a Jerusalem love story. She can be reached at ways@netvision.net.ilor through her website www.dvorawaysman.com

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