Notes on Not Being Able to Pray at The Wailing Wall

09/8/09  Print this post Print this post    4 Comments   Popular   Written by Robert Hirschfield
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All photos by the author.
Robert Hirshfield sees a sign only he can read: Only Those Serious About Their Souls May Enter Here.

My tiny digital camera weaves and bobs on the security belt. I am scanned from armpit to ankle. I tingle. Is it because I feel myself threatened, or because I feel myself a threat?

The Israeli policeman waves me through. I am cleared to pray.

The roar of prayer sweeping across the plaza from the Wall makes an angry sea sound. Jerusalem suffers from being a holy city on the bank of no river. It needs water. Water would wean it off words.  Would help wash down the tonnage of scripture that has gone into making this city.

The Wailing Wall sat on our kitchen table in the Bronx. Wrapped around the family charity box, it looked brittle from centuries of being touched and wept upon. It seems to have grown younger, stronger,  with time.

Hasidim quake like black-jacketed exclamation marks who have arrived at last at the end of days. I see a sign visible only  to myself: Only Those Serious About Their Souls May Enter Here.

It is early in the morning, and the other spiritually superficial  tourists are still asleep. I want to say a prayer for my mother who prayed here once, and who died, prayerless, of Alzheimer’s.

I am shy around strangers; it keeps me from talking to God. But here is my chance. The plaza is a landing strip for prayers, the Wall the Ganges of the Jews. It makes me uneasy. It comes wrapped in too much history for me. Wrapped and re-wrapped. A stone chronicle of destruction, lamentation, resurrection.

My prayer, still embryonic, needs a place scrubbed of grandeur.  Some place small. Some place I can whisper into. Smaller even than a charity box on a table long ago destroyed.

Community Connection

Please submit notes to david [at] matadornetwork.com

Interested in visiting Jerusalem? Check out the customs you should know about before going.


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About the Author

Robert Hirschfield

Robert Hirschfield is a free-lance writer and photographer whose work appears in Ode Magazine, The National Catholic Reporter, Outlook (the Indian newsweekly), and the London Jewish Chronicle, among other publications. He has travelled most recently to north and South India, and to Israel and the West Bank.

4 Comments... join the discussion!

  • aryeh replied on October 14, 2009

    write clearly. you’re not impressing anyone.

    ↵ Reply
    • David Miller replied to aryeh on October 15, 2009

      i was very impressed with this piece.

      ↵ Reply
  • Heather Carreiro replied on February 15, 2010

    Wow. This was a very powerful piece.

    ↵ Reply
  • eve replied on February 28, 2010

    This is one of my favorites on Matador. Its style manages eloquence and clarity, and I find it honest and brave. Robert is tackling an incredibly imposing subject juxtaposed against the most controversial of tourist sites – his own soul up against the wall. Thank you for this.

    ↵ Reply

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