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Holding G‑d in Her Hands


Once, I had a divine revelation.

It was on the holy day of Rosh Hashanah, but I wasn't in the synagogue. I was in a hospital on that very wet morning, in a sterile and depressing geriatrics rehab ward, where a few old bubbies had gathered to hear the sounding of the shofar (the ram's horn sounded on the Jewish new year).

Every year I do this--blow shofar in the hospitals. Every year at least one person cries.

This year there was a bubbeh who didn't seem so old. She was very with-it. The sight of a shofar filled her with excitement. She poured out to me memories of her childhood, it seemed the past had just come awake for her. She had grown up steeped in Chassidic warmth and soul, and even here in Vancouver it had never left her.

She recited the blessing and I began to blow the shofar, softly but clearly. The tears began to come. I'm used to that already I just keep going. But when I finished, that's when it was obvious that G‑d was there in the room. Because she was talking to him.

"Oy, zisseh G‑tt! Tiereh, zisseh G‑tt! Mein zisseh G‑tt!"

She was crying and she was holding G‑d in her hands. The hands of an old bubbeh holding an infinite, timeless G‑d.

She called him "ziss." I had never heard that before. "Ziss" I had heard applied to desserts and to grandchildren. The Psalms of David and the Song of Songs talked about the Almighty in that way. But this was an old bubbeh. Her voice had that tone of love and compassion, yet she was filled with awe. She was crying wth sorrow, with joy, with pain, with longing...yet her words were sweet ecstasy.

I can't translate those words she said. It doesn't work in English, "My dear sweet G‑d." It just doesn't happen.

Because in English you don't talk to G‑d the way a wife talks to her beloved husband, a husband who went away on a distant journey and you never knew if he would return, and now you're suddenly in his arms. Like a mother talks to her small, sweet children and like a daughter talks to her father who she knows will never abandon her. All in one. In English there is no such thing. But in the Yiddish of her childhood she could say it.

For me, her cries smashed through the most profound journeys of the philosophers, popping them like a child pops bubbles in the air, like shadows disappear in the sunshine. They had no meaning here. They are ideas. This is G‑d. The real thing. This was revelation. Something the old bubbies had back there, back then. Something we had lost. Almost.

I had to leave to go to the synagogue. She was still in tears. I discovered I was smiling. You'll think I'm insensitive, but I was helpless before this deep, uplifting joy that just arose from inside.

She cried. I was full of joy. Why shouldn't I be? I had just seen G‑d face to face. Unzer zisseh G-tt.

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By Tzvi Freeman   More articles...  |   RSS Listing of Newest Articles by this Author
Rabbi Tzvi Freeman, a senior editor at Chabad.org, also heads our Ask The Rabbi team. He is the author of Bringing Heaven Down to Earth. To subscribe to regular updates of Rabbi Freeman's writing, visit Freeman Files subscription.
About the artist: Sarah Kranz has been illustrating magazines, webzines and books (including five children’s books) since graduating from the Istituto Europeo di Design, Milan, in 1996. Her clients have included The New York Times and Money Marketing Magazine of London

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Reader Comments
Latest Comments:
Posted: June 21, 2011
Hashem's hand and the shofar
Beyond the beyond.
I DO believe you!
I have 'been there' in a similar situation when my Mother passed-on to 'lichtign Gan Eden", an illuminated Garden of Eden
(Although in a much different way).
How grateful you must feel towards G-d for that experience. May He continue to send you comfort and love.
Posted By Tehilla, Sydney, Australia

Posted: Jan 2, 2011
G´d`s Hands and the sound of shofar
Dear Rabbi Freeman,

It is a beautiful and moving story. I was used to visiting the elderly at nursing homes and their wisdom speak to us.
I can imagine how must God had been felt by that Lady, because the blowing of the shofar has always had a deep impression in my heart. Thank you so much for sharing. Shalom!
Posted By Celia Leal, Sao Paulo, Brazil

Posted: June 28, 2010
Beyond The Beyond.
My wife died in Aug.of 2000. I said kaddish for 11 mnths in lieu of 30 days. During one of the 11 months as I laay sleeping one night, and I usually sleep w.a hand extended, I was awoken unusually. I felt a warm kiss on my forehead, a warm hand clasped my right outstretched hane, and a vry gentle warm kiss on my lips. I rose up and stated my wifes name.....and in that beautiful moment I knew it was her and I said her name out loud.
Also previously I had a shouting of numbers in my ear. I awoke and wondered if that was the ammount of time I had left. That next day I found out that it was the score of some sport that I do not recall. The folliowing week, as I put on my radio, a song came on and was singing a tune by Englebert Humperdink called "Let Me Go."
I believe that there are spirital forces that usually try to guide us and aid us in tines of distress in every possible way...and you bettere believe it!
Posted By Ed., Coconut Creek, U.S.A.

Posted: Sep 28, 2009
Unser Zisseh G-tt
Roughly it means Our Sweet G-d.
Posted By Jody, Greeneville, TN

Posted: Sep 23, 2009
nice
this is a very beautiful and touching story
Posted By shmuel, scranton, pa

Posted: Sep 19, 2009
Unzer zisseh G-tt.
Can you translate this into english for me ? Unzer zisseh G-tt.
Posted By Elsie, Sparta, TN / USA

Posted: Sep 12, 2009
We Embrace (Hold) Each Other
Thank you Rabbi for sharing the story of The Bubbeh Holding G-d In Her Hands!
I can relate to this Bubbeh - Since I began my Conversion Journey earlier this year it is as though G-d and I are tightly embracing each other & staring deeply into each others Love filled eyes....
"Oy, zisseh G‑tt! Tiereh, zisseh G‑tt! Mein zisseh G‑tt!" THANK YOU G-tt For Bringing Me Back Home to You & To My People!
Posted By D'vorah Larssen

Posted: June 9, 2009
Sweet
I smiled too, I can relate to both side. Thank you. How wonderful He is!
Posted By Celine Bennett, Elliot Lake, Canada, Ontario

Posted: Sep 10, 2007
Very beautiful
This story is very beautiful...
Thank you very much for your efforts in support of Jewish people.
Leshana tova tiikatev vetihatem
Posted By Davide, Rome, Italy

Posted: Apr 16, 2006
The Face
This is a very inspiring experience and story!
Posted By Eric S. Kingston, North Hollywood, CA



 


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Holding G‑d in Her Hands
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