Lawrence Hall Mhall46184@aol.com Dispatches for the Colonial Office
The Crown of Rachel
From an idea inspired by Nat Lipstadt while we discussing something else
A dream about our teacher Akiva of Yavna When the Romans took a respite from murdering us: In our youth we approached a little house Though we were tired from following the goats all day
Akiva was tired from tending his beans And from Jacob-wrestling with great ideas But he smiled and asked what he could do Do for us little children bubbling with questions
“I am inventing the synagogue,” he might have said “What is a synagogue? A new kind of Temple?” “It is a machine for learning, a temple of the mind A school, an altar upon we sacrifice our ignorance”
“But the Romans won’t let us sacrifice anything” “Sometimes” said Akiva wryly, “they sacrifice us But in the synagogue we will have a little light Light and Torah and learning, always learning”
“We want to learn.”
“Oh? And what do you want to learn?” he asked of us
“We want to learn.”
He smiled and sat us at a table under his vines “I learned to read when I was forty,” he said As he took out a tablet and a stylus One of us said, “I can’t imagine being that old!”
Our teacher smiled, smoothed the day from the wax And instructed us to attend to the Word “The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom” That is what he said, not what he wrote in the wax
Akiva prayed, he prayed for us, and wrote And in the wax the letters formed as fire As gold and fire: