Cholent
G-d, how long?! (Psalms 90:13)
The story is told of
a simple, unlettered Jew who kept a tavern on a distant
crossroads many weeks’ journey from the nearest Jewish
community, who one year decided to make the trip
to the Jewish town for Rosh HaShanah.
When he entered the shul
on Rosh HaShanah morning, it was already packed with
worshippers and the service was well underway. Scarcely
knowing which way to hold the prayer book, he draped
his tallit over his head and took an inconspicuous place against
the back wall.
Hours passed. Hunger was beginning to gnaw
at his insides, but impassioned sounds of prayer around
him showed no signs of abating. Visions of the sumptuous
holiday meal awaiting him at his lodgings made his
eyes water in pain. What was taking so long? Haven’t
we prayed enough? Still the service stretched on.
Suddenly, as the cantor reached a particularly
stirring passage, the entire congregation burst into
tears. “Why is everyone weeping?” wondered the tavernkeeper.
Then it dawned on him. Of course! They, too, are hungry.
They, too, are thinking of the elusive meal and endless
service. With a new surge of self-pity he gave vent
to his anguish; a new wail joined the others as he,
too, bawled his heart out.
But after a while the weeping let up, finally
quieting to a sprinkling of exceptionally pious worshippers.
Our hungry tavernkeeper’s hopes soared, but the prayers
went on. And on. Why have they stopped crying? he
wondered. Are they no longer hungry?
Then he remembered the cholent.
What a cholent
he had waiting for him! Everything else his wife had
prepared for the holiday meal paled in comparison
to that cholent. He distinctly remembered the juicy
cut of meat she had put into the cholent when she set it on the fire the previous
afternoon. And our tavernkeeper knew one thing about
cholent:
the longer it cooks, the more sumptuous your cholent.
He’d glanced under the lid on his way to shul this
morning, when the cholent
had already been going for some eighteen hours; good,
he’d sniffed approvingly, but give it another few
hours, and ahhhh... A few hours of aching feet and
a hollow stomach are a small price to pay considering
what was developing under that lid with each passing
minute.
Obviously, that’s what his fellow worshippers
are thinking, as well. They, too, have a cholent
simmering on their stovetop. No wonder they’ve stopped
crying. Let the service go on, he consoled himself,
the longer the better.
And on the service went. His stomach felt like
raw leather, his knees grew weak with hunger, his
head throbbed in pain, his throat burned with suppressed
tears. But whenever he felt that he simply could not
hold out a moment longer, he thought of his cholent,
envisioning what was happening to that piece of meat
at that very moment: the steady crisping on the outside,
the softening on the inside, the blending of flavors
with the potatoes, beans, kishkeh and spices in the pot. Every minute
longer, he kept telling himself, is another minute
on the fire for my cholent.
An hour later, the cantor launched into another
exceptionally moving piece. As his tremulous voice
painted the awesome scene of Divine judgment unfolding
in the heavens, the entire shul
broke down weeping once again. At this point, the
dam burst in this simple Jew’s heart, for he well
understood what was on his fellow worshippers’ minds.
“Enough is enough!” he sobbed. “Never mind the cholent!
It’s been cooking long enough! I’m hungry! I want
to go home...!”
Scattered Sparks
Jewish history is a cholent.
The Talmud states that “The people of Israel
were exiled amongst the nations only so that converts
may be added to them.” On the most basic level,
this is a reference to those non-Jews who, in the
centuries of our dispersion, have come in contact
with the Jewish people and decided to convert to Judaism.
But Chassidic teaching explains that the Talmud is
also referring to the many other “souls” which we
have transformed and elevated in the course of our
exile—the “sparks of holiness” contained within the
physical creation.
Every created entity has a spark of G-dliness
within it, a pinpoint of divinity that constitutes
its “soul”—its spiritual function and design. And
when we utilize something to serve the Creator, we
penetrate its shell of mundanity, revealing and realizing
its Divine essence.
It is to this end that we have been scattered
across the six continents—so that we may come in contact
with the “sparks of holiness” which await redemption in
every corner of the globe. So that a printing press
in Boston should print a work of Torah learning on
paper manufactured by a Pennsylvania mill from a tree
which grew in Oregon. So that a forest clearing in
Poland should serve as the site for a wandering Jew’s
prayers and that a scientific theory developed in
a British university should aid a Jew in his appreciation
of the Divine wisdom inherent in the natural world.
And the holier the spark, the deeper it lies
buried. The Kabbalistic masters employ the analogy
of a collapsed wall—the highest stones are the ones
which fall the farthest. By the same token, when G-d
invested His will in His creation, He caused its loftiest
elements to descend to the most distant and spiritually
desolate corners of the earth. Hence our galut—our exile from the Holy Land, our subjugation to alien
governments and cultures, the cessation of G-d’s open
and direct involvement in our lives and our seeming
abandonment to chance and fate. All this is “a descent
for the sake of ascent,” a mission to the most forsaken
points of earth—spiritually as well as geographically—to
extract the exceptionally lofty “sparks” they contain.
Thus, the more painful the galut,
the more challenging its trials, the lowlier the elements
it confronts us with—the greater its rewards. Every
additional minute of galut
represents more sparks of holiness redeemed, and its
every further descent brings a deeper dimension of
the Divine purpose to fruition.
But there comes a point at which every Jew
must cry out from the very depths of his being: “Enough
already! The cholent has been cooking long enough! We want to come home!”