By Judy Lash Balint
JERUSALEM—Hundreds
of songs and poems extolling Jerusalem have been written over the ages—and
today, Yom Yerushalayim 5756, Jerusalem Day 2006, the day commemorating the
39th anniversary of the reunification of Jerusalem it seems as if they're all
being sung and recited in honor of the city at the center of the Jewish world.
Last night, on stages set up in parks all over the city, the celebrations
began with informal performances featuring Israel's most popular singers that
drew thousands out on a warm late spring evening.
At formal and informal ceremonies marking Jerusalem Day, elected officials and
just plain folk recite the words of Psalms, the writings of the prophets and
modern day poets in praise of Jerusalem.
At the official ceremony on Ammunition Hill, the site of one of the fiercest
battles of the Six Day War, both President Moshe Katzav and Prime Minister
Ehud Olmert cite the ancient words of prayer for the peace and tranquility of
Jerusalem. Olmert quotes the powerful words of Israeli poet Uri Zvi Greenberg:
Woman, here is your son!
On his back Jerusalem stands:
Jerusalem of blood, of abyss, of fragments, of majesty…
On his small back, human back, stands Jerusalem, large and heavy and on
fire…
A voice cries out to him: get on!
Woman, here is your son!
He is drawing far away from you, and illuminating.
Escort him with the blessing of the traveler…
Jonathan Pollard, languishing in his prison cell in Butner, N.C., for
the 21st year of a life sentence he's serving for passing information to
Israel, uses more ancient imagery in a special plea to be read at the
Jerusalem rally calling for his freedom today.
Pollard's words include the admonition penned by 12th century Jewish poet
Yehuda Halevi: "Zion won't you seek the welfare of your captives?"
Pollard writes: "And where is the Nation? I cry out to you from the
depths of my soul: Zion, hallo tishalee eht shlom assiraych? Zion,
won't you seek the welfare of your captives!
If Zion will not seek the welfare of her captives, it is not the personal
problem of the captives. The problem rests entirely upon Zion and upon all who
dwell in Zion."
Pollard supporters gathered outside the American Consulate before joining the
Flag Parade that brought tens of thousands of flag-bearing Israelis clad in
blue and white marching through downtown Jerusalem streets to the front of the
Kotel at dusk. The groups split up to enter the Old City through the various
gates on the eastern side, symbolically marking Israeli sovereignty over all
parts of Jerusalem. They converged on the Kotel joining with thousands of
people spilling over into the streets of the Jewish and Moslem Quarters.
The sounds of prayer and thanksgiving at the Kotel rose up above the ancient
walls—no longer the 'wailing wall' of years when others ruled Jerusalem and
determined the Jewish fate here. A continuous round of prayer and speeches
takes place on into the evening as green and blue lasers dance over buildings
close to the Old City.
For the Ethiopian community, Jerusalem Day has evolved into a memorial day.
Thousands of Ethiopian Jews who trekked through Sudan and the Ethiopian
countryside to take part in Operations Solomon (1991) and Moses (1984) died
before they saw Jerusalem. Their relatives marked the day with prayer and
ceremonies in the Holy City.
All through the heat of the day, groups of school kids and workers committees
spread out in the parks and gardens close to the Old City as they refreshed
themselves before the final hike up to the Kotel. A few dozen hardy types
marched along the fields next to the main Tel Aviv-Jerusalem highway on their
way up to the city, followed by a jeep carrying supplies.
During the day, the main challenge in Jerusalem was getting anywhere. With
roads closed throughout the city center, driving was out of the question. Many
bus routes suspended operations for a couple of hours during the parade, and
so thousands took to the streets in a jovial mass of Jerusalem humanity.
The Cinematheque, an art film house in the valley just below Mt. Zion that
houses Israel's film archives hosted a day-long symposium on Sustainable
Jerusalem that featured panel discussions and screenings of old films about
the city. My Margo is a black and white feature film with a romantic
story line set in Jerusalem of 1969. The audience sighed in collective
nostalgia at each piece of footage of the newly reunified Jerusalem.
Outside in the Cinematheque courtyard against the backdrop of the Tower of
David and Jaffa Gate, a world music band entertained a few dozen people. Back
in my neighborhood a few minutes walk away, it was 12:30 a.m. but nobody minded
that there was an accordion belting out some of the triumphant Jerusalem songs
of the 60s and 70s on an apartment balcony as a group of friends joined in.
Perhaps the song and poetry of the day may best be summed up by the words of
the prophet Isaiah: “For Zion’s sake I will not be silent, and for
Jerusalem’s sake I will not be still, until her righteousness emanates like
bright light, and her salvation blazes like a torch.”
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Judy Lash Balint is an award-winning Jerusalem-based writer and author of
Jerusalem Diaries: In Tense Times. (Gefen) www.jerusalemdiaries.com
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