They died in droves

twelve thousand pairs of them,

so they say—

died of contagious disrespect,

pernicious contention,

these zealous students,

Rabbi Akiva’s boys.

Study buddies run amok,

they sank into backbiting

mud-slinging, one upsmanship;

arguing not for the sake of heaven

but on their own behalf.

Twenty-four thousand politicians of the soul,

ruthless competitors in

the marketplace of spirit,

forgot the untold grace

of paradox, the beauty of

elu v’elu, that these and also these

are the Living words.

It brought a plague upon their heads,

or so the pundits said—

a plague that fell upon them

like poisoned rain,

killing thousands

(and whom have I lately dissed,

ignored, abandoned,

labeled “lesser than,”

in my mad rush up the mountain?),

until the thirty-third day

when the dying stopped, abruptly,

so they say,

on the same date that,

some years later,

the great bar Yokhai,

khai, khai, bar Yokhai

Rabban Shimon bar Yokhai,

Akiva’s brilliant student,

who came to him after the plague,

departed this world, prophet-like,

in a fiery chariot, luminous,

ecstatic as a bridegroom.

On this day of hod sheh’b’hod

this day of splendrous surrender,

mass dying stopped,

and the true death,

the mystical merging,

was revealed,

as it is taught:

“Your term of exile is completed,”

yomar Kadosh.

Exhale! Go get a shave!

Go home and marry

your high school sweetheart!

She who has tended your garden,

go sit in her shade

like the spreading shadow

of a lush fig tree,

and count your blessings.

And what do we know

of those sweethearts,

those women—

the mothers, sisters, solitary brides,

waiting, patiently (or not),

for these twenty-four thousand

who would never return,

sitting in courtyards

or before humble hovels,

crushing grain into flour

on their grinding stones,

baking bread in clay ovens,

spinning flax threads and wool threads

day by day, making their own

silent offerings,

doing the unsung work,

waiting eagerly (or not)

to greet their young men—

each son, each brother,

each husband—

not knowing they

have died in the wars of

othering, of besting,

of putting down—

not knowing they

did not live

to fight another day?

Hod sheh’b’hod,

surrender to the splendor!

Light a bonfire

on the hillside of your heart,

in the forest of your mind!

Burn through the fakery,

the stubbornness

that passes for

endurance, the

ephemeral victories

that call themselves “eternal.”

Soften stiff hips, aching knees,

as you sink into the deepest bow,

allying hips and legs

with heart and belly.

Groan with the earth,

sigh with the tides,

wave with the sheaves,

let pride and greed evaporate

and rise to cloud,

then fall as rain,

purified, gentle—

a healing rain

of humble blessing.

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