|
Some Very Quick Thoughts About a Very Special
Place
By Robin Treistman
We
all know how central Jerusalem is. Three of the world's major
religions consider it a focal point. In fact, each claims
to have a patent on Jerusalem. Daily Jewish life centers around
it, as one is commanded to pray facing Jerusalem, no matter
where in the world the prayer is said. What makes this place,
(after all, it is JUST a place on a map), so special?
No matter their personal belief, people who visit Jerusalem
have a tendency to call it the most beautiful city in the
world or a city which awakened their spirituality; but sometimes,
people just call Jerusalem "special" without really being
able to put their finger on what makes it so.
Maybe Jerusalem is more than just a place.
Looking at the source of the name of Jerusalem, the Bible,
mentions the city in Genesis by a slightly different name.
The story there is as follows: Abraham had just gone out to
war to rescue his captive nephew, Lot. Without going into
too much detail, Lot had been taken captive by a group of
four kings which had previously overthrown a group of five
other kings. Abraham, with his meager crew went to war against
these four kings and won. Flushed with success, he chased
them far away enough that Lot and the five other kings didn't
have to worry about further harassment from them. On his way
back home, Abraham was greeted by the kings that he saved
and by another guy: "...And Malki- Tzedek, the king of Shalem,
brought out bread and wine, and he was a Priest to the Lord
on High" (Genesis 14;19). The Jewish commentators agree that
"Shalem" is Jerusalem, and Malki-Tzedek was indeed a priest
performing monotheistic religious rites there. (Note: many
believe he was actually Shem, the son of Noah.)
Shalem. We can see how the root word is related to "Yerushalayim".
Shalem, not coincidentally, is the same root as "Shalom,"
or peace. But it is also an adjective which means whole, complete,
or perfect. This King Malki-Tzedek, whose name is translated
as the "King of Justice, was the overseer of the "perfect"
city.
Let's go back in time a bit more. According to the story
of Creation in the Bible, Man was formed from the dust of
the earth. Midrashic literature deals with the question, where
was this particular dust taken from? Rashi (Rabbi Shlomo Yitzchaki)
quotes two midrashic sources which answer the question. One
suggests that the dust was taken from the four "directions"
- meaning from all over the entire earth. The other states
that man is made up from dust taken from where the Temple
was to stand in the future. Based on that second opinion,
it appears that there is a little bit of Jerusalem in every
human being.
What could that mean? Well, if we take Jerusalem's first
recorded name, Shalem, you can see that all of us have the
inner potential for perfection. BUT, in order to achieve this
perfection, one has to be a "Malki-Tzedek" - a king of justice
- a lover of humanity, devoted to doing good, and effecting
the rest of the world toward a positive change.
So on this Yom Yerushalayim, when our 3000 years of linkage
is being called into question, remember that Jerusalem is
more than just a place on a map. It is a special place - besides
being a place to go, it is also a destination we must reach.
---------------------------------------------------------
« JPost Front Page
| Other
JPost publications »
|
 |
navigation »
---------------------
Jpost Features
---------------------
Don't know much about history
The Golan capture
Happy (?) Jerusalem Day
Remembering the war between wars
---------------------
Six Day War
---------------------
Avihu Bin-Nun:
First Strike
A defender of Jerusalem
Ori Orr: Bloody
Gaza
Yossi Ronnen:
Live from the Western Wall
Follow the cobblestone road
Teddy Kollek: A stroll down memory
lane
Mike Ronen: "They were a different
lot back then..."
---------------------
Six Day War
30th Anniversary
by Abraham Rabinovich
---------------------
The War Nobody Wanted
View from the Nile
The third day: A personal account
---------------------
Photo Tour
---------------------
Jerusalem
1948 photo album
---------------------
Jerusalem Day
---------------------
Jerusalem, Jerusalem
The Moslem Direction
Six Days, Three Brigades, One Jerusalem
Selections on the Return of the Old
City and Kotel to the Jewish People
Some Very Quick Thoughts About
a Very Special Place
Yehuda Amichai:
Four Poems About Jerusalem
---------------------
Other Links
---------------------
Holy
Land Panoramas
Jerusalem
of Gold
Western
Wall Pictures
|