Saturday, August 22, 2020

Rosh Chodesh Elul

 


In keeping with what I have decided must surely be worthy of being a tradition, I had a hike today to mark Rosh Chodesh – the beginning of the new Jewish month.  It was pretty warm out, but I must say, it was more the warm of Autumn than of summer.  I’ve decided not to be sad that Summer is racing so quickly to Autumn, though, because there are still several more months of hiking in good weather ahead of me.

Elul is the month of preparation and shofar blowing (at least, if you can blow a shofar.  I have a beautiful one from Israel, but I’ve never been able to make a sound out of it, not even a sad little bleat, much less the triumphant LISTEN TO ME of a properly sounded ram’s horn!).  Jews are meant to be more thoughtful, more mindful, in this month leading to Rosh Hashannah, the Jewish New Year, and to Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement.  Elul is about teshuvah, or return.  To where are we returning?  To ourselves – to our best, sweetest selves.  And to those with whom we have relationships – especially if they have become fractious, because now is the time to work at making them better, and return.  And repentance.  The name of the month has been understood to be an acronym for the Hebrew verse “I am my Beloved’s and my Beloved is mine;” or straight from the text:

 אלול: אני לדודי ודודי לי — ani l’dodi v’dodi li

“I am to my beloved as my beloved is to me.”

These lines are from the Song of Solomon, and they’re often used at weddings, but it’s at least as likely that its unknown author created a beautiful allegory about our relationship with God.  And that’s the other point of return for this month: we often don’t think too deeply about our relationship with God – it’s just something that is, unless, of course, something happens that causes us to look closely at it (honestly the ‘something’ is often a tragedy; we don’t always spend as much time acknowledging God in the good that still surrounds us).

Today, I went to Crystal Crescent Trail, a place I visit often – there are three beautiful white-sand beaches there, and a boardwalk past them that leads to a trail up into the woods.  The trail meanders in and out of the woods, and when it is out, you are walking on huge rocks, older than any of us, looking at the Atlantic Ocean in all her glory.  What a place this is to sanctify the new month.  I stopped at the first rocky outcrop, past all the beaches, past the sounds of people – just me and the sound of the ocean.  Even the seagulls were happy to just sit and enjoy the sun – it’s as if they, too, know that weekends of summer are dwindling, and so these days are to enjoy.


From my perch overlooking the ocean, I see the Sambro light.  And there was something big swimming out there, but I cannot tell what it was.  Enough to know that it was there.  Here, it still smells of the sweetness of summer – the trail is perfumed with flowers whose names I don’t know, but whose scent feels like a blessing.  It’s so good to be here, to be alive.


When I’m by the ocean, a refrain of “Mayyim Hayyim” is the accompaniment to my thoughts.  Water and life.  One cannot exist without the other.  Indigenous people the world over know this, and so do Jews.  Throughout the diaspora, we spend months praying for tal (dew, or rain) for Israel.  What Israelis have accomplished in a country built on a desert is remarkable.  They knew – as far back as Miriam the Prophetess and even before – that water is life.  And so they found water, deep underground, and freed it.  And they turned a sunbaked country green.


Here in Canada, we tend to take water for granted – we just turn on the tap, and there it is.  We’re surrounded by it, and we have more fresh water than anywhere else on earth.  This is the month of Elul, a month of teshuvah.  And I think that perhaps my first act of teshuvah should be to raise my voice again and question how it is that with this huge abundance of water, there can still be communities in Canada whose water is unfit, unsafe for drinking, and in some cases, unfit for bathing.  Water is life – and how do we value some lives if we don’t care whether they have access to fresh water?  I have no answers to this question, but I’m searching for them.  And if you want to search, too, just consult your favourite search engine and enter “Water Protectors Canada,” or “Water Protectors Nova Scotia,” or even (sigh) “Alton Gas.”  It’ll be worth your time.

Chodesh tov.