Dear companions, Phyllis and I have sent t this wistful story out for Tisha BâAv every three or four years. This year it seems especially poignant. Â Shalom, Arthur
 The Last Tisha BâAv: A Tale of New Temples
By Rabbi Arthur Ocean Waskow & Rabbi Phyllis Ocean Berman
To the hills of Israel where the air is clearest and it is possible to see the furthest â-Â
To the little town of Tzâfat, which some call Safed --  above the Lake Kinneret in the Galilee â Â
Long ago there came a Chassid, visiting from Vitebsk to see his Rebbe.
Struggling up hills, over cobblestones, through narrow alleyways, the Chassid came panting, shaking, to the door of a pale and quiet synagogue.
So pale, so quiet was this shul that the pastel paintings on the wall and ceiling stood out as though they were in vivid primary colors.
As the Chassid came into the shul, he saw his Rebbe high on a make-shift ladder, painting a picture on the ceiling above the bimah.
The Chassid blinked, startled to see his Rebbe with a paint brush in his hand.
And then he blinked again. He frowned and tugged at his beard:
âRebbe, what is this that you are painting here above the bimah? It looks like the Dome that the Children of Ishmael, the ones they call Muslims, have built above the rock where Abraham bound Isaac.
âThe giant golden Dome that they have built where stood the Holy Temple. I have just come from Jerusalem⌠It looksâŚâ He stopped.
The Rebbeâs eyes turned inward. âYou know,â he said, âHere in Tzâfat we live in the radiance of the Kabbalists who lived and taught here many years ago. The air here is so clear and their radiance so pure that with our outer and our inner eyes we can see and see and see⌠so far! And I have seenâŚâ he said, and paused. âI have seenâŚâ he said and paused again.
âLooking and seeing, they can be so strange. For example â our sages teach us that when Mashiach comes, he will rebuild the Holy Temple in the twinkling of an eye. But often have I wondered: How can this be? Mashiach will be extraordinary, yet still a human being merely âŚ
âBut now! I have seen ⌠Well, let me tell you: At the foot of the Western Wall, the Wall where Godâs Own Presence weeps and hides in exile, I have seen hundreds of thousands of Jews gathered, singing.
âMashiach has come! â â and they are singing, dancing, as the Great Day dawns. Women, men, together â â I could not believe it! I was not even sureâ â â he glanced apologetic at his Chassid â âwhether Mashiach was a wo ⌠well, forget it.
âI can see from the sun, the heat, it is late afternoon. Yet the crowd are wearing tâfillin. The only time in all the year when Jews wear tâfillin in the afternoon is Tisha BâAv, so I can see that it is the day of mourning for our beloved Temple. But there are no signs of mourning â â except perhaps the way, the wistful way, Mashiach reaches out to touch the Wall, to tuck one last petition between the great carved stones.
âI see Mashiach speak a sentence to the crowds. I cannot hear the words, but I can see that from this voice there stirs a river. Like water from the ancient stones of Wall, I see a stream of Jews flow up the stairway that rises to the Temple Mount.
âThe river of people pauses on the steps. They cluster âround a wrinkled, tattered piece of paper, posted above the stairway. I see it is signed by the rabbis of that day. It warns all Jews to go no further, lest by accident they walk â â God forbid! â â into the space set aside as the Holy of Holies.
âMashiach reads. And laughs. And tears the sign to shreds. The stream of people shudders â â higher, higher.
âThe crowd cascades from the stairway onto the great stone pavement of the Temple Mount. Their singing turns to the thunder of a great waterfall. They look toward the other end of the Mount â Âtoward the great golden Dome of the Rock where Abraham bound his son for sacrifice.
âSurrounding the Dome are thousands of these children of Ishmael, these Muslims. They are not singing. They are shouting, furious, stubborn. âNot here!â they shout in unison, âNot here!â
âââYou will not tear down our Holy Mosque to build your Jewish Temple!â
âBut I can hear the crowd of Jews â â muttering, whispering, âRight there, yes! â â That is the place⌠No doubt, no doubt, the ancient studies tell us that it is the place.â
âMashiach is quiet. The sea of Jews falls to a murmuring, falls silent. They turn to watch. Mashiach looks, gazes, embraces with fond eyes the Holy Space. Mashiachâs eyes move across the Dome, its golden glow, the greens and blues and ivories of the walls beneath it.
I hear a whisper from Mashiachâs lips: âSo beautiful!â
âThe Muslims too are silent now. The stillness here, the stillness there â â so total that they split the Holy Mount in two.
âMashiach raises one arrn, slowly, slowly. The Muslims tense, lift knives and clubs and shake them in the stillness. The Jews tense, ready to leap forward with their picks and shovels.
âMashiach points straight at the Dome.
âThe peoples vibrate: two separate phantom ramâs horns in the silent air, wailing forth a silent sob to Heaven.
âMashiach speaks quietly into the utter quiet:
âThis green, this blue, this gold, this Dome â â This is the Holy Temple!â
âIÂ blink.
âFor seconds, minutes, there is not a sound.
âThen I hear a Muslim shout, see him raise a knife: âNo! No! You will not steal our Holy Mosque to make your Jewish Temple!â
âHe throws the knife. It falls far short. No one stirs. The other Muslims turn to look at him. They look with steadfast eyes: no joy, no anger. They just keep looking. He wilts into the crowd; I can no longer see what he is doing.
âMashiach steps forward, one step. Everyone, Jew and Muslim. breathes a breath. One Jew calls out: âYou must not do this. You must not use their dirty place to be our Holy Temple. Tear it down! â â We need our own, the Prophets teach how wide and tall it is to be. It is not this thing of theirs, this thing of curves and circles.
âHe takes a step toward Mashiach, lifts an axe to brandish it.
âThe man beside him reaches out a hand and takes the axe. Just takes it. There is a murmur. but the murmur dies. The man holds the axe level in both hands, walks out with it into the no-Âmanâs land between the crowds. He lays it on the pavement next to the Muslim knife, he backs away.
âThere is another time of quiet. Two Muslims reach out from the crowd, toss their knives to land next to the axe. The pause is shorter this time. Then on every side weapons come flying through the air to land beside the axe, beside the knives. There is a pile. Somehow -- I cannot see how -- there lights a fire. The pile begins to burn. The flames reach up and up and up - â to Heaven.
âSo I have seen,â the Rebbe said, âMashiach build the Temple in the twinkling of an eye. And that is why I am painting this Dome upon our ceiling.â
The visitor took breath again. âAnd why?â he said. âWhy would Mashiach do this dreadful thing?â
The Rebbe put his arm around his Chassidâs shoulder.
âYou still donât see?â he said. âEven here in Tzâfat, you still donât see?
âI think Mashiach had four reasons:
âFirst for the sake of Abrahamâs two families.
âSecond for the sake of the spirals, twirling in the Dorne.
âThird for the sake of the Rock beneath the Dome.
âAnd fourth for the sake of the twinkling of an eye.â
âAnd Rebbe  â why did the people burn their weaponsâ?â
âFor the sake of the burnt offering. It is written that when the Temple is rebuilt, there must be burnt offerings. And it is also written, âChoose!â
âChoose what? Choose what to burn:
âEach other, and the Temple, yet again?
âOr â â the things we use to burn each other with?â
âSo âŚâ said the Chassid, â⌠dear Rebbe â you are saying that the Dome â it really is our Temple?
âForgive me, Rebbe, but I have a different seeing. Where they raised up the burnt-offering I think must be the Temple. The empty space. The empty space where the offering went up in flames to Heaven.
âThe empty space between them, where they burned the weapons â â perhaps that is the Templeâ?
âOurs and theirs?â
The Rebbe turned, astonished, to gaze more deeply into the Chassidâs eyes.
And then together, each with an arm around the otherâs shoulder, together they walked to where their eyes could look --
Far, far beyond the hills, much farther than the Lake they call Kinneret.
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* Copyright (c) 2006 by Arthur O. Waskow & Phyllis O. Berman according to Creative Commons Attribution/ShareAlike (CC-BY-SA) 4.0 International.
*Above the bimah in the Rabbi Isaac Aboab Synagogue in Safed, there is actually a painting of the Dome of the Rock. I saw it there in 1969. See also Encyclopedia Judaica under âSafed,â vol.14, p. 631, figure 4. --Â AW