Home Sick
31 03 2009What I saw and experienced exceeded even my wildest imaginations. A sprawling city with neatly built houses, cobbled streets, shops on every corner and young people partying day in day out. I must admit it took some time to get used to. My conscience didn’t seem to want to die as quicky as I would have wished. But after a while it did and I joined in the revelry without any pangs of guilt to ruin my fun. ‘Everybody is doing this stuff here’ I reasoned ‘It can’t be so bad’. Life in my Jewish village in Judea seemed like a distant dream although when occassionaly I saw an eldery man who resembled my father, my heart sank for a few seconds. This bothered me so much that I had to drink to be able to drown the sad feeling that would otherwise grip me.
As time went by this too stopped being a problem. ‘There you are’ I congratualted myself ‘you’ve now grow up!’ Eventaully I moved in with a pretty greek girl I met at the bar one evening. She was a beautiful creature but expensive to please. She was always wanting me to buy her that necklace, those rings, that bracelet …well anything to make her happy really. I planned to spend all my money on fun and games and perhaps eventually find work. As the weeks and months rolled by, my cash statred running out until one day I had as much left as I had friends. Very little! They had all abandoned me one by one when I couldn’t pay for their drugs, dinners and drinks.
But the distant rumblings of thunder that were being heard over the city a few weeks earlier, now broke out into a violent storm. Not a literal tempest but a finacial one. An unprecendented famine swept the land due to the destruction of the harvest caused by a swarm of locusts as thick as a rain cloud. Due to lack of efficent planning, the city was facing a crisis and people were as angry at the authorities as they were hungry.
My greek girl friend dumped me and moved back in with her parents. My landlord dumped me because I couldn’t pay the rent. And I dumped me because in my desperation I did sometihng which no Jewish guy, crazy as he could be, would ever do - I went to work on a pig farm. For us Jews, pigs represent all the darkness of paganism because they were animals sacrificed to the heathen gods. What had happened in my soul was now literally being played out in my life. Here was my sin without the glamour.
I was so hungry I longed to eat the pods the pigs were eating but I was not allowed to. If I proved myself a good worker they would consider giving me something small to eat but not until then. I became delirious at times. In my mind, the abundant food at my father’s house kept flashing before me. But now it was too late. I had forfeited all that and now I was getting my just reward. Something in my deep heart however kept telling me ‘Get up and go back to your faither’s house’ but another voice, equally strong taunted me ‘he will never have you back, look at you. You do not deserve even a pig’s pod.’ These conflicting thoughts raged in my mind for a number of days but when I could not take it any longer I came to my senses and said ‘How many of my father’s hired men have food to spare, and here I am starving to death! I will set out and go back to my father and say to him: Dad, I have sinned against heaven and against you. I am no longer worthy to be called your son; make me like one of your hired men.’
So with the little energy I had left I got up and started the long journey back home. Many times on the way I was on the verge of turning back so deep was my fear, discouragement and despair. But I was really homesick by now… I knew that if I did not make it back then I would die on the road.
I actually feared the kezazah as much as I feared the possibilty of my father rejcting me. Any Jewish boy who lost his inheritance among Gentile pagans faced the kezazah ceremony if he dared return back to the village. Fellow villagers would fill a large pot with burned nuts and corn and break the pot in front of the guilty individual whilst shouting ‘So-and so is cut off from his people’. From then on the whole villlage would have nothing to do with the hapless dude. I knew the humiliation of the kezazah awaited me since I was returning back to my village empty handed.
‘Only a few minutes and I’ll be there’ I said to myself as I spotted the now familiar surroundings on the outskirts of my childhood hamlet. I hated to think what I would do if besides the shame of the kezazah, my father refused to take me back in as a servant. As I negotiated the last few obstacles of thorns and brambles in the field close to my home, I finally spotted the house… and I thought… ‘Is it still my home?’ It stood there as it had always done for years. Nothing had changed. The sun was beginning to set. My father will be soon preparing to retire in his room to read his holy books and then sleep. ‘You must hurry now ‘ I chided myself because I was still a long way off even though the house was well in sight.
Don’t ask me to explain what happened next. One minute I actually caught a glimpse of my father on the roof of the house looking out towards the fields - a strange thing indeed; the next minute, before I could even try to figure out what on earth he was doing up there on this cold evening, he had disappeared … and soon after in the distance, I could see someone running… it was my father… and he was running fast… he was doing something no eldery Jewish man of his bearing would do in a million years… he kept running…and he was running towards me.
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