[Adapted by Mrs. Chaya Bracha Leiter from a letter by the great Kabbalist.]
The pious one [Rabbi Yosef Caro] and I agreed to make a mighty effort on Shavuot night to keep sleep from our eyes, and not to stop learning for even one second. Thank G‑d we were successful. When you hear what transpired, it will enliven your souls.
For the night of Shavuot, this is the order of study I prepared…. [Verses from Scripture *] All this we did in a spirit of great fear and awe, with melody and trepidation. But what will be told next won't be believed.
After all the verses, we recited aloud all the Mishna's of Zera'im (the first of the Six Orders), and then we started again, learning it in the way of true learning, and we completed two tractates. At that moment, the Creator graced us and we heard a great voice coming from Rabbi Caro, the words unintelligible. The people nearby heard but could not understand. The voice was very pleasing but at the same time was growing continually stronger, and we fell on our faces from the great awe. No one dared to lift his eyes and face to see.
The voice spoke:
Fortunate are you...because you took it upon yourselves to crown Me…
"Listen my beloved, those who most glorify the Creator, my loved ones, peace to you. Fortunate are you and fortunate are those that bore you. Fortunate are you in This World and fortunate you will be in the World to Come, because you took it upon yourselves to crown Me on this night. It has been many years since my crown has fallen, and there has been no one to comfort Me. I had been cast to the dust embracing the filth, but now you have restored the crown.
"Strengthen yourselves my dear ones; forge ahead my beloved; be happy and joyous, and know that you are among the exalted. You merited to be in the King's palace. The voice of your Torah and breath of your mouths arose before G‑d and pierced through the surroundings and many firmaments, until the messenger-angels on high were quieted, and the fire-angels hushed and all G‑d's lofty army listened to your voices.
"I am the Mishna that admonishes mankind. I have come to speak to you. If only there were ten of you, you would have ascended higher. Even so, you have elevated yourselves and those who bore you. You are fortunate, my dear ones, for because of you, sleep passed from the eyes of those who bore you. I have been summoned this night through those gathered in this great and prestigious city. You are not like those lying on their beds, sleeping a sleep that is one-sixtieth of death, besmirching their beds. You bound to the One and have pleased Him. Therefore, my children, strengthen yourselves and strive forth in my love, my Torah, and my fear.
"If you could imagine even one thousandth myriad of my pain, no joy could enter your hearts, no laughter could escape your mouths, considering that on your account I have been cast to the dust. Therefore, strengthen and fortify yourselves my children, my dear ones who glorify Me. Do not halt your efforts, for the thread of kindness is drawn to you, and your Torah is sweet before Him. Therefore, stand my sons, my dear ones, on your feet and elevate me. With a loud voice, as on Yom Kippur, declare, 'Blessed is the name of his glorious kingdom for ever and ever.'" Move to the Land of Israel…Do not value your belongings, for you will partake of the best of the supernal levels…
Standing on our feet, we recited aloud, as bidden. The voice then resumed:
"Fortunate are you, my children. Return to your learning and do not stop one minute. Move to the Land of Israel, because not all times are equal, and there is no preventing salvation, whether by much or by a little. Do not value your belongings, for you will partake of the best of the supernal levels.
And if you desire and will obey, the choicest of that land you will consume. Therefore, hurry and travel there for I am the cause that sustains you, and will continue to sustain you. Peace to you in your houses, and peace in all there is to you. Eternal G‑d gives strength to His people and blesses them with peace'."
All these things were spoken to us, and our ears did hear. Additional matters of wisdom were shared, and great were the promises that brought us all to tears from so much joy. We also heard of the Shechina's suffering, due to our sins, and the voice was as a sick person imploring us. Then we strengthened ourselves until daybreak, reciting verses unceasingly with joy and trembling.
When morning came, we went to immerse, as we did the two previous days, and there we met the three others that had been absent the night before. We reprimanded them and told them the favor G‑d had wrought us. Their hearts melted and they turned their faces and wept, as did we. At the same time, we maintained a harsh façade, since it was because of them that we had not merited greater revelations. If permission were granted, your eyes would behold the fire surrounding this house…
The lack of a quorum had imposed a severe limitation, as we were told. They answered that they would afford us this opportunity on the second night (of Shavuot): we would join and be ten. We consented even though we had slept not a wink the first night. During the day, we also had not rested because after the Mincha prayer, Rabbi Caro had delivered a sermon. Still, we girded our loins, performing the same rites as the night before, and did do with much joy because now we were ten.
On this occasion, however, the voice did not wait until we started to recite the Mishna. Nor did it wait until midnight (as it had the night before, when it began exactly at midnight), but it made itself heard immediately. As we were reading the verses of Shema, the voice of our cherished one knocked and began, "Listen my dear ones, those most glorifying G‑d. Arise! And raise those who are lying in dust, through the mystical secret "of the dust from Above".
Many matters of wisdom He taught, and afterwards said:
"Happy are you, my dear ones that raise me. How high you have been elevated now that you are ten, as is proper in all matters of holiness. Happy are you in the future world. Fear not the reproach of man or his goading because you elevate all of Israel. Know that you are among the exalted, that glory rinses your hands and that the thread of kindness is drawn to you. If permission were granted, your eyes would behold the fire surrounding this house. Therefore, strengthen yourselves and do not break the bond with Above. Say aloud, 'Hear, oh Israel…Blessed is the name of his glorious kingdom'."
After another half an hour, we returned to studying the secrets of Torah. Exactly at midnight, the Voice returned a second time, teaching for over an hour and a half. It praised the learning and said:
"See and hear this voice speaking? Ask your elders and know that for hundreds of years you are the only ones to merit such an experience. Therefore, from now on, be alert to help each other, and to strengthen the weak. Hold yourselves as leaders, for you are the princes of the king's palace, and you have merited to enter the hallway. Now strive to enter the inner chamber, but do not forsake the entry, for he who leaves the gate - his blood is on his head.
"Wake up my sons and understand what I am explaining to you. Wake up, my dear ones, and strive to be sons of valor... Behold the day is coming when men will remove their silver and worldly pleasures, and gods of gold, and desires of wealth, and travel to the Holy Land. It is possible, except that you are sinking in the mire of worldly vanities... Behold! You have merited what others, for many generations, have not."
These matters continued at great length. All who were present, resolved to turn to G‑d with all their might.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Rabbi Alkabetz also wrote that the following Shabbat, the voice again came to Rabbi Caro, whereupon he again gathered the ten together to warn them and to urge them to enter the "inner place". They agreed to set aside every desire, to refrain from meat and wine, and to mourn the exile of the Divine Presence, and the causes of Exile. Rabbi Alkabetz left immediately for Israel, and soon afterwards both Rabbi Caro and he established residence in Safed.
Editor’s notes:
The Shelah copied this story from the writing of Rabbi Shlomo Alkabetz and concluded, "It is apparent in his writing that there was much more that he was not allowed to reveal. We must learn from this story the importance of behaving with extra spiritual refinement on this night."
on second paragraph:
* A long list of verses (without chapter numbers) in
Torah, Prophets and Writings, including all the verses depicting the Mt. Sinai
experience, and the beginnings and ends of all the main divisions in Scripture.
All these together comprise the root of "Tikun Layil Shavuot" — the
published collection of verses and teachings which many Jews recite throughout
the (first) night of Shavuot, a custom based on the Salonica experience
recounted above.
Biographical notes:
Rabbi Yosef Caro (1488-1575) was the chief
rabbi of Zefat from 1546. Author of several major works, including Shulchan
Aruch ("The Prepared Table"/Code of Jewish Law), a compendium of the laws
of the Torah governing a Jew's entire life: personal, social, family, business,
and religious. Notwithstanding subsequent revisions, it remains the foremost
authoritative work on Jewish law and practice and is universally accepted by
Jews the world over.
Rabbi Shlomo Alkabetz (1508-1593), is best known as the author of the famous liturgical poem "Lecha Dodi" (Come My Beloved"), sung by Jews worldwide to welcome the Shabbat. He was the Kabbala teacher of Rabbi Caro and of his brother-in-law, Rabbi Moshe Cordevero, as well as the author of many works.
Mrs. Chaya-Brocha Leiter is a tour guide and Torah teacher at Ascent-of-Safed.
Copyright by Ascent-of-Safed, 2002. All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this work or portions thereof, in any form, unless with permission, in writing, from Kabbala Online.
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