It is going to be hard to put into words what the Shabbat at the Kotel experience was like. It was like nothing I have ever experienced before and until I go back and do it again, never again.
Before we brought in Shabbat (with candle lighting) we were treated to an amazing pre-Shabbat concert from Rabbi Yom Tov Glaser. He is a rockin’ Rabbi living in Israel transplanted from the surfing beaches of California. On the outside he looks like any Rabbi – black hat, full beard, pais and black coat – but on the inside a true surfing beach bum at heart.
He started with a song Shabbat Shalom (surprised?) but it was more a song ‘in the round’ where the left side of the room had one part of the song and the right side another part. Very participatory. A lot of fun. He moved into a few more songs, and introduced a song that was new and available on Itunes (modern times). It is called Letter in the Torah, and it is quite an emotional song about where you may going, what is your purpose – what is YOUR letter in the Torah. I remember the words really hit me, because being on this trip, everyone has a reason to be there.
After the concert was over, we all had the chance to light Shabbat Candles and say prayers for our loved ones, and then it was time….to go to Kotel and really ‘bring in Shabbat”. It really something you have to see and experience for yourself.
We all went down to the Kotel and as a group tried to move into the centre of the women’s section. It was hard because it was wall to wall women, teens on birthright, soliders, and other groups. But there we were – creating our own prayer and song circle, with so many other prayer and song circles. Hundreds of women, singing, dancing, praying and bringing in the Shabbat.
The men on the other side of the separation wall were doing the same thing, praying on Shabbat eve, also chanting, and dancing and connecting all Jewish people around the world welcoming in the Shabbat. I couldn’t see them, but I could hear them, and I wanted to see, so I left our area to go out see the men in prayer.
You can see again, hundreds, standing shoulder to shoulder praying for Shabbat – older men, younger men, soliders. It was something to see. Of course it was Shabbat so I have no photos or video, but the memory will be in my memory forever.
I had to take a step back away from the Kotel to take it all in. The Kotel is the last remnant of the Holy Temple, and the holiest site on earth, and there I was, able to share it’s glory on Shabbat. If you ever have the chance to experience what I had the chance to experience – you cannot let it pass you by. If you have experienced it in your lifetime, then you know what I mean.




