Easter Vigil starts in darkness, silence, warm presence of bodies in still-cool air. You hold a wax candle in hope, fidgeting the paper disc. Then an anticipated-but-still-sudden flame, a tiny light in the darkness, quickly spreads into dozens of points of light, as one person reaches to another.
It is still human, still slick with spilt wax the paper disc doesn’t corral.
But faces are beautiful in candlelight, warmed. For a moment, you can imagine Transfiguration, the glow of divine love, what persists when all else is dust.
Spread out across pews, for a moment the stars come to earth.
For a while all AL license plates read “when the stars fell on Alabama” — reminders of an 1833 meteor shower so bright folks thought it was the end of the world.
Tonight it is raining — only water.
Tonight I keep no Vigil.
Wait, Emily, are you a non-Jewish Friedman? This makes me miss my friend the non-Jewish Sarah Cohen
Literally what my classmates said at the end of my “Who is a Jew?” Class my freshman year of college!
(My Jewish great-great-grandfather converted to marry a very Catholic Louisiana woman of Acadian descent)
Ooooo, that is amazing family history
Yeah — my great great great-aunt Miriam looked just like me, some say.
Ooo, gorgeous! I can see the resemblance! And now I have to ask why she was in the newspaper.
Also, were you taking this "Who Is a Jew?" class or teaching it? How did your classmates learn about your personal history?