My Scar Tissue/Please Stop These Scars from Fading

You don’t know all the stories I could tell.
You can’t know all the stories I would tell.
Some of them don’t belong to me, I cannot tell.

Scar tissue that I wish you saw
Seeing me but not it all
Eyes locked on my arm but not my mind
Cause these fading scars say

You don’t know all the stories I could tell.
You can’t know all the stories I would tell.
Some of them don’t belong to me, I cannot tell.

Cutting into my arms at my two-month spa
Anything to end the voices scraping my mind raw
And the guilt at seeing your tears from my words
But to you it’s all hidden behind the blah blah blah.

You don’t know all the stories I could tell.
You can’t know all the stories I would tell.
Some of them don’t belong to me, I cannot tell.

Forced to sit and watch as these scars withdraw
Can’t escape that fucking time-heals-all
What if I wanted them forever?
I want them cause these fading scars say

You don’t know all the stories I could tell.
You can’t know all the stories I would tell.
Some of them don’t belong to me, I cannot tell.

These were hacks on my skin, using flesh to draw
I want those memories to forever gnaw
At my mind, never letting me forget
That the pain was there, that it all was real.

You don’t know all the stories I could tell.
You can’t know all the stories I would tell.
Some of them don’t belong to me, I cannot tell.

The real scar tissue’s in the space above my jaw
A lifetime of memories that cut like a hacksaw
It hurts so much, but can you take away pain from someone who’s addicted to it all?
Cause these fading scars say

You don’t know all the stories I could tell.
You can’t know all the stories I would tell.
Some of them don’t belong to me, I cannot tell.

You cannot eat Zionism, but you can make miracles with it

I love it only more when I see everyone together, sharing what we can get from this hard place, like when I see the guys from my neighborhood gather at the local minimarket to just talk and drink beer together. Their birthplaces span thousands of miles, but they are all here making life flourish in the holiest spot in the world.

If there’s one question I am constantly asked by Israelis, the most common by far is why I am here. Depending on the person on the other end of the question, I usually cater the answer to inspire/explain/just-get-someone-to-stop-asking-me-questions. The answer is always a variation of Zionism, religion, loving the land, and all the other platitudes that all of us olim can gush on about if given the chance in the right setting and the right mood.

But sometimes it’s not enough.

Zionism does not put money into my bank account. My faith does not help me navigate a world where I only barely understand the language. Loving this beautiful place does not replace the longing I feel for the family, friends, and the home I left behind. None of those helped me when I was in the hospital trying to regain my sanity. On the tough nights, the nights where my I can’t stop the rush of negative thoughts and emotions, I wonder if coming here was the right decision. I ask myself if leaving all of the support that I had back in the states was the smart move. If living in this place is really worth putting up with at least one problem a day because you’re an immigrant. If the isolation, the frustration, the sadness, the anger, and the desperation were worth moving across an ocean to a place where the only thing that ties me to it are ethereal and abstract.

It’s Hanukkah, and I’ve been struggling to really internalize the holiday. I light the hannukiah (menorah for my American friends), eat some donuts, and sit on my couch for half an hour near the flames to fulfill my obligations; but I haven’t felt anything. The Maccabees, the holy oil, the miracles, none of it has hit me like it usually does. I sit a few feet away from the hanukkiah, reading a book, just trying to get through another day.

Then I read an articles like this and I get reminded of why I’m here and why this holiday, and now, is so important. I think about the men, women, and children just like me. I think of the olim who fought to get here, and of those still coming to put their money where their mouths are.

I think about all of the people who gave up everything to come here, who risked it all, their lives included, to try and reach this holy soil. People from around the world with varying degrees of attachment to their Jewishness. People who had never heard the aleph-bet until their twenties to people who had been detached from world Jewry for centuries. People who fled with just a suitcase. People came from DP camps, numbers tattooed on their arms. I gave up my western comforts, but I never had someone pushing me away; and I always had a place to call home besides Israel.

I think about a man named Ziv, who I met at the local minimarket drinking beer with his friends and neighbors. He is an oleh like me, he’s from Ethiopia, and he asked me the why-are-you-here question. I told him that I came here because I am a Zionist, that I am religious, and that I believe. He just said an “ah” with the shared knowledge we both have of what it means to believe in a place like this. Later on, where he found out that I lived in the Krayot, a cluster of towns north of Haifa, he asked me what I thought about Netanya compared to the Krayot. I said to him, Netanya is a beautiful place with nice people, but that the people of the Krayot, which is known a bastion of immigrants from the former Soviet Union and Ethiopia, were emiti, they were real. He loved that response and couldn’t stop saying how right I was.

To me, those people felt so real because they knew what it meant to take action to come to this place. This is not meant to denigrate the good people that live here in this city, especially the French, Russian, and Ethiopian olim here, but something about the working-class vibe of the Krayot emphasized that we olim are doing things here; that we are helping build this country in a way that no one else can. The people there work hard and live in hard places, working everyday jobs and hard labor, living in buildings built around the founding of the state. They exemplify that aliyah is not an easy thing, but that it is amazingly beautiful in the truth that the land here flourishes when we are here. Even more, this country’s culture, faith, character, everything about it has changed because we continue to come here and make an impact. I get my greatest joys seeing Ethiopian grandmothers smiling and laughing with each other in the bus, Russian men sitting on benches and arguing politics, French bakeries giving me a taste of another world, and my fellow Anglos getting together just to share a beer. I love it only more when I see everyone together, sharing what we can get from this hard place, like when I see the guys from my neighborhood gather at the local minimarket to just talk and drink beer together. Their birthplaces span thousands of miles, but they are all here making life flourish in the holiest spot in the world.

I was not privileged to be born in the days of the first kibbutzim, to be one of the first settlers of the land; but I feel like I am still accomplishing the great mitzvah of yishuv haaretz, settling the land of Israel. My apartment existed long before I ever came here, but every day I spend here is another day that this place grows in Jewish pride and in its faith. When I pray here, I pray where G-d wants me to be and wants all of his people to be. When I put down roots here, I am making myself another tree in the forest of souls that make up the collective whole of this beautiful nation.

The Maccabees lived in a time where everything that Judaism stood for was under threat, and they decided to act. The few decided to fight the many. They lit the menorah to see it in its grandeur. knowing they didn’t have enough for tomorrow. Their actions found miracles, as I hope mine will. I think every oleh and olah that comes here knows that they are going to have rely on miracles to get by; but that’s what this land does. It is hard, and life is not easy, but you can see the miracles if you pause and look hard. They are obvious in the sight of a scattered people returned and a nation reborn, but they exist in the sparkle of the children running and speaking Hebrew in the first Jewish country in two millennia. They exist in the smiles of peoples from people who treat each other more like family than just fellow citizens. They exist in hearing that a great miracle happened here as children play. They exist in men standing for the Prayer for the State of Israel and for the IDF. They exist for me, that despite everything, I finally feel like I’m in a place that I never want to leave.

You cannot eat Zionism, you cannot pay your bills with faith, and you cannot save for the future simply by loving a piece of the earth, but you can build something with all of those. As an oleh, it may be harder, but I know that home I build will stand the test of time. May I be standing in it one day with the great menorah in a rebuilt Beit HaMikdash, and we can all celebrate this holiday together knowing our hard work and sacrifice made it happen.

A dream and a minimarket

Let me tell you about a dream I had last night.

I was with people, I can’t remember their faces. We were talking, laughing even. I was wearing my grey suit, the one that doesn’t fit anymore; and at some point in the conversation I left, just turned and walked away. I started walking alone when I saw her. I saw my mother, who passed away over eight years ago. Her hair was long, like before she had cancer, and her face was glowing with the smile that lit up every room she ever graced. Before she opened her mouth to speak the voice I’ve long since forgotten the sound of, every one of my family members started walking towards me. Cousins, aunts and uncles, everyone on my mother’s side of the family decked out for some formal event. Shocked by seeing them all, I asked them what they were doing there, they told me don’t you remember, your cousin had another baby. I looked over to my cousin, hearing her voice introducing me to the newborn, and in my dream, I remembered feeling the envelope but ignoring an invitation to the event. I never showed up. They were all together, and I was alone.

It’s been over six hundred and eight days since I last saw a member of my family in person. It’s been over eight years since I last heard my mother’s voice in real life. Six hundred days since I’ve seen my old friends from high school, friends from my old community, and the entire network of people you gain as you build a life in a place. I chose to come here, to this country, knowing I was going to give that all up; but I didn’t know how much it would hurt to not be able just be in the same room as someone you share blood with, someone you share history with, someone that you’ve made memories with. I spent nights sleepless with regret about the choices I’ve made, and the time I wasted not spending it with family and friends. I live with the choice that I made to put myself halfway across the world, and especially in these times, never knowing when, or if, I will ever see my family and friends again. It’s great to see someone over video or get an encouraging message; but there is nothing that can replace the feeling of embracing and being with people you love.

It’s hard to be so alone here.

One of the questions I’m constantly asked by sabras, native Israelis, after they find out I’m an oleh is if I have any family here. Other olim ask the same thing, having lived lives where families made aliyah together, either out of ideology, faith, or the million other reasons people come here. It’s always a little disheartening to say no, it’s just us here, plus our dog. We have no one to invite us for holidays, no place to sleep over for Shabbat, or no family in another city to visit just to get a change of scenery. In a country where the birth rate is high, and big families are not unusual, to be a lone couple with only distant relatives in the country is an oddity. We must rely on making friends to have anything compared to a family; and even that can change. One move, one lost job, one pandemic, one release from the hospital and the people you relied on to make up that hole in your heart are gone.

It’s hard to be so alone here.

But the thing is, as much as I miss every one of my family and friends, no matter how hard life has gotten here, and it definitely has, I can still never see myself moving back to America. I love this place too much, I love the people here, I love everything it stands for; I believe in this place with all of my heart and soul.

Let me tell you a story about a minimarket.

A ten-minute bike ride away from us is another neighborhood in our section of Netanya. Whereas my neighborhood is filled with green spaces and big houses (of which I live in the basement of one), this one is what would be called more “working-class.” There are more religious people, more immigrants from Ethiopia and Russia, and the houses are older and closer together. Today, I had to go to a minimarket to pick up a package (don’t get me started on our crazy postal system). I’ve been there several times, and I had looked at renting the very bad apartment behind it when we were looking to move here. It’s got your standard little market, but out front is a covered area with a TV where guys from the neighborhood are always sitting, drinking beer, and talking about every subject under the sun. I had been biking around for a while, so I decided to sit on a seat a little further from the main circle, thinking I could just drink my drink and people watch a little. This being Israel, that’s impossible; and soon I was being half-interrogated/half-drawn into the conversation. I ended up getting another drink and staying there way past when I should have left. When I got up to leave, two of the guys made sure to come up to me and give me their names and told me to come back. I had never met either of them, but here was a Dutchman and an Ethiopian guy asking me to join them for drinks again. Before I left, I looked around the circle, and most were olim like me. I wished them a good night and a happy holiday before Hanukkah, and they did the same to me.

It is moments like that get me through the loneliness of missing my own family. I know that I moved to a country that is one big family, just you sometimes you haven’t met one another yet. People look out for each other, people embrace one another with warmth and not suspicion, and they laugh and live together like family, whether they were born in France, the Netherlands, Ethiopia, Russia, or all the way in the United States. This is a country founded by people who envisioned a homeland for a people, a refuge for the displaced, and a home for the sons and daughters of their forefathers and foremothers. Israel is a fitting name, because his children fill this land, related by blood and by faith. The people walking the streets, manning the buses, even the guys sharing beers in a minimarket are all one family, one people.

It’s hard to be so alone here but having a country as my family helps.