Read Yom Kippur as Manifest in an Approaching Dorsal Fin Online
Authors: Adam Byrn Tritt
actions because I must protect my job, that
is my Kol Nidre. When I do not, can not,
must not act in accordance with my true self:
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Yom Kippur as Manifest . . .
my Kol Nidre. When I do something I must
instead of write and create. Kol Nidre.
Evanne points out that is exactly what the
abbot at the Thai Buddhist temple told me,
that I was doing what I needed to and need
only recognize that and the needs of fitting
into our community and of survival and
taken into account in the realm of Karma.
Yet even those vows I take seriously. I
uttered them. And so the Kol Nidre also pro-
tects us from ourselves; we make this prayer
because we take vows so seriously that we
consider ourselves bound even if we make
them under duress or in times of stress when
we are not thinking straight.
The Rabbi, Fred Natkin, walks up to the
bima (stage) and we look around. No fashion
show here. Women in pants, men in dunga-
rees, vests. Hats instead of kipas. I have done
this as well as it is more comfortable, does not fall off, shades my eyes when reading. Many
women have Tallit and that is a sure sign of
a rather liberal welcoming congregation.
The service starts and it is with great par-
ticipation of the congregation, coming up to
the bima, sitting down again after hugs and
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kisses. Always each moment, each prayer
ends with hugs and kisses among all those on
the bima. Evanne asks me if this is important.
Among many liberal congregations, this is
common, important, this contact and affec-
tion. I say it is a fitting way to end a prayer to love each other and who are we to argue, and
I lean over and kiss Evanne on the cheek.
The congregation prays, meditates,
responds; the rabbi sings, chants.
The time has come for the sermon. The
rabbi speaks of science fiction. Reads a letter
written by him to the neighboring Moslem
congregation offering aid and friendship after
a shooting into the mosque this week. He is
offering for the descendants of the two sons
of Abraham, the children of Isaac and the
children of Ishmael, to make peace and fight
together for justice. The Jewish high holy days
and Ramadan started the same day. We have
the same goals. The president of the congre-
gation writes his thanks, appreciation, and
friendship in a letter to the newspaper, thank-
ing the rabbi and congregation. He reminds
us we must make the world the heaven we
wish it to be. It is our job and what we are
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Yom Kippur as Manifest . . .
chosen to do. That we do not pray for peace,
but pray to
be
peace. That Judaism is a religion of verbs. The prayers re-commence.
The Kol Nidre is sung. There are two tunes
for this prayer. I was taught by a rabbi there
is magic in the tunes themselves, in the music,
so, if one does not know the words, hum, dai
de dai, la la la, and that is good and will do
the trick. But I want to sing and this is the
other tune, the one Lee knows. It is the Sep-
hardic tune, I believe, the one from the Mid-
dle East and not the Ashkenazic tune of East-
ern Europe and Eurasia. I do my best. Craig
knows the words but does not sing, unfamil-
iar with the tune even more than I. Evanne,
somehow, reads more loudly than others,
seems to fit, sounds clear, and I am frequently
amazed by this.
More prayers, meditations, the Amidah
and call for compassion. I feel this prayer as
I did the Kol Nidre and look for my wife, see
the empty space. I think of my own Yom Kip-
pur prayer. And when I have trouble follow-
ing along, I recite it to myself:
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We open our mouths to proclaim how
beautiful the world is, how sweet life
is and how dear to us you are, Lady,
Mother of All Living.
We stand here today to remind
ourselves that we are all part of this
web of creation. We are all linked, so
that what any of us do affects all of
us, and that we are all responsible for
the Earth, and each other. We have
chosen to be here today as a symbol
of our commitment, our awareness
of this connection.
Even so, we forget our promises and
our duties.
We gossip, we mock, we jeer.
We quarrel, we are unkind, we lie.
We neglect, we abuse, we betray.
We are cruel, we hate, we destroy.
We are careless, we are violent, we
steal.
We are jealous, we oppress, we are
xenophobic.
We are racist, we are sexist, we are
homophobic.
We waste, we pollute, we are selfish.
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Yom Kippur as Manifest . . .
We disregard the sufferings of others,
we allow others to suffer for our
ignorance and our pride.
We hurt each other willingly and
unwillingly.
We betray each other with violence
and with stealth.
And most of all, we resist the impulse
to do what we know is good, and we
do not resist the impulse to do what
we know is bad.
All this we acknowledge to be true,
and we do not blame the mirror if
the reflection displeases.
Lady, help us to forgive each other for
all we have done and help us to do
better in the coming year. Bring us
into harmony with the Earth and all
Her ways.
So mote it be!
In this prayer, we admit we are not perfect
and proclaim we will make good on our mis-
takes even if we are not aware we have made
them. We all make such mistakes. Such is the
friction, the
dukkuh
as the Tibetans call it, of 15
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life. And we must have the compassion for
others to apologize, to make amends, person
to person. If we do not, we cannot go into the
new year. If they do not accept, the guilt is on their heads if, and only truly if, we have honestly done our best to make amends.
We must also have compassion for our-
selves and the ways we have transgressed
against ourselves. Such is the message of the
Amidah and Kol Nidre; we can start over and
do better. Such is the message from Amida,
Amitabha.
And we are cognizant we have made mis-
takes we are unaware of individually. For
these, we say a prayer and ask forgiveness not
of God, but of each other and offer our for-
giveness as well.
More meditations, kisses, hugs. Then the
Mourner’s Kaddish, and I quietly remind
those with me this is what they gave those the
names of the departed for. I think of those I
have lost and feel keenly the empty space next
to me, where my wife should be, and move
slightly over more, closer to Evanne, leaving
more room for my absent wife as though I
was looking to be able to see her as I sang, but 16
Yom Kippur as Manifest . . .
could not find her. I am missing her and
think, sadly, at some point this space will be
open, open and empty and not fillable. Thus
says this prayer.
And with this, service ends. Craig mentions
how so many of these prayers have been
taken, nearly without change, for Christian
services. Beth feels the continuity with the
Methodist services with which she is famil-
iar. We exit, putting our books back as we do,
and head back to the house.
Lee greets us outside, still not feeling well
but wanting to be social to a degree. I am
grateful, and tell my friends so, that I was able to go to temple with those I love even when
my own dear was at home. I was able to share
this evening with them, this prayer, this holy
day. I am grateful to them and happy.
They had said it was an honor to be asked.
That night they repeated their gratitude and
surprise. It is I who am grateful. It is I who
am honored. It is I who am, again, surprised,
amazed, and smiling. I hold them both and
say thank you, then smile as they drive away.
•
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Today I stay home for Yom Kippur. I do not
go to temple, however. I plan to write, run,
walk, meditate, remain quiet.
I get ready to go to the beach. On days like
this I am reminded of some of the perks to
living in Florida. It is October and I am going
for a run on the beach. My ancestors would
already be cold, wearing thick coats and hav-
ing long collected the winter wood. I will be
running by the waves wearing as little as I can
get away with. I say to Lee, listening, that it
is too hot to wear dungaree shorts, the only
kind I have. I have two swimsuits, both old,
hardly worn but seeming worn, nonetheless,
elastics given up their ability to stretch,
become brittle.
I have not purchased any in years and told
myself I would not until my weight was down
to where I wanted it. I might have to go back
and revisit that idea. They were too small for
years and I would not go to the beach. Now
they are too big and are unfit, do not fit, I put on the one with the best elastic. My wife
shakes her head. No? Why not? Does it have
a lining? No. She tells me I have lost weight
and that will lead to needing a lining if I am
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Yom Kippur as Manifest . . .
planning on going running. She does not want
me to be uncomfortable or, worse, injure
myself, telling me the fat I used to have kept
some things in place and, without that weight,
I’ll want that lining as I go jangling up and
down. I put on the other suit and it falls off.
It has a cord, I pull it tight. It still hangs a bit and I’ll need a new suit soon.
I go off to Melbourne Beach and leave
everything, including my sandals, in the car.
Keys, wallet, glasses. I put about fifty cents in the meter and get one hour and fifteen minutes for my coins. I did not take sunscreen so
I leave my shirt on, planning to take it off if
I get too hot.
It is bright, clear, brilliant and the beach is
quiet and nearly empty. I head to the shore-
line and walk, briskly, south.
I practice an exercise as I go called the Walk
for Atonement. At-one-ment, removing sep-
aration. Becoming one with what is around
me, with the world and all that is in it. With
time and space. If we felt at one with all
things, who would we, who could we, hurt?
What is our place in this world? What is
our place, in context to all that is? I walk.
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With my steps, I contemplate spans of time.
A day. What does a day feel like? What does
it feel like to exist a day? A year. How does a
year feel? Ten years. Can I feel ten years?
How plastic I am. How much one can change
in ten years.
I do this every year. From then to one hun-
dred. This year, I add fifty years. Fifty years.
I am approaching that and can feel it. It is not far beyond my span now and I can understand that in a personal context. One hun-
dred years. What does that feel like? I have
and had relatives nearly that old. One thou-
sand years. I can understand this historically
but what does it feel like? I am uncertain. My
place in it is, or can be, nearly a tenth. But
how much a part do I actually play? My grasp
on it is tenuous. Ten thousand years. Again,
historically, I have an idea. Personally, it is too vast, too long. I have no context. What is my
place in that span of time? Nearly none. One
hundred thousand? None. None at all. A
million?
As I reach a million, I see something I have
never seen but which is astonishingly famil-
iar in the water a scant twenty feet from me:
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Yom Kippur as Manifest . . .
a triangular dorsal fin, a triangular tail fin,
both moving gracefully in the water so close
if I wanted to, if I were fool enough, I could
walk out to it and barely have my calves half-
covered by ocean. This is amazingly close for
a shark.
I stand and watch. This is an interruption in
the flow of the meditation. Or is it? A shark
comes so close as I contemplate a million years
and this seems like a message. It feels like a
hello from distance of time and I can see, now,
what that million years looks like. I cannot go
to it so it, instead, has come to me. Today.
I am aware of a person next to me, fewer
than a few feet away. “Is that what I think it
is?”
What else could he be asking? It is safe, I
imagine, to answer in the affirmative. “Yes.”
“I was going to go swimming.”
“Still going to?”
“I just moved here. This is my first time at
the beach. Are they out there all the time?”
“Are you asking me if there are always
sharks out there, or if death is always fewer
than twenty feet away and swimming around