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Showing posts with label Elijah. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Elijah. Show all posts

Friday, April 26, 2024

Ginzberg - God's Justice Vindicated - Keeping the Public in Public Domain

Folklore by its very nature travels and scholar Louis Ginzberg seems perfect to present Jewish folklore in his seven volume work, The Legends of the Jews.  I won't presume to know how Project Gutenberg manages copyright of the translation (by Paul Radin and Henrietta Szold) offering the first four volumes of the German manuscript. This weekend is in the midst of Passover, along with the current Palestinian situation in both Israel and the U.S. It seems appropriate to look at folklore about the prophet Elijah.  Almost all religions, including both Judaism and Islam, revere Elijah. Passover tradition includes the door of the house being opened and Elijah invited in along with a cup of wine reserved for him. 

Ginzberg says of Elijah: 

The Biblical account of the prophet Elijah, of his life and work during the reigns of Ahab and his son Joram, gives but a faint idea of a personage whose history begins with Israel's sojourn in Egypt, and will end only when Israel, under the leadership of the Messiah, shall have taken up his abode again in Palestine. 

Talking about the post-Biblical work of Elijah, Ginzberg states:

Elijah's removal from earth, so far being an interruption to his relations with men, rather marks the beginning of his real activity as a helper in time of need, as a teacher and as a guide. At first his intervention in sublunar affairs was not frequent.

. . . 

It was reserved for later days, however, for Talmudic times, the golden age of the great scholars, the Tannaim and the Amoraim, to enjoy Elijah's special vigilance as protector of the innocent, as a friend in need, who hovers over the just and the pious, ever present to guard them against evil or snatch them out of danger. With four strokes of his wings Elijah can traverse the world. Hence no spot on earth is too far removed for his help. As an angel he enjoys the power of assuming the most various appearances to accomplish his purposes. Sometimes he looks like an ordinary man, sometimes he takes the appearance of an Arab, sometimes of a horseman, now he is a Roman court-official, now he is a harlot.

One example of why Elijah is invoked is his wisdom seeing beyond the obvious.  This story shows how what we see may not reveal God's view of the situation.  (Wikipedia's article on Elijah gives a more visually friendly version of the story.  I'm giving it as Ginzberg wrote it, only breaking it up rather than one very long block of text.)

***

Once he granted his friend Rabbi Joshua ben Levi the fulfilment of any wish he might express, and all the Rabbi asked for was, that he might be permitted to accompany Elijah on his wanderings through the world. Elijah was prepared to gratify this wish. He only imposed the condition, that, however odd the Rabbi might think Elijah's actions, he was not to ask any explanation of them. If ever he demanded why, they would have to part company. 

So Elijah and the Rabbi fared forth together, and they journeyed on until they reached the house of a poor man, whose only earthly possession was a cow. The man and his wife were thoroughly good-hearted people, and they received the two wanderers with a cordial welcome. They invited the strangers into their house, set before them food and drink of the best they had, and made up a comfortable couch for them for the night. When Elijah and the Rabbi were ready to continue their journey on the following day, Elijah prayed that the cow belonging to his host might die. Before they left the house, the animal had expired. Rabbi Joshua was so shocked by the misfortune that had befallen the good people, he almost lost consciousness. He thought: "Is that to be the poor man's reward for all his kind services to us?" And he could not refrain from putting the question to Elijah. But Elijah reminded him of the condition imposed and accepted at the beginning of their journey, and they travelled on, the Rabbi's curiosity unappeased. 

That night they reached the house of a wealthy man, who did not pay his guest the courtesy of looking them in the face. Though they passed the night under his roof, he did not offer them food or drink. This rich man was desirous of having a wall repaired that had tumbled down. There was no need for him to take any steps to have it rebuilt, for, when Elijah left the house, he prayed that the wall might erect itself, and, lo! it stood upright. Rabbi Joshua was greatly amazed, but true to his promise he suppressed the question that rose to his lips. 

So the two travelled on again, until they reached an ornate synagogue, the seats in which were made of silver and gold. But the worshippers did not correspond in character to the magnificence of the building, for when it came to the point of satisfying the needs of the way-worn pilgrims, one of those present said: "There is not dearth of water and bread, and the strange travellers can stay in the synagogue, whither these refreshments can be brought to them." Early the next morning, when they were departing, Elijah wished those present in the synagogue in which they had lodged, that God might raise them all to be "heads." Rabbi Joshua again had to exercise great self-restraint, and not put into words the question that troubled him profoundly. 

In the next town, they were received with great affability, and served abundantly with all their tired bodies craved. On these kind hosts Elijah, on leaving, bestowed the wish that God might give them but a single head. Now the Rabbi could not hold himself in check any longer, and he demanded an explanation of Elijah's freakish actions. Elijah consented to clear up his conduct for Joshua before they separated from each other. He spoke as follows: "The poor man's cow was killed, because I knew that on the same day the death of his wife had been ordained in heaven, and I prayed to God to accept the loss of the poor man's property as a substitute for the poor man's wife. As for the rich man, there was a treasure hidden under the dilapidated wall, and, if he had rebuilt it, he would have found the gold; hence I set up the wall miraculously in order to deprive the curmudgeon of the valuable find. I wished that the inhospitable people assembled in the synagogue might have many heads, for a place of numerous leaders is bound to be ruined by reason of multiplicity of counsel and disputes. To the inhabitants of our last sojourning place, on the other hand, I wished a 'single head,' for the one to guide a town, success will attend all its undertakings. Know, then, that if thou seest an evil-doer prosper, it is not always unto his advantage, and if a righteous man suffers need and distress, think not God is unjust." After these words Elijah and Rabbi Joshua separated from each other, and each went his own way. 

***

As we look at the way things are happening in the world, may this remind us we should do the best we can, but don't know the full picture.  

For further background I suggest starting with the Wikipedia articles on Elijah and Ginzberg in the first paragraph here and also on Joshua ben Levi. I omitted here numbers relating to footnotes there, but there is even more you may find if wished.

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This is part of a series of postings of stories under the category, "Keeping the Public in Public Domain."  The idea behind Public Domain was to preserve our cultural heritage after the authors and their immediate heirs were compensated.  I feel strongly current copyright law delays this intent on works of the 20th century.  My own library of folklore includes so many books within the Public Domain I decided to share stories from them.  I hope you enjoy discovering new stories.  


At the same time, my own involvement in storytelling regularly creates projects requiring research as part of my sharing stories with an audience.  Whenever that research needs to be shown here, the publishing of Public Domain stories will not occur that week.  This is a return to my regular posting of a research project here.  (Don't worry, this isn't dry research, my research is always geared towards future storytelling to an audience.)  Response has convinced me that "Keeping the Public in Public Domain" should continue along with my other postings as often as I can manage it.

Other Public Domain story resources I recommend-

  • There are many online resources for Public Domain stories, maybe none for folklore is as ambitious as fellow storyteller, Yoel Perez's database, Yashpeh, the International Folktales Collection.  I have long recommended it and continue to do so.  He has loaded Stith Thompson's Motif Index into his server as a database so you can search the whole 6 volumes for whatever word or expression you like by pressing one key. http://folkmasa.org/motiv/motif.htm

  • You may have noticed I'm no longer certain Dr. Perez has the largest database, although his offering the Motif Index certainly qualifies for those of us seeking specific types of stories.  There's another site, FairyTalez claiming to be the largest, with "over 2000 fairy tales, folktales, and fables" and they are "fully optimized for phones, tablets, and PCs", free and presented without ads.
    Between those two sites, there is much for story-lovers, but as they say in infomercials, "Wait, there's more!"

The email list for storytellers, Storytell, discussed Online Story Sources and came up with these additional suggestions:        

         - David K. Brown - http://people.ucalgary.ca/~dkbrown/stories.html

         - Richard Martin - http://www.tellatale.eu/tales_page.html

         - Spirit of Trees - http://spiritoftrees.org/featured-folktales

         - Story-Lovers - http://www.story-lovers.com/ is now only accessible through the Wayback Machine, described below, but the late Jackie Baldwin's wonderful site lives on there, fully searchable manually (the Google search doesn't work), at https://archive.org/ .  It's not easy, but go to Story-lovers.com snapshot for December 22 2016  and you can click on SOS: Searching Out Stories to scroll down through the many story topics and click on the story topic that interests you.

       - World of Tales - http://www.worldoftales.com/ 

 
           - Zalka Csenge Virag - http://multicoloreddiary.blogspot.com doesn't give the actual stories, but her recommendations, working her way through each country on a continent, give excellent ideas for finding new books and stories to love and tell.

     
You're going to find many of the links on these sites have gone down, BUT go to the Internet Archive Wayback Machine to find some of these old links.  Tim's site, for example, is so huge probably updating it would be a full-time job.  In the case of Story-Lovers, it's great that Jackie Baldwin set it up to stay online as long as it did after she could no longer maintain it.  Possibly searches maintained it.  Unfortunately Storytell list member, Papa Joe is on both Tim Sheppard's site and Story-Lovers, but he no longer maintains his old Papa Joe's Traveling Storytelling Show website and his Library (something you want to see!) is now only on the Wayback Machine.  It took some patience working back through claims of snapshots but finally in December of 2006 it appears!

    Somebody as of this writing whose stories can still be found by his website is the late Chuck Larkin - http://chucklarkin.com/stories.html.  I prefer to list these sites by their complete address so they can be found by the Wayback Machine, a.k.a. Archive.org, when that becomes the only way to find them.

You can see why I recommend these to you. 

Have fun discovering even more stories

Thursday, December 20, 2012

Cookie Stories Good Enough to Eat



                                                                   
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‘Tis the season to be…eating!  Here are some calorie-free cookie stories.
These brief cookie stories are seasoned with facts about libraries.  The sources for the research are in this A.L.A. reference book.  I see that when this post appeared, it wiped out information from earlier this month on the problem of e-books prices and conditions so that libraries can offer them.  Please also go to my post, "Smart Cookies Read."



Facts like:  58% of adults in the U.S. have public library cards. 

In my illustration,I love the dreidel cookies along with the other holiday cookies.  Dreidels are tops, often homemade, and are traditionally played at Hanukkah.  Here's a virtual dreidel  you can play by yourself.  This is the song traditionally sung about dreidels.  These jolly fellows stick to the part about the clay dreidel.  On YouTube you can find other verses added to make a longer song (also parodies).  It’s not traditional, but you may enjoy the expanded versions.  Similarly storyteller/author, Eric Kimmel, often expands folklore to make original stories like his The Magic Dreidels.




I’m not sure if dreidel cookies are traditional, but I am sure that Americans go to school, public and academic libraries more than three times more often than they go to the movies.


Elijah tales are traditionally told, especially at the various Jewish holidays, as he is found in the Talmud, folklore, and even in Islam and other faiths. Foodies should love hearing about his taking refuge from King Ahab by staying with the Widow of Zarephath.  He's an uninvited guest who wants food.  There's not sufficient food to keep her and her own son alive!  Elijah tells her God won't let their supply of flour or oil run out.  She feeds him the last of their food, and Elijah's promise miraculously comes true.  There's more in 1 Kings, especially chapter 17, but that and his being taken bodily up to heaven in 2 Kings 2 led people to set a place for him at feasts in case he should appear. . . so save some cookies.


An excellent collection of Elijah stories is in 
The Mysterious Visitor; Stories of the Prophet Elijah by  Nina Jaffe

There are more public libraries than McDonald’s in the U.S. – a total of 16,766 including branches.
 

Another religious figure for this time is St. Nicholas.  In the U.S. we condensed his name from Sinterklaas to Santa Claus and his red suit comes from the red robes of a bishop.  St. Nicholas was a bishop known for his generosity to the poor, especially tossing three bags of gold over the wall into the yard of  three sisters for marriage dowries, saving them from probable prostitution.  His feast day is celebrated on December 6. 


In the colonial days of the U.S. it is said that in Albany an expert Dutch baker named Van Amsterdam was known for his Sinterklaas cookies until he upset an old woman.  She asked for a dozen.  He gave her 12, but she insisted on 13.  When he refused, she rebuked him for his lack of the saint's generosity.  A year passed and nothing he baked was worth eating.  By the following Dec. 6 he had just enough to make his trademark cookies one last time.  Some say in a dream the saint talked to him about generosity, so when the woman reappeared he gave her the extra 13th cookie forming the first Baker's Dozen (and restoring his baking abilities). 

Here are two excellent versions of the tale.  (The photos of various book covers all originated on Amazon.com where you may read their summaries and find ordering information.  Any "Click to look inside" comments only work on the Amazon site.)


by Aaron Shepard
by Heather Forest




Americans spend nearly three times as much on candy as they do on public libraries.






Of course Gingerbread Cookies don't have to be made as Gingerbread Men or made into Gingerbread Houses, but there are so many wonderful versions.  If you feel sorry that the cookie gets eaten, why not try the tasty illustrations and two versions by Jan Brett, the Gingerbread Baby and Gingerbread Friends. I also noticed a Gingerbread Thematic Unit by Daphne Ransom.  Haven't tried it yet, but it's an appetizing idea.


Americans spend over 18 times as much money on home video games as they do on school library materials for their children.

For baking cookies and more, I’m also reminded of the Scottish tale about the Woman Who Flummoxed the Fairies.  When fairies kidnap a fabulous baker she insists they bring her the ingredients, then the utensils and other tools, then her purring cat and snoring dog because it helps her mixing rhythm, then she's too worried to bake properly without her husband and baby.  She whispers to him to step on the cat's tail.  Cat yowls, dog barks, baby cries, husband shouts for dinner and fairies send her home because of the noise, but from that time on every week she leaves baked goods (o.k., we’ll say just cookies) on the entrance to the fairy mound for them.  They pay her handsomely, but never again try to keep her a prisoner.  I love telling this as an audience participation tale, but there’s also a picture book version and once again it features retelling by Heather Forest. 



Americans check out an average of more than 8 books per year, but their per capita tax cost is about the cost of an average hardback book. 


While thinking about cookies and the various religious traditions, why not also include the “wise fool” character loved throughout Islamic countries?  While he's spelled many different ways and also goes by many names, I especially enjoy the Turkish versions about the Hodja as they often include a bit of historical background.  Timur (sometimes called Tamerlaine) makes the Hodja his new tax collector.  The previous collector had to eat his receipts since they were unsatisfactory to Timur.  The Hodja has his wife make thin cookie dough and writes his records on them, making it better later than eating paper.  There are many anthologies and online stories about the Hodja.  (Don't stop with just the one online source linked here as he has many fans and his stories appear in many places.)   As for books, my first exposure came from the works of Alice Geer Kelsey and Barbara Walker, but, like cookies, I didn't stop there and I hope you don't either.

Taxes may not be tasty, but here's a library value calculator, showing libraries are a bargain, so pass the cookies and enjoy these sweet cookie stories by borrowing them from your local library.