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Adapted from Sichat HaShavua #281.(First published in English in Kfar Chabad Magazine)
To hear this story in audio, press the "play" button (1st one from the left):
On the eve of 18th of Iyar, the
thirty-third (in gematria, 33=lamed-gimmel, "lag")
night of Counting the Omer in 5683 (1923), as every year, an enormous crowd was
assembled on the roof of the building in Meron that enclosed the tomb of Rebbe
Shimon Bar Yochai. The huge annual bonfire was throwing off heat and smoke,
radiating light that could be seen as far away as the streets of Safed and
casting shadows on the circle of chassidim and leading members of the community
that danced energetically in front of it. All the other men stood off to the
side and sang and clapped enthusiastically to the pulsating beat of the
traditional Lag B'Omer songs. Below, in the large courtyard, the women and
children also sang and rejoiced, in honor of Rebbe Shimon Bar Yochai.
Lag B'Omer is the anniversary of the passing-on more
than eighteen hundred years ago of the renowned Mishnaic sage and foremost
Kabbalist, Rebbe Shimon Bar Yochai, whose teachings comprise the text of
the primary Kabbala sourcebook, the Zohar. (This of course is in addition
to its halachic significance as a cessation in the semi-mourning observances
that obtain between Passover and Shavuot.) The yahrzeit is celebrated
with great joy in accordance with the recorded express wishes of Rebbe Shimon
himself. Written accounts from more than five hundred years ago cite the
tradition and the great virtue of attending the tombsite in the village of Meron,
situated in the northern Galilee of Israel.  | | " The 'stars' of the Lag B'Omer festivities that year were the little three-year-old boys..." |  |  |
Sages and common folk alike attest that anyone who
prays to G-d sincerely there on Lag B'Omer will surely be answered in Rebbe
Shimon's merit. The barren, the poor, and the critically sick have all made the
pilgrimage there and found salvation.
As always, the "stars" of the Lag B'Omer festivities
that year were the little three-year-old boys, whose proud parents had brought
them to have their first haircuts and peyot-shaping at Rebbe Shimon's
tombsite on "his day". As the children were transferred from mothers' arms to
fathers' shoulders, the scissors would be passed around to relatives, friends
and bystanders, so all could share in the merit of snipping the long strands and
curls, while leaving the peyot untouched.
That year Lag B'Omer fell on a Thursday night-Friday.
Many of the celebrants elected to stay on for Shabbat, knowing that the holy day
emerging out of Lag B'Omer in the presence of Rebbe Shimon would be an
extraordinarily exalted occasion.
Friday evening everyone prayed together, and the
holiness and joy of the Shabbat spirit was palpable. Then everyone turned to
their lodging places, where the pleasure of the holy day continued unabated
throughout the evening meals.  | | " ...a loud bitter wail shattered the shimmering atmosphere of Shabbat joy" |  |  |
Early Shabbat morning, as soon as the first streaks of
light infiltrated the sky, the Sephardim returned to the tombsite for the
sunrise minyan. After them, the "regular" minyanim took place, and finally, the
chassidim arrived for the late-morning shift in their own inimitable ecstatic
style. Afterwards, when they too returned to the large communal eating area, the
happy singing of the earlier arrivals left no doubt that the spirit of Shabbat
joy was continuing to expand with each passing moment.
But then, a loud bitter wail shattered the shimmering
atmosphere of Shabbat joy. A little boy, who had come with his mother for his
first haircut, had unaccountably fallen sick and stopped breathing. Aid was
given, but to no avail. He was dead, and his broken mother was screaming
uncontrollably. All the women around her were crying too.
The word spread quickly. Almost instantaneously,
melancholy gloom replaced the exuberant rejoicing. The singing stopped, the
dancers froze; the mother's loud cries pierced every heart.
Before they could recover from their shock, a further
development struck. The British Mandate police assigned to keep order suddenly,
without any warning, locked the gates of the courtyard. They then announced that
they were forced to take this precaution because maybe the disease that had
struck down the hapless child was highly contagious, and they were obligated to
do everything possible to prevent it from proliferating.  | | " The grieving mother was staggering determinedly towards the place of Rebbe Shimon..." |  |  |
Pandemonium spread. Many families were divided by the
padlocked gate; numerous little children were cut off from their parents. The
British police didn't seem to care, and turned a deaf ear to every appeal.
Masses of Jews were being prevented from reaching Rebbe Shimon on the day of his
celebration.
The stunned Jews still inside pushed closer to the
tombsite, to express their crushed hearts in fervent prayer. Suddenly the crowd
rippled, and like at the Splitting of the Reed Sea, a clear path miraculously
opened. The grieving mother was staggering determinedly towards the place of
Rebbe Shimon, carrying her dead son in her arms.
The sight was enough to break every heart. Some
sighed, some cried, others nodded their heads as if to show understanding and
empathy.
The distraught mother came up to the tomb. She placed
her son on the ground. Seemingly unaware of all the people around her, in a
quivering voice she spoke out through her tears, "Oy! Tzadik! I, your
humble maidservant, came here to honor you. Only you know that in bringing my
son here to you, I was fulfilling the vow I made on this spot four years ago,
before I merited to be a mother for the first time. Yesterday we inaugurated him
with joy and song in the mitzvah of leaving peyot. And now, woe is me!
How can I go home without my son!?"
All those present choked back their sobs. No one dared
to make a sound that might interfere with her words.  | | " Everyone ran in...and spontaneously burst out with overflowing hearts..." |  |  |
The mother stopped crying. She straightened up and
took a deep breath. In a firm clear voice, she pronounced: "Rebbe Shimon! I have
laid my son on the ground next to you, dead. Please do not disappoint me. Return
my son to me alive and healthy as he was when I brought him here to you.
'Yitgadal v'yitkadash shmei rabbah' - 'Exalted and blessed is His great
name', and also the name of Rebbe Shimon Bar Yochai. Everyone knows that you are
holy and He, our G-d, is holy. Please give me back my son!"
She stopped speaking, then spun and exited the
structure built around the tomb. Every other person present followed her out.
They closed the door after them, leaving the dead child behind, unattended.
A few minutes passed. From inside, behind the closed
doors, a weak voice was heard. "Mommy, water. I'm so thirsty."
Everyone stood as if paralyzed, trembling with
conflicting emotions of fear and disbelief, of shock and delight. The mother
burst through the doors and swept up her child into her arms. Everyone ran in
and surrounded them, and spontaneously burst out with overflowing hearts,
"Blessed is He who enlivens the dead!"
The bewildered British quickly re-opened the courtyard
gates. The throngs of Jews impatiently standing outside streamed back in. When
they heard about the great miracle that had just taken place, the thanksgiving
and celebration multiplied sevenfold.
The sound of their enthusiastic singing of the most
popular "Bar Yochai" song (composed by the Kabbalist, Rabbi Shimon Labia
approximately 450 years ago) could be heard for miles around - and, no doubt,
penetrated to the highest heavens, including the celestial abode of Rebbe
Shimon.
"Bar Yochai, nimshachta ashrecha, shemen sasson
meihavarecha" - "Bar Yochai, fortunate are you, annointed with joyous oil
over and above your companions."
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