As a child I was enchanted with the idea of being a pioneer.
I pictured myself in a long, homespun dress and calico bonnet, helping to tame
the Wild West. When I read in my grammar school Weekly Reader about
Edward Kennedy taking his family cross country in a covered wagon I was
enchanted. If only my parents would do something like that! Of course, the
whole idea of my mother and father doing anything remotely similar was
ludicrous. My father always said he had done enough camping in the army and
even picnicking was something he tried to avoid.
Somewhere in my adolescent years my enchantment with the
nineteenth century began to wane. I began to realize that running to an
outhouse in the middle of the night was anything but romantic. I appreciated being
able to open the refrigerator door and have food readily available. And to talk
to a friend on the telephone was one of my greatest pleasures. So, I tempered
my dream of being a pioneer in the Wild West to becoming a settler in the Land
of Israel. Although I moved into a house with the advantages of running water
and electricity, I was still helping to tame the land. It was the best of both
worlds, except when we had power outages.
In the twenty-seven years I have lived in Shilo we have been
without power countless times, sometimes for just a few minutes and sometimes
for days. The longest period was this past week when we had what has been
called the worst snowstorm in Israel of the past one hundred years. Electric
lines all over Yehudah, Shomron, Jerusalem, the Golan, and the Galil went down.
In Shilo, power went out on Friday at three in the morning. As I write these
words five days later I am using generator power and praying that we will soon
be reconnected to power lines.
Twenty years ago most people here heated their homes with
gas, kerosene, and wood heaters. As the price of electricity became less
expensive, many of us abandoned those heaters for cleaner, electric heat. So
last Friday scores of families were left with cold, unheated homes. Countless
stories can be told of how families took their old heaters out of storage and
made do with heating a room or two. Others kept the gas burners lit on their
cooking stoves and huddled in their kitchens. There were those who fled their
homes for welcoming neighbors who still used the old-fashioned heat.
Without the electricity the water pump in Shilo does not
work and by Shabbat morning we only had a trickle of water in our faucets. Some
had filled bathtubs with water Friday afternoon. Others gathered buckets and
pots of snow to use for flushing the toilets. We drank soda, whiskey, and the
water we had left. By Shabbat afternoon the refrigerators were no longer cold
and it seemed more prudent to leave food in one of the cold, unheated rooms or
outside.
Our phones were out and cell phone reception was at a
minimum. It was several hours after Shabbat that I was finally able to make
contact with my children. They were worried and concerned. “Come to us,” my
middle daughter begged. “We have heat, hot water, everything.” It sounded
lovely but the roads were closed, many blocked by heavy snow, others too icy to
be able to drive safely.
By Sunday, afternoon, though, we were able to leave. Slowly,
carefully, my husband drove down the Shilo hill to the highway. There were
still some patches of ice but most of the way was smooth. Twenty-five minutes
from home the whole landscape changed. Gone was the pristine, white snow.
Instead the hills were their normal green and brown. Our first stop was at my
son’s in-laws and life was routine there. It was so strange to see that schools
and businesses were open. I felt like a refugee from another world trying to
adjust to normal life. I used the bathroom and amazingly the toilet flushed
automatically. We were hungry and my son’s mother-in-law casually opened up her
refrigerator and pulled out some Shabbat leftovers. Without thinking she
slipped them into the microwave. What a miracle! In a matter of minutes we had
a good, hot meal. Then we arrived at our daughter’s home and she gave us towels
and soap. Inside the shower I turned on the faucet and hot water came gushing
out. What a luxury!
Meanwhile in Shilo the electric company brought generators
and there was once again running water in Shilo. The phone lines began working
and with the generators there was power off and on. Monday afternoon we decided
it was time to return home. Our adventure was not over but we believed the end
was in sight.
Now, six days later, as I finish this article we are reconnected
to the power lines. Although we still are concerned about icy patches the
adventure is more or less over. As always, after such an adventure, it is
important to try to learn from the experience. Although I had spent my
childhood wishing to live in The Olden Days, I have spent most of my
adult years taking many of the wonders HaShem has given us for granted. It took
a serious power outage for me to really appreciate what a privilege it is to
brush my teeth with running water. And so I have learned to be grateful for all
the wonderful, miraculous inventions HaShem has made for us. I pray I will not
forget this lesson.
4 comments:
Ester, I remember your love of the pioneers as a kid. I also cannot imagine either of your parents roughing it! We too have grown used to comfort and this recent snow that kept me home for 2 days til all was cleared reminded me how grateful I am for snow plows! It is beautiful to see, but I still hate the cold. Thank you for another wonderful story. Love Esther
Thank you, Esther.This snowfall reminded me of my of why I moved to Arizona. I would visit the snow once a year, marvel at the beauty, and then hurry back to the desert.
I was also at my middle daughter, just ten minutes to the south of us, even though they had more snow and it was colder, they had electricity and water. I also stayed a night in Pisgat Zeev, but as soon as the news came that we were reconnected to the grid, I trempted back home.
Thanks for sharing. I only suffered without electricity for one morning and once in awhile off and on for a few minutes here in Betar Illit. I was very surprised that the cell phones were not working. I have learned about the noisy buses that pass by my apt. I don't think that the noise will bother me anymore now that they are running again. What a blessing to even have buses.
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