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Tag: MaHaRal

The Story of the Speaking Head: Part II Trap Sprung and the Escape

Posted on Thursday, 17, June, 2021Tuesday, 20, September, 2022 by Rabbi

Part II Trap Sprung and the Escape

Now let us return to the young bridegroom in the tower. When he entered this last little room with the books he had no more than crossed the threshold when the man abandoned him; and as the door closed behind him, he heard a voice, sighing: “Alack and alas, you have also been tricked like me, you unhappy one. Now that you have come here you will never depart alive.” The boy was struck dumb with horror, wondering whose voice that could be. He raised his eyes and saw a very old head, just a head unattached to any body. It was this head that spoke to him.

The head went on: “Whom do you have here? A bride, a mother-in-law or a father-in-law? Where are they? This is the abode of Lilith of the other side, a place of impurity. All those your eyes have seen are merely snares of the soul who wish to make an end of the world, and here there is nothing but images and witchcraft.”

The head went on: “I also was a child prodigy, and in the best years of my youth they lured me into this trap and caught me in their net to serve them as a mouthpiece before God. They have unholy names from the idols that belong to Jeroboam ben Nebat, who caused Israel to sin. Once in eighty years they cut off the head of a child prodigy who is the first-born son of a first-born. They do this when he is thirteen years and a day old, then they place the unholy names under his tongue, and he declares the things that are to come hereafter (Isaiah 41:23) and forecasts the future for them. Now the years of my slavery are over, and they have taken you instead. Look around and see how they have prepared wine for a libation; and the many lights that are burning in the room are only for me.”

Terrified and trembling, the lad heard all this, then he girded up his strength and asked the head: “If you have told me all this, then please tell me now what I should do? Is there any remedy for me?” “There is nothing better for you,” answered the head, “than to flee for your soul through this window. If you do not flee for your life tonight, you will be slain tomorrow and placed at my post instead of me. I advise you, and may the Lord be your aid, that when you jump through the window you take me in your arms so that I can tell you what road to take. For otherwise you will not be safe. Understand that if I am not with you, then if one of those men comes and asks me where you are, I must tell him at once where he can find you. So if you will listen to me, you will do wisely.

Isaiah 41:23

“And now swear to me that when you return home to your father you will do me a last kindness and bury my head in a Jewish grave and say the Kaddish prayer as a memorial to my soul and that you will do all that is proper and fitting for my soul.”

The boy swore this to him. Then he opened the window and jumped out, carrying the severed head. They flew high above the castle and escaped away. The boy was frightened; from time to time the head declared, “Now we are here, at such and such a place, start running fast, for those who would trap your soul have just come to look for you.”

Let us return now to share in the grief of the townsfolk with their master and rabbi, whose soul was weeping in secret before the all-saving Lord. The day came when the rabbi proclaimed a fast for the congrega¬tion. All the townsfolk, men, women and children, came to the syna¬gogue, which is called the Altneuschul. There the rabbi ordered that they should all recite the First Book of Psalms, and they all repeated the songs of David with full devotion. After they completed the book, the rabbi said, “The boy has not yet returned, and therefore, my masters and rabbis, I shall preach a moralizing sermon and words of reproof to you.” The rabbi said everything with such spiritual force, all the people were moved and their prayers uplifted. Then he ordered the congre¬gation to recite the Second Book of Psalms. When they had ended it, he looked this way and that but the lad was not there, so he preached once again as before. Then he recited the Third Book of Psalms himself before the Holy Ark, verse by verse, as is done by the leader of the community in prayer; and he blew the shofar (ram’s horn). As the blast came to an end, the window of the synagogue opened by itself, and the boy flew in and stood before his teacher, and all the people saw this and trembled at the sight.

Then the boy told the entire congregation all that had befallen him and showed the head that was with him to the rabbi. Then the rabbi cried in a loud voice, “Yet heaven brought this about in order to take the pure out of the clutches of the impure and to save more souls of Israel for whom they have been lying in wait forever. Now I have taken all those unholy names from them.” With that, he removed the names from under the tongue of the head, and tore them into little pieces. He promised the head in the presence of the entire congregation to pray for hi holy soul, bury him and say the Kaddish prayer for his soul. And he did so.

There are some who say that on the night when the rabbi prayed for the return of the captive soul of this boy, his deceased grandfather came and bore him on his shoulders past villages and forests the great distance of a whole month’s journey, in a single night, until he came home in peace. All this came about due to the prayers of the holy rabbi.

Noraos Anshe Ma’asseh #1

May all your tales end with Shalom (peace)

Click here for more storytelling resources

Tell it to your children, and let your children tell it to their children, and their children to the next generation. (Joel 1:3)

Rachmiel Tobesman is a motivational speaker and Maggid (spiritual Storyteller). He is available for speaking engagements or storytelling, Click here to contact us

Please share this story with family and friends and let us know what you think or feel about the stories in a comment or two. Like us on Facebook or tweet us on Twitter

If the stories are not shared they will be lost.

Please share this story with others

Posted in Faith, Horror, Love, Stories, Uncategorized, WisdomTagged bar mitzvah, Isaiah 41:23, Jewish horror story, MaHaRal, Prayer, Psalms, Rabbi Judah Loew ben BezalelLeave a Comment on The Story of the Speaking Head: Part II Trap Sprung and the Escape

The Story of the Speaking Head – Part I The Betrothal and Concern

Posted on Monday, 14, June, 2021Tuesday, 20, September, 2022 by Rabbi

Part I The Betrothal and Concern

In the days of the MaHaRaL (Rabbi Loew ben Bezalel) of Prague, a very wealthy merchant lived in that community. He had a son who was a prodigy as a student, and when he was only twelve years old, he was one of the outstanding pupils of the rabbi, who treated him like a son. Now among the foreign merchants who did business with this wealthy man there were two who always purchased large quantities of goods through him and enabled him to make much profit. When they came to do their business, they entertained themselves with this bright boy as long as they were in the city, and from time to time they gave him gifts because his answers so pleased them; and his father paid no attention to this.

Once when they were at ease with the wealthy merchant and were on very friendly terms with the boy, one of the two magnates asked the merchant whether he would be prepared to entertain a pleasant hope and would consider an excellent match for his son with the daughter of a very wealthy person. She was his only child and she was outstanding in looks, behavior and wisdom. Since her father had no other child, she would inherit all his wealth and property; and who will share all these treasures if not the son of the proud merchant if only he wedded her.

The merchant set out to make inquiries about this wealthy man with only one daughter, and people told him that indeed he had gold and riches. He also learned that the foreign longed to wed his daughter to a man who devoted himself to the Torah and holy study. Yet not all this quieted his mind; he sought the counsel of the holy MaHaRaL of Prague who taught his son. The rabbi spoke in favor of the match, saying that it would be a fit and proper one for him to make.

When he returned home, the two merchants asked him whether he had made all due inquiries. He answered what was on his mind. Then one of the merchants went on: “In that case, you should know that I myself am the very person whose praises from afar resounded in your ears.” Without any delay, the two wealthy merchants went together with the boy’s father to the great rabbi, with whom the prospective bridegroom was studying. They shook hands and agreed on a marriage, as was the custom. They wrote an engagement contract and happily wished one another “Mazal Tov! Good luck), Mazal Tov” They made a feast and there was great rejoicing. The bridegroom delivered a beautifully reasoned dvar Torah – a Torah lesson.

The two wealthy merchants agreed to stay a few days longer, entertaining themselves with the bridegroom. When their time came to depart, they requested his father to send the boy with them so that he could also be introduced to the bride and her mother. He was reluctant to do so. He was anxious to send his beloved son such a great distance away from him before the wedding. The merchants strongly encouraged him, and the bride’s father, begged him to do this for the sake of his wife and only daughter, in order that they might see this precious choice with their own eyes. He could not harden his heart any more, and he went to ask the advice of the rabbi, who also agreed that the bridegroom might be sent there and stay until he was thirteen years old. So the bridegroom’s father consented and gave them his son, and they parted in peace.

Psalms 63:2

The men set out on their way and brought the boy to a distant land where there was a big tower. They conducted him through all the rooms, and each of them was more splendid than the other. He went all over the tower and could see no people, especially neither the bride nor her mother. He had imagined that the rabbi and the leaders of the city would come to meet him and debate with him in Torah, but nothing happened. The door of the castle was locked, and no one appeared except the man who said he was the father of the bride. He visited and conversed with the boy two or three times a day.

At long last, the boy could not restrain himself and asked him, “Why is it that I do not see anybody or anything in the house?” Then the man took him by the hand and led him through one room after another until they came to a small room that was very brightly lit up and was full of ancient books and the works of early and recent authorities. “What more do you want, my son?” he asked. “Here are precious books. Study whatever you wish as much as you desire.”

Now let us pause a while and turn from what befell this darling youth and tell of the distress of his father. The father his only son so greatly and found in him the desire of all his soul and the life of his spirit. Every day he would wait to receive a letter from his beloved son, but none came. Weeks turned to months and his hopes were futile, for neither letter nor message came from his son. He raised his eyes aloft and wept bitterly countless times before the rabbi, who put heart into him and gave him ample hope, saying that all was well with the child. In spite of the rabbi’s assurances, the father could not calm himself and was torn with grief. Many people who knew the father were outraged and in their hearts complained about the rabbi, because he had agreed to it all.

Indeed, the grief and heartbreak of the father and mother are beyond description. They looked miserable, they could not sleep, and they cried constantly. The rabbi could not rest either; he prayed and entreated the Holy One, blessed be He all the time and grew restless with his effort. He was very angry with himself for having made such an error, and he shook the very foundations of the heavens with fasting, weeping and prayer.

May all your tales end with Shalom (peace)

Click here for more storytelling resources

Tell it to your children, and let your children tell it to their children, and their children to the next generation. (Joel 1:3)

Rachmiel Tobesman is a motivational speaker and Maggid (spiritual Storyteller). He is available for speaking engagements or storytelling, Click here to contact us

Please share this story with family and friends and let us know what you think or feel about the stories in a comment or two. Like us on Facebook or tweet us on Twitter

If the stories are not shared they will be lost.

Please share this story with others

Posted in Faith, Horror, Stories, Uncategorized, WisdomTagged betrothal, Jewish horror story, MaHaRal, merchant, Rabbi Judah Loew ben BezalelLeave a Comment on The Story of the Speaking Head – Part I The Betrothal and Concern

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