Wheat from Heaven
There was one
winter in the mid-nineteenth century that portended a year of drought in the
The Jews turned to
prayer. One night, Rav Yeshaya
Bardaky, the noble leader of the Perushim
(followers of the Vilna Gaon), organized a
At the conclusion
of their prayers, they started to return homeward. They were quite surprised to
find the narrow lanes crowded with mules laden with sacks of wheat, extending
all the way to the courtyard of Rav Bardaky. Eagerly, they asked how much the precious grain
cost.
The leader of the
Arab caravan disregarded their questions. "Where is Bardaky?"
he asked. On meeting the Perushim leader, the Arab
offered to sell the whole train of wheat which he had brought from far away.
"I am
willing," Rav Bardaky
announced. "But I don't have cash to pay for it."
The Arab answered,
"I am willing to accept a note from the Chacham
(Sage), who is known to be trustworthy."
Unhesitatingly, Rav Bardaky wrote an IOU for the
entire sum. Then he invited the Arab leader and his companions to be his guests
for the night. The leader replied, "Thank you, but we must be off at once."
Within minutes, the mules were unloaded, and they disappeared in the dark
corridors of the city.
In gratitude to HaShem, the Merciful One, Rav Bardaky gave part of the wheat to the Moslem and Christian
citizens of the city. In that way, he spread the greatness of HaShem’s Name throughout the Land.
Days and weeks
passed, yet the Arab never returned to claim payment for the wheat. Rav Bardaky inquired in every
sector of the city, but without success. The gatekeepers confirmed his
suspicions that on the night of the delivery of the wheat, the gates of the
city were duly bolted as required by law, and that no caravan of mules had
entered the city. For years to come, the people of
The above story appears in the book
"Where heaven touches earth" - Jewish life in