As we honor the third anniversary of the September 11 attack, in which humans
brutally killed many innocent people in the name of distorted faith, we are
also encountering natural disasters in the form of hurricanes ravaging the
South Atlantic. It clearly is a time to take stock of our lives and learn
how to face the cruel forces that make us so vulnerable.
And the timing couldn’t be more opportune: As we approach Rosh Hashana, the
collective birthday of the human race, what better time to reassess the purpose
of our existence, the challenges we face and our overall role in the unfolding
drama of life.
We bring you here an unusual source of information about
some of the mysterious forces affecting us today.
Our own Rabbi Simon Jacobson, who just returned from North Miami Beach, offers
us an exclusive interview with Hurricane Frances, which sheds some light on
our present day calamities. Ivan was not available due to his busy schedule,
devastating Grenada and making its way to his next destination.
AN INTERVIEW WITH FRANCES
SJ: How are you today, Frances?
FRANCES: Frances?! Where did you get that ridiculous name from?
SJ: That seems to be the name that scientists call you.
FRANCES: Scientists! Give me a break. What do scientists know about me that
they feel they can coin me with some human name? Did they parent me?
SJ: Actually, scientists are perplexed about you and your cohorts. Years
ago they tried taming you, but they have long given up hope. Now they focus
on trying to track the way you form and move.
FRANCES: Exactly. They know nothing about me, yet they call me by their man-made
name!
SJ: So what should I call you?
FRANCES: You may be more comfortable calling me an “act of nature,” but I
am actually an “act of G-d” – even your insurance companies have acknowledged
that…
SJ: Isn’t it somewhat arrogant to call yourself an act of G-d?
FRANCES: It’s even more arrogant for humans to label me by their human name.
SJ: Ok, please don’t be so touchy. Let’s get beyond semantics.
FRANCES: This isn’t semantics. If people would accept that they I am not
their creation, but a tool of G-d’s, they would be able to begin to understand
me, and perhaps even master me.
SJ: Let’s get back to the interview. How are you today?
FRANCES: Much calmer thank you. I had a rough week down south, and I feel
relieved that my rage is finally subsiding.
SJ: Rage? Are you angry at something?
FRANCES: Not exactly angry. However, as you may have witnessed, I unintentionally
did cause much devastation. And I have driven fear into so many people’s hearts,
which really disturbs me.
SJ: Why does it disturb you?
FRANCES: Because the last thing I want to do is terrify people. That is why
I granted you this interview to perhaps help set the record straight.
SJ: Ok, that’s great. Then I hope you won’t mind if I ask you some blunt
questions about you and your friends.
FRANCES: By all means.
SJ: Our abovementioned scientists have learned much about your patterns,
your nature and the way you are constructed. They have learned to track your
path and to issue evacuation warnings to minimize your impact on populated
cities. People have also learned how to shutter their homes and to use other
measures to protect themselves from your floods and winds. However, with all
our scientific progress, we have no idea what you are really about, what role
you play. What your “soul,” if I can call it that, is like?
FRANCES: As you know everything in existence has both a body and a soul.
By studying the body of an experience you can come to understand it’s soul.
So, let me give you a lesson or two in the physical and spiritual nature of
a hurricane.
Do you know what causes us to be formed?
SJ: I believe that the birth of a hurricane requires at least three conditions.
First, the ocean waters must be warm enough (warmer than 26.5 degrees Celsius,
81°F) at the surface to put enough heat and moisture into the overlying atmosphere
to provide the potential fuel for the thermodynamic engine that a hurricane
becomes. Second, atmospheric moisture from seawater evaporation must combine
with that heat and energy to form the powerful engine needed to propel a hurricane.
Third, a wind pattern must be near the ocean surface to spirals air inward.
Bands of thunderstorms form, allowing the air to warm further and rise higher
into the atmosphere. If the winds at these higher levels are relatively light,
this structure can remain intact and grow stronger, which results in the beginnings
of a hurricane.
FRANCES: Very good. But allow me to add the following. Why do thunderstorms
occur in the first place? Why, for instance, does a period of high humidity
and low-pressure result in a thunderstorm?
SJ: I always understood it as a form of release. As heat builds up and has
nowhere to escape, it finally bursts into a thunderstorm, to release the bottled
up energy.
FRANCES: Exactly. Like the spout on a boiling kettle, which allows the pressure
to be released, a thunderstorm releases the pressure build up within the system.
If the storm would not come, the pressure could build up and explode like
a kettle without a spout, causing much more damage.
Hurricanes begin essentially as a complex of thunderstorms. When a group
of these storms comes together under the right atmospheric conditions for
a long enough time, they may organize into a tropical depression. Once a tropical
depression has intensified to the point where its maximum sustained winds
are between 35-64 knots (39-73 mph), it becomes a tropical storm. During this
time, the storm itself becomes more organized and begins to become more circular
in shape – resembling a hurricane. As surface pressures continue to drop,
a tropical storm becomes a hurricane when sustained wind speeds reach 64 knots
(74 mph). A pronounced rotation develops around the central core.
SJ: But why in the first place is there such a disparity between hot and
cold, between low and high-pressure systems that cause disturbances in atmospheric
conditions, leading to storms and ultimately hurricanes?
FRANCES: Ahh, that leads us back to G-d and the way He created the universe,
and to the “soul” of the storm. You have heard of the great Tzimzum, have
you not?
SJ: Yes, I have. The Lurianic doctrine of tzimtzum explains how “space” was
created for the existence of an entity that is consciously independent of
G-d’s all encompassing reality. Like a teaches that conceals his brilliance
to allow space for the student, the tzimzum allows us to exist and to slowly
discover the Divine reality, step by step, in ways that we can contain without
being annihilated.
FRANCES: But, as you know, this tzimzum in turn causes a serious imbalance.
Once the true reality is concealed, a duality has taken hold. Two perspectives
now clash with each other: The pre-tzimzum perspective from “above” that sees
existence as just another extension of G-dliness, and the post-tzimzum existential
perspective from “below” that sees its own existence as primary and can barely
sense a reality outside of its own. The two consciousnesses – The Divine one
and the human one – are no longer seamless.
SJ: A dichotomy exists between “light” and “container.”
FRANCES: The tension between these two realities ultimately leads to what
is called the “shattering of the containers.” As painful as the shattering
may be, it is necessary. It serves as a form of adjustment – a so called “market
correction” – to realign and readjust material reality with Divine reality.
When seen in its full light, the destruction of tohu, the shattering
of the containers, releases the tension and is actually necessary to begin
the process of repair and building something greater. Like the razing of a
building in order to build a greater one in its place. Like the deteriorating
seed that allows the fruit to bloom.
Now back to our earlier statement that you recall that we discussed earlier
that everything in existence has both a body and a soul. The body of a hurricane
is a result of heat, low pressure and the imbalance in atmospheric conditions:
The stormy winds of the hurricane are in essence coming to realign the imbalance.
In spiritual terms, the soul of the hurricane is similar to the “shattering
of the containers” which comes to relieve the tension and realign the imbalance
between spirit and matter.
SJ: Astounding.
FRANCES: If you like I will give you an example from your own human body.
As you know, the human being is universe in microcosm, and the universe is
like a large organism. Everything that exists on Earth also exists in human
physiology. Coughing is the body's way of removing foreign material or mucous
from the lungs and throat. High fever often is necessary to burn away unhealthy
bacteria and fight off infections. You can see me as an atmospheric cough
– drawing energy from the warm water – attempting to dislodge foreign forces
that impede the flow of nature.
Or using another example from your world: I am like a large vacuum cleaner,
sweeping up the dirt and grime of the universe, and realigning its balance.
SJ: This all sounds nice and good, but please forgive me: As a vacuum cleaner
why must you wreak such havoc in your path, destroying lives, damaging property
in the billions of dollars?
FRANCES: For the record, did you notice the great rains that came with the
winds? Those are my tears, weeping for the destruction I leave in my wake.
SJ: I am moved. But instead of weeping, why don’t you just do your thing
without any destruction, so neither you or we will need to weep
in the first place?
FRANCES: First of all, I am not the one in control calling the shots. I am
a force driven by G-d, so you need to direct your question to Him. What I
can tell you is that like the “shattering of the containers,” my destructive
force is not an end in itself, but a necessary step to maintain balance in
an unbalanced world.
SJ: Are you suggesting that you are a punishment for human sins?
FRANCES: G-d forbid. Just as the human cough is not a punishment and the
“shattering of the containers” are not a punishment, neither am I. On the
contrary, we are all forces that help realign and repair the dichotomy.
If I had my way, I would never hit land where I can harm people and property.
I would prefer doing my “rebalancing” out at sea, where you would not even
know that I existed. Just as many of the earthquakes take place in the ocean
depths, also, incidentally as a force that relieves the stress accumulated
along geologic faults, separating between the plates of the earth’s crust
grating against each other.
But what am I to do when my path often takes me through land that humans
have recently populated? Frankly, if there were no people and no buildings
in the way, there would be no destruction.
SJ: But there are people and buildings.
FRANCES: Well the fact is that we came first. We hurricanes were here long
before you populated this part of the world. Perhaps you were able to annihilate
the Indians, but you really can’t get rid of us, and you wouldn’t want to
if you appreciated our role in maintaining a balanced ecosystem.
Don’t get me wrong. I absolutely embrace your living in this part of the
world. And as I said, if it were my call, I would do everything possible to
stay away from hurting any of you.
But, the fact remains that we live in an unbalanced world, and you need us
hurricanes as much as we need you. You could not imagine what the world would
be like if we did not relieve the inherent tensions (as a cough eliminates
the blockages) and did not do our share of “vacuuming.”
And finally, let’s not forget that part of the pressure includes the deep
tension between nature and humans – a dichotomy that has been around for a
long time.
SJ: How long?
FRANCES: My great grandfather told me that his great grandfather told him
that his ancestors told him that these winds were blowing back then.
SJ: Are you essentially saying that you are merely a breath of fresh air?
FRANCES: And much more. I am a wind below that has the power to call and
rouse the wind above. As the Zohar says: “wind rouses wind,” “spirit (ruach)
rouses spirit.”
Did you ever notice why you sometimes cough strongly, gasping for air? You
do so because you are trying to dislodge a blockage. Yes, it would be better
to just breath silently with no disturbances. But when there is an impediment,
you have the power to cough it up. Thus, the nuisance you call a cough is
actually a lifesaver. So too, we hurricanes are a call that can reach deeper
and blow away impediments.
We also cannot exist without heat and without water – the two essentials
of life. Think about that.
SJ: Much to think about.
FRANCES: Now you can understand why I am offended that you insist on imposing
upon me a man-made name? I am here to remind you of the winds above and the
tensions between heaven and earth, and you go and try to turn me into another
human commodity…
What is it with you humans? Why must you turn everything into a “product”?
SJ: What would like us to call you?
FRANCES: Perhaps… a breath of fresh air…
SJ: So where do you go from here, Frances?
FRANCES: I will move north, deliver some life nourishing water and fill up
your reservoirs. You never know when you’ll need extra water. Then I will
probably just recede into the background. You won’t feel me but I’ll be there.
SJ: Since you know a thing or two about devastation, would you care to comment
on the September 11 attacks and the current climate of terrorism consuming
the world?
FRANCES: Please don’t compare me to them. I am a natural force, without free
will, meant to rebalance things. As I mentioned, if it were up to me, I would
function only at sea and in a place where I cannot disrupt your lives. Terrorists,
on the other hand, have made a choice to aggressively attack human beings,
all created in the Divine Image, for which they are fully accountable.
SJ: But couldn’t the same argument be made that the terrorists are a form
of “market correction” to repair the imbalance in life, and to shake us out
of our complacency and wake us up to our calling?
FRANCES: That may be true. But the terrorists still made their criminal choice,
and no one appointed them to perpetrate their atrocities. So though you all
need to learn your lessons from these attacks, in no way does this absolve
them of responsibility for their vicious crimes.
SJ: I’m amazed with your knowledge. Are you alive? Sometimes a storm of your
nature almost seems to have a life of its own as it threads its own path
FRANCES: I am alive.
SJ: Will we ever meet again?
Next time you enjoy the breeze, feel the wind flutter or refresh your lungs,
think of me. That wind may just be me whispering in your ear.
Next time you don’t know which way the wind blows, remember
me.