By Miriam Kresh for The Jew and the Carrot
It’s Hanukkah,
and we’ve been hearing a lot about olive oil. But consider the olive
tree; its noble wood and generous shade; its gnarled beauty; its fruit,
and the pungent oil pressed out of that fruit.
A
trip to the Galilee brought me to Druze villages where residents
traditionally make their living from the olive harvest. My guide was
Nivin, a young Druze woman. We drove past modern olive groves planted
against green hills. She indicated where to stop, at the edge of another
olive orchard. This one’s trees are 2000 years old.
They thrive
on winter rains alone, and for this reason, the ancient farmers spaced
them well apart, making room for each one to receive sunshine and
moisture without competition. It was a cool, blue afternoon, and we
walked between the great, silent trees with a certain awe. They had been
set down into that soil as flexible saplings when Solomon’s Temple
still stood.
The trees continued to grow slowly throughout the
centuries, making new wood that curved outward, so that each tree’s
heart was exposed, or curved back towards the mother tree so that a
wooden hollow was formed that’s big enough for an adult to stand in. And
those ancient trees are still producing fruit. Their branches were so
heavy with sun-warmed, blue-black olives that they bowed almost to the
ground.
As we walked through the orchard, Nivin told me a Druze
folk tale, about the olive and King Solomon. King Solomon had the
supernatural power of understanding all living creatures’ languages. He
would leave his palace to walk through fields and forests, conversing
with beasts and plants, gathering and distilling their wisdom. For this,
all natural beings loved him. When the great king died, nature went
into mourning. The trees deliberately shed their foliage, so that their
bare branches rattled sadly in the winter gusts. But not every tree did
this. To the disgust of the others, the olive stood in its full glory of
green and silver leaves.
“Why aren’t you mourning the passing of
Solomon?” the trees asked the olive. “Don’t you care? Look at us. The
mulberry, the almond, the oak — all our greenery has fallen to the
ground. Everyone can see how sad we are. Yet you are indifferent. You
haven’t shed one leaf. Where’s your heart?”
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