Satan in Goray - Isaac Bashevis Singer [2]
2
In Lublin Rabbi Benish had been constantly busy. The events of 1648 and 1649 had left thousands of women neither married nor widowed, since it was uncertain whether their husbands were alive. Often the rabbinical court had to veer from the strict letter of the law and release a woman from the marriage bond. In the anterooms of the community house where Rabbi Benish sat in judgment with other great rabbis, there was always a crowd of weeping women. Some of these unfortunates wandered from town to town, searching the registers of the holy burial societies for the names of their lost husbands. Others, forced to release their brothers-in-law from the obligation of marrying them, complained bitterly of the fee demanded for such consent. Often, one of these women would remarry, only to have her first husband return; he would have escaped from Tartar slavery or been ransomed by the Jewish community of Stamboul. Around the building where the Council of the Four Lands met, marriage brokers bustled, matching prospective couples and extracting advances on their fees; beggars tugged at the jackets of passers-by; persons who were half- or completely mad laughed, cried, sang; children who had lost father and mother wandered about the courtyard, abandoned and mangy, insolently begging. Daily, emissaries arrived, each from a different Jewish community, recounting the suffering that had come on the heels of Chmelnicki and the Swedish soldiers. More than once Rabbi Benish begged God to transport him from this world, as he no longer had the strength to hear these sorrowful stories. But here in Goray all was calm. There were no judicial disputes, few queries concerning the holy law. True, the town offered him only a scant living, but for that very reason the rabbi had enough time for himself. His room was separated from the rest of the house by a large corridor, and silence reigned throughout. A solitary fly buzzed, beating against the windowpane; a mouse scratched along the floor; the cricket behind the stove would chirp monotonously for a few minutes, then listen to its echo for a long while before beginning anew, as though mourning an unforgettable sorrow. The ceiling was blackened by smoke; the walls were mildewed, and the stain of a white-and-green mold would appear nightly, rising, it seemed, from another world. On the table lay unlined sheets of paper and goose-feather quills. Rabbi Benish sat there for hours at a time, deep in thought, his high forehead wrinkled, and every now and then he would cast an expectant glance at the yellowed window curtains. Although more than half the town had returned by now and found shelter, the sound of talk and of children at play was rarely heard outside. It seemed as though the few Jews who had come back to Goray