One
man's trash is another man's treasure—and sometimes, one man's trash is
another man's history. In her second novel, In the Courtyard of the
Kabbalist, Ruchama King Feuerman explores the ways two men—one Jewish,
one Arab—build an unlikely friendship despite Jerusalem's cultural and
political divisions.
Isaac Markowitz, a Lower East Side
haberdasher who makes aliyah to realize his unfulfilled potential, finds
a job as an assistant to a Jerusalem rabbi who is part Talmudist, part
psychoanalyst: Jews from all walks of life gather in his courtyard to
seek his guidance on everything from romance to kashrut.
When
Mustafa, a custodian at the Temple Mount/Al-Haram al-Sharif with a rare
medical condition, arrives at the courtyard, Isaac is surprised by the
intimate—and curiously volatile—friendship that arises between them. One
day, Mustafa brings Isaac an ancient stone pomegranate from the Temple
Mount, leading Isaac—and the police—to discover that such artifacts are
being buried, broken, and cast aside. Occasionally, the men come
dangerously close to archetypes: the old-fashioned Ashkenazi, the devout
Muslim. But in Feuerman's hands, they are human: conciliatory,
contradictory, and hoping their lives have meaning.
- Leah Falk for Jewniverse
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