Opinion

Submerging into our land

Five natural springs are within a 20-minute walk of my home; at least one of them was used by my ancestors during the time of the Temple in Jerusalem.

Ein Chubela is an ancient spring in the Judean Hills overlooking the valley where David killed Goliath. Photo by Shlomo Vile.
Ein Chubela is an ancient spring in the Judean Hills overlooking the valley where David killed Goliath. Photo by Shlomo Vile.
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Shlomo Vile
Shlomo Vile is the webmaster and digital marketing director for JNS. Professionally, Vile is a digital marketer who specializes in working for pro-Israel organizations, like JNS. Vile earned two degrees from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and has worked in a number of fields, including engineering, printing management, direct mail marketing, and financial services. Shlomo made aliyah to Bat Ayin in 2010 with his wife and four children.  He is living out a long-time dream to live as a native Jew in the land of our ancestors, following in their footsteps,  and working towards the fulfillment their messianic dreams.  

Ein Chubela, the spring pictured here, has a pool fed by an artificial cave carved into the limestone hillside. My ancestors dug the cave more than 2,000 years ago. They dug the cave to increase the flow of water from the natural spring that King David himself may have visited during his time as a shepherd in these hills.

Submerging into the pool of cold spring water is an all-absorbing sensory experience. It’s somewhat overwhelming for those who are not accustomed to it. To stay in the cold water for any length of time, you have to negate the part of your mind that is telling you to get out ASAP.

But if you can relax, breathe and let yourself sink into the water, then you can experience a sense of being swallowed into the land and infused with its spirit. Our souls have been waiting for 150 generations for this embodied experience of connection to our land, and it’s worth the effort to savor it and open ourselves to connecting to what is, as a Jew, already part of us.

Emerging from the pool, you aren’t the same person who entered. Something of the spirit of Eretz Yisrael and our holy ancestors stays with us. And honestly, getting out of that cold water, you do kind of feel like King David or one of his warriors, full of the holy vitality of the land of Israel.

See the other articles in this series:

How I became a West Bank settler meme

Connecting to our mothers and fathers

Eating the fruit of the land of Israel

The opinions and facts presented in this article are those of the author, and neither JNS nor its partners assume any responsibility for them.
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