Song of Solace
| August 3, 2011
Caged inside thick glass-walled soundproof cubicles the musicians play sing and take occasional breaks to converse in rapid-fire Hebrew with the sound engineer ensconced in the center of the studio. “Ve’hu kechatan yotzei mei’chupato ” croons the lead vocalist his voice meshing with expertly spun strains of guitar and cello studded with percussion. In a separate cubicle immersed in the music yet far apart from it all sits a silent observer head cradled in his hands. He sits and he weeps.
“I got very choked up about that song” Naftali Moses says his eyes becoming misty even now just thinking back a week ago to that recording session. “The musicians finished that song and they came out of their cubicles and there I was all choked up and crying. They asked why and I told them it reminded me of the poem my wife wrote. After the shloshim …”
The Wedding Canopy
by Leah Moses
One day
I thought
there’d be a chuppah
and a bride.
We’d sing
and dance
and take you
toward
your future.
One day
after thirty days
of mourning there was a chuppah
but no bride.
We sang
and danced
and took a Torah Scroll
to your school.
I thought
there’d be a chuppah
and we’d celebrate
your life.
I was wrong.
There was a chuppah
and we celebrated
your death.
To read the rest of this story please buy this issue of Mishpacha or sign up for a weekly subscription.
Oops! We could not locate your form.

