A Tale of
Two Birds of Paradise
By Tzvi Freeman
Many wonderful things were said in praise of the
Jewish people by our own holy prophets and sages.
Yet, every morning, we begin our prayers with the
words of the evil prophet Balaam, a man who would
have cursed the nation for gold and silver, had
G-d only allowed. Some explanation is needed. And
so, we have this story, which I heard from my
teacher, Rabbi Elimelech Zwiebel:
In another dimension of time, in a world beyond
ours, is a forest filled with magnificent
creatures. Of all the creatures there, the birds
are the most spectacular, and of all the birds,
the tzidikel bird is more beautiful than them
all. And of all the tzidikel birds, one stands
out with dazzling beauty, beyond anything words
can describe.
Every morning in this splendorous forest, the
creatures gather before sunrise about the tree of
the tzidikel bird. As the sun reaches the tops of
the trees, its rays shine down through the canopy
and the tzidikel opens its wings in full glory. A
panorama of colors glisten and sparkle in its
feathers, dancing in the sunlight like so many
magical stars and fairies to entertain the bird's
delighted audience. Each morning is a more
glorious spectacle than the day before. Each
morning all the creatures ahhh and ooh in wonder.
All this occurred every day within that dimension
of time, until, one year, a new bird came to the
forest. Soon enough, the creatures began to
gather at the roost of this new bird each
morning, leaving the tzidikel all but alone.
"Is she then more glorious than I?"
demanded the tzidikel of her few remaining
faithful. "How could this be? There are no
colors left in the universe that I do not
possess!"
"But she," her faithful muttered, their
heads hanging from shame, "she has no
colors. She is black."
The fury of the tzidikel knew no bounds. She was
the perfection of the art of beauty, and if black
was to be beautiful, then there was no beauty at
all. In rage, she tore herself from her branch
and flew to see her rival.
There stood the creatures of the forest in silent
wonder. Perhaps it was the oils of the black
bird's feathers that refracted the light of the
sun as a prism into so many rainbows. Perhaps it
was the mystery of her absolute blackness, or the
contrast she held against the bright morning sky.
All that could be said is that it was an
intangible beauty, not of something that could be
painted, or described or known in any way. It was
beauty as indefinable as black is dark.
"Is she then more glorious than I?!"
screamed the tzidikel from her perch above the
crowd.
"We cannot tell," the animals
explained, trembling. "For it is no longer
dawn."
"Very well then," cried the tzidikel.
"We will have a contest at dawn! But who
will be the judge?"
No creature dared volunteer for such a task. And
neither could the two birds themselves come to a
consensus. So it was decided that the two would
appear at dawn at a position known only to them
and the first creature to appear would adjudicate
their contest.
All night they prepared their feathers and
rehearsed their movements, all night at their
secret post in the forest. And as the sun began
to rise, they ruffled their feathers and then
with a dramatic swoosh spread them wide in the
most glorious scene ever to come to the most
glorious of forests. Yet there was no witness to
that scene, none but the two birds themselves.
Until, from behind the bushes below, a sound was
heard that almost toppled the tzidikel from her
tree in horror. It was the grunt of a wild boar.
Covered in mud and smelling of its own excrement,
the boar appeared, and yes, even he was delighted
with the beauty that encountered him. And the two
birds, surrendered to the fate of their contest,
both spread their feathers and turned elegantly,
displaying their pride to the pig below.
He grunted, he snorted, he coughed. He asked for
a replay again and again. And after an hour or
so, he finally set forth his verdict: The black
bird was the most beautiful of them all.
"If so," cried the tzidikel, "my
beauty is not beauty. There is no place left for
me." And she flew away from the forest,
never to be heard of again.
The tzidikel is the light G-d brings into His
creation. Through miracles, through tzaddikim,
through righteous acts that have no tint of
personal motives. The black bird is the darkness.
But when the darkness is turned to beauty, it is
a beauty so great that light is dim and impotent
before it.
As for the pig, it is this lowly world, the world
of action, which the Creator Himself has declared
the final judge of truth and beauty.
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