• ‘Sk A Wispy White Shabbos Guest See t By YAFFA GANZ Savta Simcha loved all of Israel and she loved Yerushalayim the most. But next to Yerushalayim, there was no place she loved as much as Tzefat. Going to Tzefat meant going north — up into the mountains of the Galil — and then looking down and out over miles of high mountains and low valleys. On a clear day, you could even see the shiny blue waters of faraway Lake Kinneret and the city of Teverya glistening in the sun. Tzefat meant fig trees in every courtyard and around every corner. Wherever you went, the smell or ripe figs went with you — big, soft, chewy figs, just the kind Savta Simcha needed for her kiddush compote and her fig bars. The wide, spreading trees with their great, hand-shaped leaves were always in sight, waving a friendly hello and offering you their shade. And Tzefat meant narrow cobblestone streets and little stone houses, like Figtree Court, where Doda Shifra and Dod Gershon lived. Doda Shifra and Dod Gershon were Savta Smicha and Uncle Nechemya's favorite cousins. Each time they visited each other, they would boil a samovar of tea and sit down to catch up on family news. "Cheep!" chirped Sumsum. He flew off of his floppy pink nest and landed on the brass knocker on Doda Shifra's door. Before he could even peck a hello, the door swung open and Doda Shifra smiled a warm, wide welcome. Round and chubby as ever, she wore her usual flowery kerchief and her matching flowery apron. `Come in, come in," she cried. "We're waiting for you! My, my, Simcha, you are as skinny as a toothpick! Don't you ever eat? Skin and bones, that's all you are. And still shlepping that humongous black bag with you! I don't know how Nechemya lets you carry on like that! Well, put it down, put it down We have a lovely surprise for you. Guess who's here?" "Nechemya?" guessed Savta Simcha. "No, not Nechemya. Guess again. Someone smaller than Nechemya." "Ezra? But he's supposed to be in Tel Aviv with his sister Tehilla. They're spending the week with their grandmother." "He is, but he came for L-8 FRIDAY, JANUARY 18, 1991 I Shabbos. And guess again." "Again? Urn ... let's see ... I know! Tehilla came too! How lovely!" "Right again. Now just one more guess — a double guess this time! And then we can all sit down for tea." vv t k <( „' tie nc "More! A double guess?" Savta Simcha thought and thought but she could not guess who the last two guests might be. And when she finally heard, she could not believe her ears. And when she saw, she could not believe her eyes either. It was Michael and Malka, her good friends from Wintergreen City, U.S.A.! "Dear me, dear me," Savta Simcha kept repeating. "Isn't this just wonderful? What are you doing here? When did you arrive? How long are you staying? How is everyone in Wintergreen City? What a perfectly lovely surprise!" "Michael will be learning in my yeshiva in Teverya this year," said Ezra. (Ezra, you will remember, had a dreadful time learning how to read. But once he got the idea, he zoomed full speed ahead.) "And," Tehilla added breathlessly, "Malka is visiting her grandmother in Tel Aviv. Our grandmothers are friends and they introduced us. And we've become friends too, the very bestest kind. We spend almost every day together and we have so many things to discuss that we never get through!" Well, I needn't tell you what a lovely tea they all had. There was so much news to catch up on: news about Yerushalayim and Tel Aviv and Tzefat and, of course, Wintergreen City. The tea lasted long enough to empty two samovars and to finish eating several plates of fig cake and cinnamon cookies. The next day, which was Erev Shabbos, Savta Simcha and Doda Shifra were busy cooking and baking, Ezra and Michael were out helping Dod Gershon in the garden, and the girls took Sumsum and went to do errands. When they returned, it was obvious that something was wrong. For the first time ever, Tehilla and Malka were quiet — very, very quiet. Even Sumsum seemed quieter than usual. Savta Simcha and Doda Shifra looked at each other but didn't say a word. "I think that Tehilla and Malka had an argument," whispered Ezra before Shabbos. "They aren't talking." "So we've noticed," said Savta Simcha. "But there's no reason / can't say a few things." And so she did. "Did you know that Lecha Dodi, the song we sing to greet Shabat Hamalka — the Shabbos Queen — was written in Tzefat? I think the Shabbos Queen must start out from these very mountains every Friday night. Who knows? We might even meet her!" Everyone smiled. "Where do (