Truly How Majestic: In Memory of Bonna Devora Haberman z"l
When I think of Bonna Devora Haberman z”l, I
picture her leaping into the air on Yom Kippur afternoon, her face pale but
beaming as she gathers everyone within arm’s reach into a circle for a
triumphant chanting of Mareh Kohen, the liturgical poem about "truly how majestic" was the look on the high
priest’s face when he successfully exited the Holy of Holies. Bonna was very
proud of her Kohanic lineage, and even though she sometimes came late to shul,
she never missed Birkat Kohanim – when she and her husband and children would
get up to bless the congregation from beneath their tallitot, breathing new
harmonies into the ancient biblical text.
When
I wasn’t davening with Bonna – we participated in the same minyanim both at
Harvard Hillel and in Jerusalem – I would often see her jogging in the early
mornings with her husband Shmuel and their dog Sumsum. Bonna rarely stood
still. A self-avowed “textual activist,” she was also always active, always on
the go, never content to let anything be. At the funeral her husband Shmuel—always
the quiet one in their relationship, Matthew Cuthbert to her Marilla—told the
story of how he first met her in college in Ottawa at an Israeli dance class,
where Bonna, too, was spinning circles around him. At one point he sat her down
and asked her to tell him her dreams. “I dream of a large barn and a community
of women, dancing, reading books, busy with organic farming, discussing ideas,
and caring for children.” A community of women was not exactly what Shmuel had
in mind, but Bonna had given him his opening. “Where will all the children come
from?” he asked, feigning innocence. “Well, a few men will be allowed once in a
while,” Bonna conceded. Then she asked Shmuel his fantasy, and he said he
wanted to retire with her to a desert island. Bonna was quickly dismissive. “We
can’t,” she said. “There’s too much in this world that needs fixing.”
Bonna
insisted that Dayenu must end with Tikun Olam, because only when the world was
healed would it truly be enough. For her, that was what building the Temple—the
actual last line of Dayenu—was about. It was what drove her to help found Women
of the Wall, a monthly Rosh Hodesh group where women donned the garments of
ritual prayer and read from the Torah at the Kotel. And it was what inspired
her brilliant writing about the Beit HaMikdash, including her profoundly bold
and radical essay “The Yom Kippur Avodah in the Female Enclosure,” which I
reread every year on Yom Kippur and which has inspired so much of my own
writing and thinking about eroticism and the Talmudic sages. For a while Bonna
became, for me, the embodiment of that essay, as if that one piece comprised
the entirety of her identity; each time I’d run into her I’d buttonhole her
with further questions and new ideas inspired by her words.
But
Bonna was so much more. When she wasn’t writing she was fighting sex
trafficking around the globe, pushing for gender equality at the Kotel and in
Jerusalem, informally counselling young women about natural childbirth, caring
for Mother Earth, and staging theater performances with Israeli and Palestinian
women to solve the conflict in the Middle East. One of her sons said that she
understood her name to be Bonna DvarYa – that is, a builder of the words of
God. Just as the midrash in Breishit Rabba relates that God used the blueprint
of Torah to create the world, Bonna looked to Torah for inspiration to repair the
world. Another one of her sons said that Bonna, particularly in her last few
months of illness, never wanted to sleep. “I’ll have enough time to sleep in
the grave,” she insisted. But her son was not so sure. He assured us at the
funeral that he has no doubt his mother has already staged a revolution in
heaven.
And
he is probably right. I can just imagine Bonna taking the angels by a storm,
gathering them in a circle for a frenzied recitation of Mareh Kohen in which it
is the angels who are analogized to the priests rather than vice versa. I will
miss her presence in shul, especially during Birkat Kohanim – but regardless of
what she is up to in heaven, I have no doubt she will still be shining
her blessing upon us. יהי זכרה ברוך