
The Courageous Yehudit
The story was retold in different versions. According to one
version, it happened during the time of the Maccabean revolt
against Syrian oppression (which resulted in a miraculous victory
and gave us the festival of Chanukah). According to this account,
Yehudit was a daughter of Yochanan the High Priest, father of the
Hasmonean family.
At any rate, the heroic deed of Yehudit has inspired faith and
courage in the hearts of Jews throughout the ages.
The town of Bethulia, in the land of Judea, came under siege by
Holofernes, a mighty Syrian-Greek general, at the head of a huge
army.
Holofernes was notorious for his cruelty in suppressing
rebellions. When he captured a rebel stronghold, he showed no
mercy to the men, women, and children sheltered there.
Now he was determined to crush the rebellion of the town of
Bethulia, whose inhabitants refused to recognize the oppresive
rule of the Syrians.
The men of the beleaguered town fought bravely and desperately to
repulse the repeated assults by the superior enemy forces. Seeing
that he couldn't take the fortified town by force, Holofernes
decided to starve the inhabitants into submission. He cut off the
food and water supply, and before long the town was indeed
brought to the verge of surrender.
Hungry and thirsty and in utter despair, the townspeople gathered
in the marketplace and demanded that, rather than die of hunger
and thirst, they should surrender to the enemy.
Uzzia, the commander of the defense forces, and the Elders of the
town, tried to calm the populace without success. Finally they
pleaded, "Give us five more days. If no salvation comes by the
end of five days, we will surrender. Just five more days..."
Reluctantly the people agreed, and slowly they dispersed. Only
one person, a woman, remained in her place, as if riveted to it,
and she addressed Uzzia and the Elders, who had also turned to
go. Her voice was clear and firm.
"Why do you test G-d, giving Him only five days in which to send
us His help? If you truly have faith in G-d, you must never give
up your trust in Him. Besides, don't you know that surrender to
Holofernes is worse than death?!"
So spoke Yehudit, the noble daughter of Yochanan the High Priest.
She was a young widow. It was several years since she had lost
her beloved husband Menashe, and had devoted all her time to
prayer and acts of charity ever since.
Yehudit was blessed with extraordinary charm, grace, and beauty,
but she was particularly respected and admired for her
devoutness, modesty, and loving kindness.
Yehudit's words made a deep impression on Uzzia and the Elders.
"You are quite right, daughter," they admitted, "but what can we
do? Only a downpour of rain that would fill our empty cisterns
could save our people, but it is not the rainy season. We are all
suffering the pangs of hunger and thirst. Pray for us, Yehudit,
and maybe G-d will accept your prayers..."
"We must all continue to pray, and never despair of G-d's help,"
Yehudit said. "But I have also thought of a plan. I ask your
permission to leave town together with my maid. I want to go to
Holofernes..."
Uzzia and the Elders were shocked and dismayed. "Do you know what
you are saying, Yehudit? Would you sacrifice your life and honor
on the slim chance that you might soften Holofernes's heart? We
cannot allow you to make such a sacrifice for us."
But Yehudit persisted. "It had happened before that G-d sent His
salvation through a woman. Yael, the wife of Heber, was her name,
as you well know. It was in her hands that G-d delivered the
cruel Sissera..."
Uzzia and the Elders attempted to discourage Yehudit from such a
dangerous mission, but she insisted that she be allowed to try.
Finally, they agreed.
Yehudit passed through the gates of Bethulia, dressed in her best
clothes, which she had not worn since her husband passed away. A
delicate veil all but hid her beautiful face. She was accompanied
by her faithful maid, who carried on her head a basket filled
with rolls, cheese, and several bottles of old wine.
The sun had already begun to hide behind the green mountains when
Yehudit and her maid wound their way toward the enemy's camp,
their lips whispering a prayer to G-d. Presently they were
stopped by sentries, who demanded to know who they were and who
sent them.
"We have an important message for your commander, the brave
Holofernes," Yehudit said. "Take us to him at once."
"Who are you, and why are you here?" Holofernes asked, his eyes
feasting on his unexpected, charming visitor.
"I am but a plain widow from Bethulia. Yehudit is my name. I came
to tell you how to capture the town, in the hope that you will
deal mercifully with its inhabitants..."
Yehudit then told Holofernes that life in the beleaguered town
had become unbearable for her, and she bribed the watchmen to let
her and her maid out. She went on to say that she had heard of
Holofernes's bravery and mighty deeds in battle, and wished to
make his acquaintance. Finally she told Holofernes, what he
already knew, that the situation in the besieged town was
desperate, that the inhabitants have very little food and water
left. Yet, she said, their faith in G-d remained strong, and so
long as they had faith, they would not surrender. On the other
hand, she added, before long, every scrap of kosher food would be
gone, and in desperation they will begin to eat the flesh of
unclean animals, and then G-d's anger will be turned against
them, and the town will fall....
"But how will I know when the defenders of the citadel will begin
to eat unkosher food, as you say, so that I can then storm the
walls and capture the city?" the commander of the besieging army
asked.
"I had thought of that," Yehudit answered confidently. "I have
arranged with the watchmen at the city's gates that I would come
to the gate every evening to exchange information: I will tell
them what's doing here, and they will tell me what's doing
there."
Holofernes was completely captivated by the charming young Jewish
widow who had so unexpectedly entered his life and was now
offering him the key to the city. "If you are telling me the
truth, and will indeed help me capture the city, you will be my
wife!" Holofernes promised. Then he gave orders that Yehudit and
her maid were to have complete freedom to walk through the camp,
and anyone attempting to molest them in any way would be put to
death immediately. A comfortable tent was prepared for the two
women, next to his.
The two women, veiled and wrapped in their shawls, could now be
seen walking leisurely through the armed camp at any time during
the day and evening. Fearful of the commander's strict orders,
everyone gave them a wide berth. Soon they attracted little, if
any, attention. Yehudit could now walk up to the city's gates
after dark, where she was met by a watchman.
"Tell Uzzia that, thank G-d, everything is shaping up according
to plan. With G-d's help we shall prevail over our enemy. Keep
your trust strong in G-d; do not lose hope for a moment!"
Having delivered this message for the commander of the defense
force of the city, Yehudit departed as quietly as she had
appeared.
The following evening she came again to the city's gate and
repeated the same message, adding that she had won Holofernes'
complete confidence.
In the meantime, Holofernes, having nothing special to do, spent
most of his time drinking, with and without his aides. When he
was not completely drunk, he would send for Yehudit. She always
came to his tent in the company of her maid. On the third day he
was already getting impatient.
"Well, gracious Yehudit, what intelligence do you bring me today?
My men are getting impatient and demoralized doing nothing; they
cannot wait to capture the city and have their fun..."
"I have very good news, general. There is not a scrap of kosher
food left in the city now. In a day or two, famine will drive
them to eat their cats and dogs and mules. Then G-d will deliver
them into your hands!"
"Wonderful, wonderful! This surely calls for a celebration.
Tonight we'll have a party, just you and I. I shall expect you as
my honored guest."
"Thank you, sir," Yehudit said.
That evening, when Yehudit entered Holofernes' tent, the table
was laden with various delicacies. The general was delighted to
welcome her and bade her partake of the feast. But Yehudit told
him she brought her own food and wine that she had prepared
especially for that occasion.
"My goat cheese is famous in all of Bethulia," Yehudit said, "I'm
sure you'll like it, general."
He did. And he also liked the strong, undiluted wine she had
brought. She fed him the cheese, chunk after chunk, and he washed
it down with wine. Before long he was sprawled on the ground,
dead drunk.
Yehudit propped a pillow under his head and rolled him over on
his face. Then she uttered a silent prayer.
"Answer me, O L-rd, as You answered Yael, the wife of Heber the
Kenite, when you delivered the wicked general Sissera into her
hands. Strengthen me this once that I may bring Your deliverance
to my people whom this cruel man vowed to destroy, and let the
nations know that You have not forsaken us..."
Now Yehudit unsheathed Holofernes' heavy sword, and taking aim at
his neck, she brought the sword down on it with all her might.
For a moment she sat down to compose herself. Then she wrapped up
the general's head in rags, concealed it under her shawl, and
calmly walked out and into her own tent.
"Come quickly," she said to her maid, "but let's not arouse
suspicion."
The two veiled women walked leisurely, as usual, until they
reached the gates of the city. "Take me to Uzzia at once," she
said to the sentry.
Uzzia could not believe his eyes as he stared at the gruesome
prize Yehudit had brought him.
"There is no time to lose," she told the commander. "Prepare your
men for a surprise attack at dawn. The enemy's camp is not
prepared for it. When they run to their commander's tent, they
will find his headless body, and they will flee for their
lives..."
This is precisely what happened.
The enemy fled in confusion and terror, leaving much booty
behind. It was a wonderful victory, and it was the G-d fearing
and brave daughter of Yochanan the High Priest, the father of the
Hasmonean family, that saved the city of Bethulia and all its
inhabitants.
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