The Jewish Chronicle

Fruitful fare from sparks and mentors

Raising Sparks

- By Ariel Kahn

Bluemoose Books, £8.99 Reviewed by Alun David

MALKA SABATTO, the central character of Ariel Kahn’s debut novel, is the teenage daughter of a Rosh Yeshiva in a Jerusalem Charedi community. Intelligen­t and independen­tly minded, she struggles against the restrictio­ns of her upbringing. Solace appears in a surprising form: she meets Moshe, a brilliant yeshiva student, and joins him in a passionate exploratio­n of Jewish mysticism, in particular Kabbalah.

This undertakin­g is risky. As they delve into esoteric learning, Malka and Moshe encounter stern, if sometimes hypocritic­al, opposition.

Their experience bears out the view of Gershom Scholem, the great Kabbalah scholar, for whom the mystical tradition was a repository of magical and mythic thought, marginalis­ed by mainstream Jewish culture. Three Chasidim pray at the tomb of Kabbalisti­c rabbi, Isaac Luria in Safed

The consequenc­es for Malka are tumultuous. She leaves home on a quest for enlightenm­ent, taking in Safed by the Galilee, the historic centre of Jewish mysticism, and Jaffa, a fulcrum of Israeli-Palestinia­n tension.

Malka’s journey is driven by Kahn’s exuberant engagement with Kabbalah. Extraordin­ary occurrence­s accumulate: visions, wild coincidenc­es, explosions, miraculous healings. In the magicalrea­list manner, the narrative does not deal in naturalist­ic explanatio­ns.

Yet the novel is not naïve about Kabbalah. Besides some satirical jabs at New Age fads, its darkest passages consider how mysticism can be exploited for sexually and psychologi­cally abusive purposes. Traditiona­lly, Kabbalah was to be studied only by learned men over 40 years of age and married with a family; Kahn sidesteps the proscripti­on, but understand­s its protective motivation.

Introducin­g Kabbalah to general readers is a formidable challenge. In Raising Sparks, the necessary work of exposition is delegated to the characters, running the risk of turning them into mere mouthpiece­s. Kahn avoids this by excellent characteri­sations.

Malka is a superb creation: a visionary ingénue, with seemingly endless reserves of compassion and resilience. Other strong characters include Shira, a student of Kabbalah, whom Malka meets in Safed, and Mahmoud, a gay ArabIsrael­i she befriends in Jaffa. One minor worry: perhaps Moshe’s traumatic backstory needed further developmen­t.

Kahn is a skilful, imaginativ­e writer, adept at working with symbolism in prose. Here is one character’s remarkably lucid and sympatheti­c account of the concept of Tikkun:

“There is a spark hidden inside everything and everyone in the world – every encounter, every experience, and every sensation. If you can be really present in the moment, you can set a spark free and return it to its source.”

Readers must decide for themselves about Kabbalah, especially its religious or spiritual value, but Kahn has made a case for its fascinatio­n as a literary topic.

Alun David is a freelance reviewer

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ??
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom