Rabbi Onias Sleeps Through One Hundred Years

Curated by The Jewish Mythology Team ·

Rabbi Onias reached the hill above Jerusalem and saw a city of ash.

Landa's 1919 public-domain version shifts the famous sleeper tradition into the grief after the First Temple's destruction in 586 BCE. Onias has food with him, but he refuses to eat it. Someone else may need the dates. Someone thirstier may need the water. Then he sees the ruined city and breaks.

"Not in a hundred years can its glory be renewed," he cries. Exhaustion takes him. He lays his head down beside his camel and falls into a sleep so deep that days, seasons, and generations pass over him. Seeds gather around his body. A palm grows from one of his dates. A thicket hides him from the road.

When he wakes, his beard has gone white and his camel is bones. The dates are still fresh. The water is still drinkable. And Jerusalem stands again, rebuilt beyond anything he expected. The carob trees he saw planted before his sleep now cover the hill.

The miracle is not gentle. Onias gets the answer to his despair, but he has outlived his own world. His grandson carries his name. The people laugh at his speech. The rebuilt city is real, but he no longer belongs inside it. He returns to the place of his sleep and asks for peace.

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