Rise Up My Love By Philip Graubart
A rabbi prepares her skeptical daughter for bat mitzvah while helping a devout terminally ill woman convert to Judaism. Image generated with OpenAI "Rabbi Judith. I just... I think I might be dying." Kristine spoke in a clear, bell-like voice. I might even say healthy voice - not the kind of voice that's struggling to choke out her last words. Still, the sentiment didn't shock me. She was, in fact, dying. Just, from what I could tell listening to her breathe, speak, argue, sing, not right now, two in the morning, on the phone with her rabbi. Now sounded more like insomnia than the rare auto-immune disorder that we both knew would one day take her life. "Do you feel like this often?" I asked. "I mean that you're dying, in the middle of the night?" "Every night," she said. "This is just the first time I called you . I've run out of friends who'll listen to a lunatic complain about dying. I figure now that I'm Jewish, I...