* It was Shimon who was shown the image of
a holy man clothed in white every Yom Kipur as he left the holy of holies
(on the fortieth year, the last of his life, the image wore black - TB
Menachos 109b).
* It was Shimon who, throughout his term as
high priest Godol, merited that the oil in the "western" cup of the menora
burned longer than any other (even though it was lit last) a clear, yet
daily, miracle (TB Yoma 39a).
* It was a very young Shimon who, at the head
of a procession of Jerusalem's sages, set out to greet the great emperor,
Alexander. The Greek, as far as anyone knew, was planning to destroy
Jerusalem and end what he saw as its opposition to his rule. At the
head of his huge army, astride his tall horse, Alexander was not likely
to give the Jews much time to plead their case. But it was the face
of Shimon that inspired the king to dismount and kneel on the ground before
the Rabbi. "This face," explained Alexander, "appeared to me before
every battle which I won..." (TB Yoma 69a)
* It was Shimon who strengthened the walls
of the Holy City, and with them, the hearts of the dispirited Jews who
had given up everything to live near the Temple.
Shimon Hatzadik, as much as anyone, built the
Foundation for Jewish life in Israel for the next four hundred years, and
by extension, set the tone for Jewish life until this day yet he, too,
endured a personal struggle.
The next day, Chonyo waited with all the rest of the priests for his brother's arrival. When Shimi came, dressed as he was, Chonyo pointed and shouted:
"Look at that man! He promised his wife that as a sign of his love for her, he would wear her clothes the day he became high priest!"
The other priests chased Shimi, intending to
punish him for disgracing the Temple. But before they could do anything,
Shimi managed to figure out what had happened and told the whole story.
Now the priests' attention turned back to Chonyo, the real culprit...
By the time all the dust had settled, Shimon
Hatzadik's brother, Eliezer, was Kohen Godol and Chonyo was in Alexandria,
Egypt. Once there, Chonyo built an altar and began to attract a following
among the local gentiles, his goal, to teach the people about the true
worship of the One G-d. No Jew offered sacrifices on this altar as
Jewish sacrifices outside of the Temple in
Jerusalem were (and still are) strictly forbidden.
Eventually, Chonyo returned to Jerusalem and
took up the position of high priest he had lost so many years before.
Three generations later, another Chonyo (a
direct descendent of Shimon Hatzadik's son) travelled to Egypt. He too
built a altar - actually a replica from the Temple in Jerusalem - and there
Jews offered their own (forbidden) sacrifices.
Such was the strange state of the Jewish community
of Alexandria...
I chose to relate only one of two versions
of the above story recorded by the Talmud. In addition, I have followed
the historical opinion of the Rambam and of Rabbi S. Rothenberg (Toldos
Am Olam) who worked to reconcile this passage with the writings of Josephus.
* Babylonia (modern-day Iraq) was the main Torah community and was host to the greatest Jewish population in the world. Already at the time of the destruction of the first Temple, the Babylonian community was strong and ready to receive and support the new exiles. It was one of G-d's many kindnesses that He arranged for Torah leaders to be brought to Babylonia to prepare a home, decades before the mass of Jewish exiles would arrive.
* North Africa. To this day, the island of Djerba is home to an ancient Jewish community. Strangely enough, they are nearly all priests (kohanim, a few yisroelim and no leviim at all. Legend has it that Ezra cursed the leviim of Djerba for not going to Jerusalem when they were needed. There is also a legend that any levy who goes to Djerba, will die within a year. don't personally know anyone who's put it to the test...
* France. France? In the time of the Temple? Wrong. France, four hundred years BEFORE the building of the first Temple. There is a tradition from the Sefer Meiros Eynayim (quoted by She'eris Yisroel), that there were members of the tribe of Benjamin who escaped from the Jewish civil war - fought just one hundred years after the exodus from Egypt (see Judges, chapters 19 and 20) - and ran to France. One of the communities they founded was the famous city of Worms (Rashi's home). The Sefer Meiros Eynayim contends that one of the reasons the city of Worms suffered so badly at the hands of the medieval crusaders was because their ancestors had failed to answer Ezra's plea for immigrants to the fledgling Jewish community in Jerusalem.
The hand of the old sage, Ezra, reaches far
indeed.