I came back home this morning after a rope-jumping work-out. There were wild Narcissus growing out of crevices in the sidewalk.
It must be a simin for new beginnings in CHODESH NISSAN.
This photo, signed by Menachem Begin had something also to do with Likud’s Victory. The photo hangs in the Likud Office, very Poshut, humble, just as he was in real life.
The poster below – hand drawn by a scribe, boldly recites the prayer for our democratically elected representatives to the Knesset and in our city. Prime Minister Natanyahu should show it to President Obama. Count down to the fourth paragraph.
It hangs quietly in the Likud Jerusalem Headquarters.
Wherever you stand politically something about politics in Israel rings true. The Likud really is for the democratic process. Just read the hand drawn poster that stands in the entrance.
I recommend the following recipe for a fabulous sauce. It was the spark in a luscious lasagna.
Tomato sauce with sun-dried tomatoes fromhttp://rouxbe.com/recipes
Step 1: Preparing the Sauce
To start, first roughly chop the onion. Peel and finely mince the garlic. Over medium to medium-low heat, cook the onions in the olive oil for a few minutes. Add the garlic and cook until fragrant. Then add the tomato paste and cook another minute or two.
Next, add the crushed tomatoes, whole tomatoes, broth and the sun-dried tomatoes. If the sun-dried tomatoes were packed in oil, be sure to drain them first. Add the pepper, salt, oregano, sugar and balsamic vinegar. Stir well.
Let the tomato sauce come to a gentle boil, stirring often. Cover, turn the heat to low and let simmer for an hour, stirring occasionally. Or alternatively use a pressure cooker. Bring to maximum pressure, (jiggling), lower heat, place on a diffuser and continue for half hour. Shut off heat and allow the temperature to reduce slowly.
1 large onion
1 large garlic clove
1 tbsp extra-virgin olive oil
1 250 gram tomato resek
1 – 24 oz can crushed tomatoes
1 – 28 oz can whole tomatoes
1 cup vegetable broth
1 cup sun-dried tomatoes, chopped
1 container
1/2 tsp freshly ground black pepper
1/2 tsp sea salt-omit
1 tbsp dried oregano
1 tbsp sugar can omit
2 tbsp balsamic vinegar, add to taste at the end
TIP: In lieu of the canned tomatoes, you can substitute REAL tomatoes, any variety , about a kilo. Remove the center piece which forms connections to the stem and score the tomatoes a bit. Plunge into boiling water for a few minutes until the skins shrivel. Then plunge into cool water. Let tomatoes cool, peel, chop into ingredients for sauce and reserve. You can purchase these ripe tomatoes in the Shuk for about 2 sh a kilo. (That’s $.50 for 2.2 lbs. and you can’t beat that.)
Step 2: Finishing the Sauce
Once the tomato sauce has cooked, place a few scoops at a time into a food mill. If your food mill has interchangeable plates, use the plate with medium or large holes.
Or alternatively, use as immersion blender. Don’t think that the food mill is necessary. Serve.
I was out today and stopped off at Bibi Jerusalem headquarters, about a block from my house. I was shocked that there were no voter lists to call undecideds. So here goes my 2 cents for what it’s worth.
Here is a reounting of a Channel 2 Interview:
Channel 2 News was interviewing the leaders of the major parties in the race, three days before Israelis head to the polls to elect their next Knesset. Netanyahu, interviewed in a live feed from his office immediately after Herzog, who was in the studio, was asked by host Rina Matzliach if he had any questions for Herzog before his interview began.
Netanyahu initially seemed ill at ease with his position. When asked by Matzliach on the spot whether he would agree to come to the studio the next day for a true debate, he answered abruptly: “You have some original suggestions. We’ll consider them after the program, thank you Rina.”
He then went on to criticize Herzog for his ostensible failure to support the government on the world stage on issues such as the Iranian nuclear threat as well as Israel’s building rights in Jerusalem.
“Why won’t they say that they stand behind us (on these matters)?” Netanyahu asked.
Herzog quickly retorted that it was not the prime minister’s stances that he opposed, but his approach to the issues — which he claimed had cost the country critical backing in the global arena.
“The security of Israel is dear to us more than anything else,” Herzog said. “We know how to care for it and I will care for it.”
When the prime minister warned that Herzog may divide Jerusalem to appease Palestinians as part of a peace deal, Herzog said that, “It is Netanyahu who is bringing Jerusalem into the debate, when no one is talking about dividing it. Every election he does this, giving rise to unnecessary international chatter (on the issue).”
The Zionist Union leader then made a gaffe by vowing to “keep Netanyahu united,” while clearly intending to say “Jerusalem,” though he did not seem to notice his mistake.
Netanyahu restated his claim that Herzog and his Hatnua partner in the Zionist Union Tzipi Livni would “capitulate to any dictates” of the international community. “They can’t stand up to (them),” he said.
“He says he cares for Israel’s security but when he faces the test, the prime minister must say a simple word (to international pressures): no.”
South Tel Aviv’s Central Bus Station (CBS) sprawls across 10 acres in the poorest part of the city. Inaugurated in 1993 as a “city under a roof”, the neglected station – like many urban transport hubs – has since became a hangout, hotel and unofficial business center for addicts, prostitutes, thieves and homeless. It’s not a place to dawdle. Could plants and paint transform this beast into a safe source of civic pride? The optimistic folks behind Next Station thought so. But what’s happened since the project’s November launch?
There is a municipal plan to transfer bus traffic from the CBS building to other Tel Aviv terminals, raising questions about the building’s future. Once the world’s largest bus terminal with an area covering twenty-five million square feet, it offered an ideal experimental space for urban innovation. The project viewed CBS as a giant lab to explore urban agriculture in Israel, see rendering above.
Next Station was a collaborative urban action by designers, farmers, architects, urban planners, gardeners, artists, engineers and volunteers led by the Onya Collective who designed and installed 30 artworks and plantings throughout the CBS, injecting color and plant life into the oppressive architecture.
Billed as an urban agri-exhibition, the project received no institutional funding and was supported instead by donations of time, materials and guidance from the Tel Aviv New Bus Station Management Company, Dan Public Transportation, the municipality, ecological NGOs and Israeli industries.
Gardens were planted on top of the terminal, and also on the roof of a bus. New flower pots made of upcycled plastic lined pedestrian walkways. Commuters received free seed packets, a giveaway to spread guerrilla gardening beyond the transport hub.
A new seating area called the ‘Vertical Tea Garden’ was built using donated industrial waste including pink PVC pipes, wood pallets and plastic paint buckets. Drip-irrigation pioneer Netafim designed a watering system for the herb gardens which use condensate from the station’s air-conditioning system.
The ‘Book Station’ is a free lending library offering donated books and magazines in 12 languages. Readers can relax at cast off tables and chairs supplied by Tel Aviv schools in a part of the CBS that was formerly a foul-smelling corner ruled by stray cats.
More than 1,200 people attended the Next Station exhibition’s gala opening in November, including many Israelis who had never set foot in the station.
The organizers, in cooperation with Tel Aviv University and the Ministry of Agriculture, hosted workshops in urban gardening and eco-design, tours, private parties and limited art shows from September through December. But there is no news about what has happened to the project since then.
Next Station sought to bridge the separation between the city and nature. Urban agriculture holds power to strengthen community life, and deepen the affinity between people, the food they consume and the space they live in. The CBS sits in the Neve Sha’anan neighborhood, one of the most complex areas in Tel Aviv. So, was the project a success?
Green Prophet has not been able to contact the organizers. The follow-up news trail went cold. It seems too gargantuan effort to just fade out. Or is Zen-like impermanence part of the plan?
Let’s make this story an interactive platform like its subject: has anyone been through the CBS lately, and can you share what’s happening now?
Images from Onya Collective, lead rendering courtesy of Dana Mor/Onya Collective
For the flour here I use the same 70 percent whole grain flour to 30 percent starch (like potato starch, arrowroot or cornstarch) that I used in my whole grain gluten-free muffins a few weeks ago. It is based on Shauna James Ahem’s (www.glutenfreegirl.com) formula. Because there is no gluten involved you don’t have to worry about overworking the dough, but the dough can break apart if you try to roll it out. I just press it into the pan, which is easy to do. I love the strong, nutty-flavored combination of buckwheat flour and millet flour. If you want a crust with a milder flavor, try a combination of cornmeal and millet flours or teff and millet flours.
INGREDIENTS
120grams (approximately 1 cup) millet flour (I make this by grinding millet in my spice mill)
100grams (about 4/5 cup) another whole grain gluten-free flour, like buckwheat, cornmeal, or teff
95grams (approximately 7 tablespoons) potato starch, cornstarch, arrowroot or a combination
5grams (3/4 teaspoon) salt
50grams (1/4 cup) extra virgin olive oil
150 to 165grams (2/3 to 3/4 cup) water
10grams (2 teaspoons) red wine vinegar or strained lemon juice (optional; the reason for the acid is that it relaxes the gluten in flour, but you don’t have to worry about gluten)
PREPARATION
Sift together the grain flour and starch. In a large bowl or in the bowl of a standing mixer fitted with the paddle or a food processor fitted with the steel blade, add the salt and mix together. If using a bowl, make a well in the center, add the olive oil and mix in with a fork. If using a mixer or food processor, turn on and add the olive oil. When it is evenly distributed through the grain flour and starch, combine the water and vinegar or lemon juice and add it with the machine running. The dough should come together in a ball. In most cases you won’t need as much water as is required for wheat flour dough, because the grain flours don’t absorb as much, but each combination behaves a little differently. Divide into 2 equal pieces, shape into a flat circle and wrap tightly with plastic. The dough may be sticky, so flour your hands and work surface. Let rest for 1 hour.
To line tart pans place the dough in the center of the pan and, pressing from the heel of your hand, press the dough out to the edges of the pan, then up the sides. It should be soft and easy to manipulate. Pinch an attractive lip around the edge of the pan and refrigerate uncovered until ready to use.
Advance preparation: The dough can be refrigerated for 3 days or frozen before or after rolling out.
This article uses information from the 2013 elections. As soon as more information for the 2015 elections becomes available, we will post it on this page.
In Israel, each of the 33 approved political parties running in the 2013 elections, are identified by a Hebrew symbol/initials. On election day, January 22, when you enter the polling booth, you will be confronted with a box filled with slips of paper. There may be blank ones, but the rest of them will have the Hebrew symbol/initials printed, in black, on their face. Each initial represents a different political party. Avoid a mistake! Before you go out to vote, make sure you know the symbol/initials of the party you plan to nominate.
For example the Likud is represented by the letters מחל and Aleh Yarok is represented by the letters קנ. The full name of the party is printed below the initials, in Hebrew.
Prime Minister Netanyahu called a primary for 25 December 2014, however, it was postponed until 6 January. After the election was called, the prime minister demanded a vote of the central committee to move it back up to 31 December. This was passed in a mini-referendum.[8] The candidates were Netanyahu[9] and former deputy Defense MinisterDanny Danon.[10] Likud’s internal court changed the date to 6 January 2015 after finding that the vote lacked a two-thirds majority.[11] A panel of Likud judges accepted Netanyahu’s appeal and allowed the vote to occur on 31 December 2014.[12]
The controversy over the timing of the primaries led to an internal investigation resulting in a report by party comptroller Shay Galilee that claimed Netanyahu had misused party employees. Galilee subsequently invited Netanyahu to a pre-disqualification hearing, which resulted in Netanyahu being prevented from running in the primaries. The prime minister immediately appealed to the Likud internal court.[13] Menachem Ne’eman, the chairman of the Likud election committee, has claimed that Galilee acted outside his authority and that his decision is invalid. Netanyahu’s attorney and his primary campaign have contested the disqualification.[14] Netanyahu was allowed to run.[15]
The primary results were widely seen as a victory for Netanyahu and the more moderate faction within Likud, as opposed to the far-right fringe.[16]Moshe Feiglin, who for a long time led his own far-rightist faction within Likud and once challenged Netanyahu for the chairmanship, suffered a major defeat in the primary, failing to win a realistic spot on the ticket. In response, he left Likud and announced plans to form a new party.[16][17] Feiglin said his new party, which may be called the Jewish State Party, will not run in the 2015 election but will run in the next election after that.[18]
The Labor Party and Hatnuah agreed on 10 December 2014 to form a joint ticket.[8] Hatnuah head Tzipi Livni has said that other parties will also be part of the alliance.[22] Herzog and Livni said that if they won enough votes to form the next government, they would take turns in the role of prime minister, with Herzog serving for the first two years and Livni for the second two, in a compromise known as rotation.[23] Labor held its primaries on 13 January 2015.[24]
The Jewish Home held its primary elections on 14 January 2015.[29] It has agreed to a vote-sharing agreement with Likud.[5]Tkuma has candidates on the same list as the Jewish Home for the election. It held its primaries on 11 January 2015. Its Knesset members will be placed on the 2nd, 8th, 13th and 17th slots in the joint list.[30][31]
Rabbi Shimon Or competed against incumbent party leader Naftali Bennett in the 14 January leadership elections.[32]
Hailed as the kingmakers in the 2013 elections, Yesh Atid and its leaderYair Lapid have seen their popularity cut in half since joining the government. Elected on a “promise to lower the cost of living and improve the middle class’s quality of life, Lapid implemented a string of unpopular austerity measures after being appointed finance minister that, he said, were necessary to counter a government deficit that ran into the tens of billions of shekels”.[34] Such actions led to Lapid being named the “most disappointing politician of 2013” and giving him the lowest approval ratings of cabinet ministers.[35][36] Lapid responded to these criticisms in an interview withChannel 2, where he said:
“
Fact: I entered the job with 40 billion shekels in a budgetary hole, a 4.3% deficit, an economic crisis, and when I left the job after a year and eight months, the deficit had fallen to 2.6% and the hole had disappeared. During that time we established a national program for Holocaust survivors, equalized the burden [by drafting haredim to the army], changed the government’s methods, and set up a national program to reduce the number of students per class.[37]
”
Following the election call, several sitting Yesh Atid MKs announced their intention not to run in the upcoming elections, including Rina Frenkel, Adi Koll, and Shimon Solomon.[38] However, the party gained a member from another party, asHatnuah MK Elazar Stern joined Yesh Atid following party leader Tzipi Livni’s merger with Labor.
Yisrael Beiteinu, who ran in the 2013 elections on a joint party list with Likud, split from the party in July 2014, with analysts suggesting that it was due to policy disagreements between Prime Minister Netanyahu and Yisrael Beitenu leader Avigdor Liberman, specifically regarding the2014 kidnapping and murder of Israeli teenagers and the ensuingconflict in Gaza.[40] The party’s poll numbers stayed relatively steady after the split from Likud, but began to slide in early 2015. For the 2015 elections, the party signed a vote-sharing agreement with Kulanu.[5]
The Kulanu party was established in November 2014 by former Likud MK Moshe Kahlon following months of speculation.[43][44]
Kahlon was able to attract some high-profile candidates for the Kulanu party list, including former Israeli Ambassador to the United StatesMichael Oren and Deputy Mayor of Jerusalem Rachel Azaria. However, one of these candidates, former Reshet Aleph director and IBA presenter Tsega Melaku was barred from running in the elections, due to the fact that she did not wait the requisite 100 days between quitting her public sector job and running in a general election.[45]
Following the raising of the electoral threshold, Balad, Hadash, the southern branch of the Islamic Movement, Ta’al and the United Arab List agreed on 22 January 2015 to run on the same list in the election,[48] the first time the major Arab parties had all run on a single list.[49] One poll suggested that the formation of alliance, later named the Joint List, could increase turnout amongst Arab voters to 56%, 10% higher than in the 2013 elections.[49] However, the more hardline northern branch of the Islamic Movement opted to boycott the elections, alongside the Bnei HaKfar (Sons of the Village) movement.[50]
One of the fiercest rivalries in this campaign has been competition among several different parties for the votes of Sephardic Haredi Jews. Historically, Shas, a Sephardic Haredi party founded by Sephardic Chief RabbiOvadia Yosef has been the key party among Haredi Sephardicand Mizrahi populations. In 1999, Shas leader Aryeh Deri was convicted of taking $155,000 in bribes while serving as Interior Minister and given a three-year jail sentence in 2000, he was replaced by Eli Yishai.[53][54] Yishai led the party for over ten years after Deri’s imprisonment, leading the party through Knesset elections until 2013. Deri was released from prison for good behavior in 2002, and remained a popular figure within his constituency.
Between 2011 and 2014, several events occurred that created rifts in the party. In 2011, after years out of the political spotlight, Deri announced an interest in returning to politics. After Aryeh Deri announced his return to politics, and following a series of highly publicised events that led to an increase in the tensions between the Haredi public and the non-Haredi public, Shas’s popularity began to falter according to most polls. As a result, Shas chairman Eli Yishai requested that Aryeh Deri join the party instead of establishing an independent party.[55] Shas spiritual leader Ovadia Yosef offered Aryeh Deri the 3rd position on the party list, but Deri rejected it at first and was believed to want to lead the party, start his own party (which according to polls might win as many as 7 seats), or not participate in the election at all.[56] On 16 October a compromise was reached: Shas would not a have a formal chairman, but would instead be jointly lead by Deri, Yishai and Housing and Construction MinisterAriel Atias.[57] In May 2013, some months after internal rift following Deri’s political comeback, Yishai was ousted and Deri was once again renamed as the leader of the Shas party.[58]Ovadia Yosef, the Sephardi sage and Shas spiritual leader said regarding his decision to oust Yishai “It was a deposit that he held, and now he can redeem it.” Yosef also said he had told Deri at the time of his imprisonment that the position of party leader would be returned to him.[59]2013 also marked the death of Ovadia Yosef, the party’s spiritual leader.
In 2014, Yishai created a new party, called Yachad. On 28 December 2014, a recording was released of Rabbi Yosef condemning Deri and supporting Yishai in 2008, years before Deri’s return to politics.[60] In response to these recordings, Deri tendered his resignation to the party leadership, which they rejected.[61]
There were also protests and threats to boycott the election from Haredi women, upset with the fact that the Haredi parties do not allow women on the ballot. Women who protested this policy were threatened with repercussions by male Haredi activists.[62]
The Otzma LeYisrael party, which failed to cross the electoral threshold in the 2013 elections, was rebranded as the Otzma Yehudit (Jewish Strength) party. The leaders of the party announced that they would consider running with breakaway groups from Shas and Jewish Home, but not with Jewish Home itself, because they view Naftali Bennett as insufficiently right-wing.[66]
The two parties came to an agreement on a joint electoral list.[63]
The Ale Yarok (Green Leaf) party, which supports legalizing marijuana, said that anyone who donated to them would receive marijuana if and when the plant was legalized in Israel. As a result, the party raised over NIS 100,000 as of January 13. Green Leaf has never won parliamentary seats before; however, there are enough cannabis smokers in Israel that if even a quarter of them vote for Ale Yarok, the party will have a good chance of winning seats.[40]
In January, a political party led by Haredi women declared its intention to run in the upcoming elections, a first in the Israeli political system.[68] The party, which is called Ubizchutan (“And By [female] Their Merit”), includes Ruth Korian and Noah Erez on its list.[69] Party leader Ruth Korian asked for protection from the government after she said her 10-year-old daughter was pulled out of class and questioned about party activities.[70]
The “We Are All Friends Na Nach” party, representing BresloverHasidim, is also running. Because the name of the party in Hebrew is “Kulanu Haverim Na Nach”, they objected to the use of the first word by Moshe Kahlon‘s Kulanu party. Ultimately, however, both parties were allowed to use the name.[70]
The Greens party renamed itself this election as the “Greens Don’t Give A Fuck” party.[71]
Former United Arab List MK Taleb a-Sanaa founded a party called “The Arab List” after not receiving a slot on the Arab parties’ Joint List.[71]
Other parties running again after failing to cross the threshold in the previous election are the Pirate Party, Or, Protecting Our Children – Stop Feeding Them Porn, HaTikva LeShinui (“The Hope for Change”), and the Finance Party headed by the Goldstein brothers.[70][71][72]
Other parties running for the first time in this election are Democratura, Manhigut Hevratit (“Social Leadership”), Nivheret Ha’Am HaZmanit (“The Temporary National Team”) headed by former Brit Olam founder Ofer Lifschitz, Schirut BeKavod (“Making a Living With Honor”), and Perach (“Flower”).[72]
Non-participating parties
Kadima
After polls showed that Kadima would be unable to win any seats in 2015 if it competed on its own, there were reports that the Zionist Union was considering adding it to its ticket by reserving the 11th spot for Kadima leader Shaul Mofaz.[73]However, Mofaz rejected these rumors, stating he had no intention of joining the alliance,[74] and announced that he was retiring from politics in January 2015. He was replaced as party leader by Akram Hasson, the first time a Druze Israeli had led a Jewish party.[75] His leadership of the party was short-lived, however, as Hasson shortly quit the party to join the Kulanu list,[76] receiving the 12th slot. Without either of its current MKs, Kadima is not running in this election at all.[72]
The 120 seats in the Knesset are elected by proportional representation in a single nationwide constituency. The electoral threshold for the 2013 elections was 2%, but on 11 March 2014 the Knesset voted to raise the threshold to 3.25%. The change may exclude many of the smaller parties, and could result in some mergers. The vote was boycotted by the opposition.[77] It is expected that the smallest parties in the Knesset under this new threshold will have 4 seats.[78]
Two parties can make an agreement so that the sum of both parties’ surplus votes are combined, and if the combined surplus votes amounts to an extra seat, then the extra seat goes to the party with the larger number of surplus votes.[79] The following agreements were signed by parties prior to the election:
These delicious salmon fish cakes are a healthier option by being baked rather than fried. I used tinned wild red salmon but fresh salmon would work perfectly also. I served them with a tomato, red onion and avocado salsa.
The fish flavour is quite subtle as they are mixed with a bunch of wonderful flavours like sweet potato, quinoa, fresh herbs and lemon.
For a super healthy meal choice, these are wonderful served with a big salad or steamed vegetables. Don’t be afraid to eat these cold, they are just as good the next day!
Preheat oven to 180 degrees Celsius or 356 Fahrenheit
Add sweet potato to the oven and cook for around 45 mins or until soft. Stick a knife through it to check
Add quinoa to boiling water and cook for around 10 mins. Strain and set aside
Drain liquid out from tin of salmon and break it up with a fork until the salmon is in small pieces and a fine consistency
Add the chilli flakes, parsley, coriander, pepper, chives, spring onions to the bowl along with the cooked quinoa
Add the lemon zest & lemon juice and mix well
Once the sweet potato has cooked, allow it to cool enough to remove the skin and add to the salmon mixture. Mix well to ensure it is evenly distributed throughout the mixture
Crack an egg into the mixture and mix well to combine
Shape mixture into eight patties about the size of your palm
Add coconut oil to a skillet, add the patties and put in the oven. Cook for 10 minutes on each side
Continuation Of The Lost Princess`I began the story of Rabbi Nachman’s Lost Princess back in Posts 59 and 60. Indeed her tale has been pushed aside,so to speak, lost in the shuffle. Now it seems to be appropriate to return:
However, since the earlier posts, I have seen that my illustrations on this blog have moved into the public sphere. Hence, I will continue to post the story and add photos that come close to my illustrations and occasionally add my illustrations with my precise ownership.
My goal still remains is to awaken in my reader our need to connect to G-dliness and His intellect as we understand it in the world and is represented as the King’s daughter.
The story goes way back to creation. This ability to grasp G-d’s intellect is referred to as Malkut and is beyond the everyday. That’s why the story states this Malkut resides in the Seventh sphere, which creates wholeness is associated with Shabat.
The King was bonded to the daughter. One time he was alone with her on a certain day (at the beginning) of the first day of creation).
All the six masculine forces were readied to create the universe. they were all expressed in the first day. Everything was created on that day.
The King became angry with her on the seventh day. He inadvertently said, “may the evil one take you away”. G-d withdrew some of his power from the vessels (Malkut).
The vessels would then shatter when the light of creation entered them. The purpose of shattering the vessels was to allow free will to exist. Eliminating knowledge of the future in the world permits free will to exist. The so to speak “Vessels of Creation” could not hold G-d’s light and they shattered when G-d’s light entered them and withdrew from them.
This is called the Shattering of the Vessels
Many of those who use this term do not know is that this idea is rooted Jewish tradition, a cosmological story created in the sixteenth century by the great Jewish mystic, Rabbi Isaac Luria of Safed, known as the Ari (1534-1572). It is the Ari’s sacred stories about our origins, deities, ancestors.
“Ten holy vessels came forth, each filled with primordial light.” Credit: Creative Commons/lootdujour.
G-d created the people of Israel in order to repair the worlds above and below.
“The breaking of the vessels can be viewed as a birth process of the universe.” Creative Commons: Mark Rutley. As you can see, when the vessels were shattered, those of creation, something new entered the world.
The “No-Good” would limit the power to see good in the world.
At night the princely went to her room.The father was
very upset and sent his viceroy to look for her.The king’s viceroy represents the nation Israel.
He asked the king give him a servant, a horse and some money. This request arises again in Rabbi Nachman’s story “The Cripple”. A truly serious task needs planning to include these three elements.(to be continued).