A HERMIT'S TALE: Part One

 


General Introduction

I am writing two books at the moment. One of them is almost finished and the other just needs minor editing. The first book is concerned with intentionally dedicated and solitary contemplative lifestyles and is called “The Mitkarevim”, and the second is just Part Two of my short “Treatise on Contemplative Prayer.   Part One of that treatise (The Cave of the Heart) is already published. It is available HERE on Amazon.

But there is a third text—one that was finished some years ago but is too brief to be issued as a book, and it does not belong as part of the other two aforementioned book-drafts as it is of a totally different character. This is because it is a personal memoir and not a practical or theoretical manual like the other works.

I am in my seventieth year, settled in Safed in Israel as a full time intentional solitary contemplative (a Mitkarev). But I was once a Carmelite monk, converted to Progressive and then Orthodox Judaism, worked decades as a musician and school teacher in UK, Indonesia, and Singapore— and then lost my sense of hearing totally. I am entering a new and third stage in my life....and this autobiography traces the way I got here.

Personally, I am irritated by the existence of this autobiographical text as, by definition,  it is intensively  self focussed. I am an aspiring Jewish-Sufi contemplative, and such mystics are supposed to transcend the ego. As autobiography, it indicates I have very far to go on that Path— and of course that knowledge  hurts my ego.  But I labour to develop equanimity in such matters. I long to “die before I die” and so I shelved the annoying  text until today and hoped it would just go away.

But I keep hearing the voice of one of my greatest teachers (now deceased) telling me “to write my own scripture and tell the story of my life for the benefit of others”. So here it is.

Some parts of it are mindless froth designed to raise a chuckle, some parts of it are purely peripheral entertainment for musicians,teachers, or the spiritually minded; other parts tell the story of a personal journey in and out of tragedy—a transformation that may well be of comfort, and even inspiration for those experiencing disability, loss, or isolation in their own Spiritual Journey. That last statement is the main reason I am lifting it down from the shelf and publishing it online in installments here as “A Hermit’s Tale.” If you are meant to read it....you will find it....may it give you hope and strength.

Nachman Davies

Safed

Adar 2023

A HERMIT'S TALE



PART ONE.  Planted and Transplanted

The journey of spiritual transformation is often concealed when  Providence  is at work.  The route-changes and unexpected diversions, the traffic jams and collisions in our spiritual journeys often reveal their hidden purpose  many years after they have happened, becoming clear to us only when  we make  time for retrospective reflection.

Today, I would call myself  ‘a Jewish Contemplative’.  It took me  many years to see that I had  been on a journey that was designed to produce that realisation. The journey is not over—and never will be— but I am now aware that a vocational metamorphosis was being effected step by step over many years.

I was born to non-religious but nominally Christian parents in north-western England, in Birkenhead on the Wirral, in the early 1950’s. My genetic ancestry is North European, predominantly Welsh & English (with smatterings of German-French-Russian and Sudanese) and though there were family rumours of  Jewish antecedents in the patrilineal line, I have  never had firm evidence of this. 

Most significantly, I was an only child  and my parents allowed me enormous freedom to develop an imaginative interior life from a very early age.  I was a sociable child and joined in all the street games of my childhood friends, but I was equally happy to play at home alone....mostly being a wizard writing spells and potion recipes (in the years before H.Potter!), or as a pioneering spaceman travelling in  my wardrobe). Both of my parents held several jobs down simultaneously in order to survive. My father was thus a “Bird’s Eye frozen-food salesman/Liverpool taxi driver/Oxton Village undertaker” and my mother was a “Dashley’s Meat butcher/ Liverpool Vernon’s pools-entry sorter/Prenton sweet shop assistant”. For them, making ends meet was a never ending struggle, and so I spent  a lot of time  in the house without them while they juggled with the timetables of their multiple jobs.  I also cooked lunch for myself from the age of ten onwards as  they were both out at work.

I think I had already ‘caught’ religion by the age of  six, ostensibly after watching the 1960’s BBC television series Paul of Tarsus starring Patrick Troughton.  The morning after the first  episode was broadcast, I was to be found preaching to the nations: Dressed in full Middle-Eastern-style finery fashioned from the family bed-sheets and towels, in the vestibule of our ‘Coronation Street’ style terraced house— I propped-up my Bible on a wooden pedestal ashtray stand and delivered my prophetic message to anyone who happened to be passing the open front door.   One of my passing congregants was Mrs. Williams the local Lollipop lady. (A Lollipop Man or Lollipop Lady was a part-time  traffic warden at a zebra crossing  near a  school. They stood beside the Belisha beacons and bore huge STOP signs resembling lollipops. Younger readers may need to perform  several google-searches to make  any sense of  that statement. Other readers will now be aware that we are currently in one of the “frothy entertainment” sections of this story).

From that day onwards (and until I moved to Secondary school in my eleventh year) whenever I approached her zebra crossing on Borough Road, she greeted me  affectionately as ‘Paul of Tarsus’.  From this I assumed that my preaching as a six year old had been effective.  Patrick Troughton went on to play ‘Doctor Who’.  I have exchanged the towels for a tallit (prayer shawl) but am otherwise more or less the same deep down. Birkenhead seems to have recovered from the shock of my debut appearance relatively unscathed.  

The house of my childhood was a musty  two-up-two-down Victorian Terrace  in Whitford Road, Higher Tranmere, later declared insanitary and dangerous  to public health and forthwith demolished in the 1990’s.   During my family’s residence there in the 1950’s and 1960’s, there were only five  books in the entire house. Two of them were religious: a Masonic Bible belonging to my father and  kept (in its original and pristine boxed condition) in his  bedside drawer and my own (battered and bruised)  Paul of  Tarsus Bible. Another one of the five was an ancient and  disintegrating edition of the Chambers  Dictionary which had been given to me with great love  by my mother’s brother, Edward Jones.  I read it as though  it were a text book intended to be  read page by page, from cover to cover. That gift contained the  fully-detailed etymological information that many other dictionaries lacked, and it provided me with a precocious vocabulary and much of my  English language knowledge. 

  The remaining two books in the house were kept in a cupboard by the side of the kitchen fireplace, where they kept company with the building’s indigenous silverfish,Whitney blankets, and various hoarded remnants of decaying cloth that  my mother had put  aside for  repairs. The two books were (i) a 19th century collection of Daguerreotype photographs of South  East Asian culture, and (ii) an A1 size volume of indeterminate but considerable age entitled The Naval Battle Plans of Cornelis de Witt (1623-1672). Both books were brought back from the Second World War by my father (who had served in the 8th Army in North Africa) when he was  in Germany for  a ‘clear up’ operation immediately after the Armistice.    Alongside these two books rested a (never displayed) twelve inch diameter pewter plaque of Saint Cecilia, the patron of musicians, playing a portative pipe organ.

  These three items were strangely prophetic as I became  a music teacher and organist and also ended up living in Indonesia with a long-lasting connection to a family of well known Dutch ethnomusicologists. (Greet Heins of Amsterdam was my second gamelan teacher  and her talented daughters, Marleen and Saskia, taught my Frodsham High School students Javanese music and dance with generosity and great kindness. My first Javanese gamelan teacher was  the composer Alec Roth of Preston, who kindly interrupted  a busy schedule  to give me tutorials in Liverpool Lime Street train station cafeteria). The connections between those items in that cupboard and the later parts of my life-story  may seem to be extremely tenuous connections to you, but to me they have always felt like a revelation of Divine playfulness.    

As a pre-teen child, I spent most of my free time devouring the books in the religion, history, and  mythology sections of  Birkenhead’s wonderful  Central Library (built in neo-classical style in 1934).   Thanks to the foresight  of Ms. Pinches, the local historian and senior librarian, I was prematurely admitted to the enormous Adult Library at the age of ten as I had already consumed all the material on those subjects housed in the Juvenile Library.  With the memory of the moment’s excitement undimmed, I can still recall the frisson that accompanied each step that  I made as we walked from the Juvenile Library to the Adult Library: Ms. Pinches led me by the hand, through the magisterial marble and wrought-iron entrance arch, to the polished oak and brass-hinged gate where, with measured ceremonial formality, she introduced me to the beaming counter staff as an honorary member.  I was issued with four cardboard  adult tickets and ipso facto the  Doors of Academia were  opened to me. I walked  or bicycled there each week or fortnight after school, taking my little pile of study materials  home  in a canvas haversack to be  hungrily devoured in solitude at home.

At Primary School things  were not  quite so idyllic. Though he was a very kind and able educator, Mr. Oliver—the Headmaster of  Woodchurch Road Primary School—did not regard my choice of studies and their obsessive intensity quite so positively.  He summoned my parents to the school to tell them that unless I ‘got my head out  of Ancient Greek mythology and started to focus on improving my appalling Mathematics, I would be nothing but a source  of worry for them’.   I cried a lot about this— justifiably in a way, as my mathematical and logical skills are atrocious to this day—but I was rescued by Mr. Donald Clutton who was the visionary class teacher of  Woodchurch Road’s class 4B.  He  inspired me to read and  write English Literature, and he encouraged me  to  study history with the passion he had rightly identified in the midst of my wayward daydreaming. Donald Clutton bumped into me by chance on Thurstaston Common thirty years later and despite the  passage  of so many years, he recognised me  immediately and even greeted his former ten year old pupil by name.   He later became  Head of History at Gordonstoun.  May his memory be for  a blessing.

My parents did not attend any church except for weddings, christenings, and funerals, but they gave me the freedom to go wherever I liked, and between the ages of ten and sixteen I had been allowed to discover and attend services and Sunday Schools in: St Catherine’s Church  (Church of England); St Paul’s Church (Scots Presbyterian); Maitland Meeting Hall (Evangelical); and, for one abortive session only, Grange Road  Youth Group (Salvation Army).

 After these early experiments in community membership, I settled for several years (aged ten to fourteen)  in Christ Church, Claughton (Low Church CofE) as a choir member sitting in the choirstall of  Wilfred Owen the war poet. There I was taught musical literacy and  basic keyboard skills by the charismatic organist, Mrs. Dorothy Dearnley. Her inspirational tuition and her passionate performances of Messiaen’s ‘Dieu parmi nous’ on the Church’s Father Willis organ turned me, virtually overnight, into an aspiring musician and composer. Aged ten, and with emerging chutzpah, I wrote to Olivier Messiaen personally to tell him this  and received in return a signed photo, a brochure on the organ of Saint Sulpice, and a sheet music score of  his prayerful and uplifting  motet, ‘O Sacrum Convivium’ .

In the midst of a burgeoning and stormy adolescence, I surprised everyone (except G-d) by concluding my search for a Christian home by becoming a Roman Catholic, setting up a new religious base at St. Joseph’s Church in  North Road, Birkenhead.  The church had a remarkable pipe organ (Two manuals and pedalboard) which was often played by one of the parish priests, Fr. James Molloy, and I was  delighted to be invited  to act as his page-turner during his twice-weekly practice sessions.  On his passing, I inherited his complete organ-works library and, not having a piano or keyboard at home, I was fortunate  enough to be granted permission to practice regularly on the church’s pipe organ myself—something I did every weekday on the way home from school. Armed  with Fr. Molloy’s legacy and a fair amount of zeal, I proceeded to teach myself  to play the organ.

  Fr. Molloy’s library included the principal organ works  of J.S.Bach and Josef Rheinberger. Using the money I earned playing at Church weddings at St. Joseph’s and across the Wirral, I added scores by Charles-Marie Widor, Karg Elert, Louis Vierne, and Flor Peters, together with the slower and blissfully ecstatic movements of  works by Olivier Messiaen.

The many hours of organ-loft observation  that I had spent as a page-turner for both Dorothy Dearnley and Fr. Molloy proved to be valuable free tuition for me, and I served as parish organist at St. Joseph’s Church for the following four years.

 To this day I would claim that playing such  an instrument is one of the  most satisfying performance activities available  to a musician. In the  world of instrumental music, nothing can match the challenge and exhilaration of controlling multiple keyboards, a pedalboard, swell pedals, draw-stops, tabs, manual and foot piston buttons, and written scores simultaneously—the experience is like being composer, conductor, orchestra, and audience at one  and the same time  in each intense moment of performance. 

Music  and spiritual experience often go hand in hand. R.Nachman  of Breslov assures  us  that it can that it can act as a foundation of true  attachment to G-d. and he went  so far  as to claim  ( in Likutey Moharan I:3  and  Likutey Moharan I:54) that it can even lead to  a  level of prophecy. In the  light  of this, it was not accidental that  it was also at St. Joseph’s, at the tender age  of sixteen, that I first discovered the mystical writings of Teresa of Avila and Juan de la Cruz, and simultaneously  began the regular practice  of contemplative  prayer in earnest.

oooOooo

 I set up a personal connection with the Discalced Carmelite Convent in Oxton and began serving Mass there and doing small gardening jobs for the nuns each Saturday morning.  In return, I received  the spiritual encouragement and personal support of Sister Mary Immaculata O.D.C.  She called me ‘her little brother’ in the spiritual life, and we met—on either side of the parlour grille— for a spiritual stock-taking/progress review, several times each year for many years.    

  I had decided when I was child of seven or eight that I wanted to be a vicar (Anglican minister) when  I ‘grew up’ and that original aim was simply transmuted into its Catholic format after my going over to Rome as  an  adolescent.  To the enormous grief of my dear parents, I announced  that I intended to become  a Roman Catholic priest.  My parents would have  preferred it if I had remained CofE and married to continue the family line, but they did not stand in my way and they eventually accepted my decision with love—and so I left home shortly after A levels to become a Discalced Carmelite monk.  I was eighteen: full of self-regarding religious zeal and almost oblivious to the searing pain I was causing them. 

The Order of Discalced Carmelites is an order of friars and nuns whose rule of life originated in the mediaeval Christian hermit community on Mount Carmel near Haifa, a community  which was given its official status  by the giving  of  the  Rule  of St. Albert of Jerusalem in the early thirteenth  century C.E. From that that date onwards it spread throughout Western Europe  until it split into two factions: the  Calced Carmelites and  the Discalced Carmelites. The Discalced [i] branch is the more contemplative and  eremitical of the  two branches and has its form from the hands of two sixteenth century Spaniards of Jewish ancestry: the aforementioned Teresa of Avila and Juan de la Cruz.

 Interestingly, the tradition within the Order claimed that there were also Jewish and Islamic hermit communities living on Carmel who were hermits following the tradition of Elijah the prophet. But I am unaware of any archeological evidence to support this conjecture. To this  day, near the ruins of the original Carmelite monastery at the  seaside base of the mountain, there is  a ‘Cave of Elijah’ which is a place of worship frequented by Jews,Moslems, Druze,and Christians.

Speaking very generally, there are two principal forms of Christian monasticism. Eremitic (individual reclusives living in isolation) and Cenobitic (groups of celibate devotees living,eating,and  working in common).  Three monastic orders combine both forms: the Carthusians,the Camaldolese, and the Discalced Carmelites.   The Discalced Carmelites are communal hermits whose life consists of simple community services recited in church, two separate hours of silent ‘mental prayer’  in common each day, and a great deal of time spent in one’s solitary cell in silent work, study, or contemplation.  Liturgy is simple and spartan. The two hours  of ‘mental prayer’ usually take place in the church with all the  friars  sitting or standing for  each of the  two hours in silent free contemplative prayer.[ii]  Though their emphasis is clearly on contemplative prayer, in recent years the Discalced friars have undertaken a more active ministry as well, but the nuns—to their great credit— have zealously maintained the purely contemplative lifestyle to the present day.

     Looking back on my time as a Carmelite, I can now see that I was too young—in experience as well as  in years—to have realised what I had taken on.  I am ashamed to say that I lacked perseverance and  felt the call of the secular world more than I ought to have  done.  Though I was observant of the temporary vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience  to the letter, I found observance of the  latter two almost unbearably difficult to maintain.   After a few restless but deeply formative years in that Order (in Oxford, and then at Ushaw College Durham) and before taking permanent vows[iii]—I decided to leave the community, and to return to secular life. It came as a shock to Fr. Bede Edwards O.D.C.  who had plans that I should become a historian under his mentorship at the Teresianum in Rome, and to the community who had expected me  to stay for life.

 There is also a part of me  that still views my decision to leave as a shameful rejection of the intimate relationship that was being offered to me.  In recent  years, as I age and  can look back on my life, I can  appreciate just how selfish and short-sighted that decision was. In Christian  monastic circles, Solemn Profession as a monk or nun is regarded as marriage with the  Divine.

 Ditching a Divine  Partner is never  an insignificant matter and it  has far-reaching  consequences.

   When  I  left the  Carmelites in 1976, my Novice-master, Fr. John Bernard Keegan O.D.C. told me that he was absolutely certain that I would one day return to what he believed was my true calling—a dedicated contemplative lifestyle.  He was right.  But it did not happen quite as he might have envisaged it.

oooOooo

During my time as a Carmelite monk two events helped me to see that my technicolour helter-skelter tour through Christianity was only the very beginning of a return journey to my true spiritual home.  The first event was reading a  book entitled “Jesus the Jew” written by Geza Vermes in 1973. The book had been written only a few miles away from the Chilswell Priory (on Boar’s Hill) that was my monastic home and had been donated by the author to our community library. This scholarly book opened up a criticical study of early Christianity which gave  me  a good intellectual shake up on the mythology vs history plane, and it helped to pave the way for me to begin the move out of Christianity.   

The second  event was a providential meeting with a visitor to the monastery: Reform Movement Rabbi, Lionel Blue.  The meeting was highly significant as it led to my conversion to Reform Judaism in 1992  and ultimately to my conversion ki halacha  as an Orthodox Jew in 2016.[iv]  It was also the beginning of a lifelong friendship, and his practical support for my work as a composer and religious writer was unconditional and unfailing.   (It was his advice on publishing this very text that is referred to in the General Introduction above).

My debt to him is beyond measure.

  Lionel’s version of Judaism was never my own, [v] but despite profound and fundamental differences in our conflicting approaches to the halacha, and despite the fact that we eventually ended up on opposite sides of the Orthodox/Progressive religious divide—we were nevertheless in perfect agreement in holding that

  • (i) prayer is a two-way conversation with G-d,
  •  and (ii) that compassion and respectful consideration for others are the hallmarks of the truly righteous in all denominations  or religious groups

In 1974, when  we first met, he gave  my group of  Carmelite novices  a lecture on the  Pesach Seder  and when he sang the Ha Lachma Anya with quivering  kavana,  my world stopped and was transformed.  Quite simply: in the deepest conscious level of my soul, I already knew  and recognised what I was hearing, and as the room seemed to fade and give way to another world hidden just behind it, I was given  the first glimpse of my true home.  

It then took me seventeen years to fully accept that Christianity had been my soul’s route back to Judaism and not my final destination—that I had a soul-element that had stood at Sinai and that, for reasons beyond my comprehension, I had to climb back there through many denominational and circumstantial brambles and thickets before my re-incarnated soul’s tikkun would be accomplished.

Those who know me would tell you that I have every respect for religions other than Judaism. I believe (in particular) that the Abrahamic religions possess a Providential diversity: that the acceptance and co-existence of these Faiths  is a Divine challenge  not a "problem".

 When Christian or Moslem friends ask me why I left Christianity I remember that principle. I know it often gives them some pain and disappointment (though it really shouldn’t) but my most simple yet all-embracing answer is:

 “Jesus the Galilean preacher said he came to lead people to “the Father”. I believe that Jesus the Cosmic archetype did just that—and then disappeared from my life,mission accomplished.”

 That both those manifestations of “Jesus” continue to inspire and guide many of my non-Jewish friends does not irk me. It seems to me that they provide an equally valid religious experience to mine, and they have the potential to produce a personally authentic way for them to meet G-d. How the Divine Unity is revealed in religious diversity is beyond my comprehension, but it deserves my awe and respect.

oooOooo

I left the Carmelites and the contemplative lifestyle in 1976. Both my parents died shortly after that date.  After several months of disheartening unemployment (and four weeks of  hard labour as a cowherd in Storeton Hall Farm on the Wirral) I began a degree course in Music and Educational studies at  Hope University Liverpool.  

There I was fortunate to have the composer and professor Stephen  Pratt as my composition tutor and  personal mentor, and the concert pianist, Michael Young, as  my long suffering  piano tutor for four blessed years.

 Michael Young is the only pianist I have ever heard who could  make the piano sound like a legato instrument (in the Berg’s PianoSonata ), and also like a symphony orchestra in full Mahlerian expansiveness.   At my first lesson with him and on hearing that my favourite composer was Mahler, he immediately broke into an electrifying impromptu performance of  memorised extracts from Mahler’s Symphonic works.

 Stephen Pratt was perhaps  the  most gifted educationalist  I have ever encountered. He  was endlessly supportive  and helped me produce my first composition  (entitled ‘SINAI’) which was a setting  of the Sh’ma for vocalist, orchestra, percussion and  a shofar solo—and he inspired me  to go on writing for many years to follow.

In private conversation Stephen Pratt  had declared me  to be a  ‘cultural hermit’ and to expand my experience he (literally) sent me to an Albert Hall Prom Concert on 24 August 1979 that was to change and  re-direct my musical career for ever. He had noted, in my own compositions, certain similarities to the gamelan music of Java, and the Promenade concert in question featured a gamelan performance  by the Akademi Seni Karawitan Indonesia of Surakarta under the direction of Sri Hastanto, coupled with a performance of Messiaen’s Trois Petits Liturgies that featured Jeanne Loriod on ondes martenot under the baton of Simon Rattle.

(Gamelan is South East Asian percussion music performed on large sets of bronze or iron metalophones and gongs. Vocal solos and choruses,bowed and plucked string soloists are sometimes added. The ensemble has no conductor but is “directed” by the  drummer and/or the  bonang or rebab player.)

For me, that concert was Earth Shattering beyond words.

I stood on tip-toe through the entire Gamelan section of that concert, straining to get a view of the performers, utterly paralysed in musical ecstasy and frozen in a trance outside of time on hearing this music for the first time:  and from that day on, I became a gamelan student and teacher.

  After obtaining a B.Ed hons. degree in Liverpool, I turned my energies to the forging of a career in music teaching and educational management. I spent over twenty ferociously workaholic years doing that in Primary and Secondary schools in  UK and in South East Asia—and  made a good and secure living doing so.

I taught the usual spectrum of Western serious and popular  musical genres, and managed  Music departments in Stanney Comprehensive School in Ellesmere Port and then at Frodsham High School near Warrington. My special area of focus became the teaching of Javanese Gamelan in British schools, and this  was the case for the rest of my teaching career.


I was involved in the introduction of Javanese Gamelan into the English National Curriculum in the 1980’s, and my childrens’ Gamelan group from Frodsham High School performed on British television, in the Queen Elizabeth Hall and in the Albert Hall during the national Schools’ Prom in 1984.  The students had built the entire set of instruments themselves and students Jonathan Clark, Sorelle Kane, Alison Kaye, Gary Barlow, Kitty Prisk, Julie Cowin, Penny Argust, and Andrea Julyan[vi] produced new gamelan compositions and lyrics in traditional style to extend  its repertoire. Here are  some of the  beautiful lyrics written by  Sorelle Kane in 1984.

"Seized by the  eyes.  Its pallor taking me  higher. From shining skies eternal. Spread the  Wings of Peace. Penetrate the mist. Like  sun inscribed on shadow. The sharpest point of Talon. Unclasp the Golden secret.  For a glimpse everlasting. My veins run pure with gold. Lift me higher. You carry my soul.  I have at last the key. Then falling...falling...falling........ "[vii]

  

Although I was working in Frodsham which is  near Warrington, I lived some distance away in rural Storeton Village on the Wirral.   After my parent’s death, I had bought a stone-built cottage on a mortgage which I soon realised was totally beyond my means.  Most seriously, I found that I could  not afford to heat the place in winter. The second-hand car in which I commuted to work was on its last legs and I could  no longer afford to run it and pay the utility bills.  It would  seem that Mr Oliver’s concern over my mathematical innumeracy was not so misplaced  after all. To this day it is still my area of particular incompetence.   

In December 1984, one of my fellow teachers at Frodsham spotted an advertisement in the Times Educational Supplement for a teaching post in Jakarta, Indonesia and  joked that it might solve my financial and heating problems in one blow—giving me some hands-on and indigenous gamelan experience into the bargain.

 I appreciated the joke (and her concern) but replied that I was happy in my job and lacked any desire to go abroad.  I was never a keen traveller and have usually settled in one place without leaving  its close environs for years  at a  time, but relocations have  often happened against my will, out of the blue, or by ‘coincidence’.   To me, it has always felt as if there was a 'Pillar of Cloud'  at work.

Moved more by the freezing cold of that December evening in Storeton than by any cultural or career considerations— I applied on impulse for the job in Jakarta and was interviewed in London.  I was woken up a  few days later by a telephone call from Geoffrey Tomlinson, the school’s Principal, offering me the  post—and I surprised myself by accepting.  I was still half asleep at the time and as I put the phone  down it suddenly dawned on me what I had done. I had set a process of enormous change in motion: I was about to leave my much loved native Wirral and go to live  in an unknown country on the other side of the world; in a type of school which was totally beyond my experience. I need not have worried.  Mr Tomlinson turned out to be yet another one of the charismatic teachers I have  been so fortunate to know, and I had the happiest years of my teaching career under his benevolent leadership.

    I moved to South East Asia in 1985  as the principal Music Specialist at the British International School Jakarta  and soon after, I became Director of Music during the ambitious and enormous expansion of that school under Ronald Stones. He was to become my long-term and highly supportive employer as I later moved on to become his Director of Music at the Tanglin Trust School in Singapore where I was responsible for the general music education of thousands of expatriate  children. 

   In both Jakarta and Singapore I was fortunate enough to teach children—from Nursery to A level age—in two educational environments that could only be described as ideal. They deserved that epithet because of good leadership; dedicated and highly competent teaching colleagues; and because the children taught there were totally motivated to enjoy and derive the maximum benefit from a  happy  time at school.   Good schools are always more about people than equipment and facilities. Fulfilled and appreciated staff will always be found  in a classroom of happy children—and  vice versa.

   The students that I taught are the children  I never had, and many of them are still in touch with me to this day. As is so often the case, they don’t realise that they taught me  much more than I ever taught them.

 oooOooo 

If you made it this far...congratulations.  I realise that this part of “A Hermit’s Tale” is purely background and much of it would only interest people who are either Scousers, or personal friends, or musicians........but it was necessary to state much of it if readers are to  make sense of the  more spiritual parts of the  tale which will follow in later installments of the  tale.  Hope you enjoyed reading it.

 

©Nachman Davies

Safed 2023

 

 PART TWO of A HERMIT'S TALE  is HERE

 



ENDNOTES

[i] So called because the ‘barefooted’ branches of monastic orders were newly reformed  and stricter communities, often embracing signs  of religious poverty. In fact the original Discalced Carmelites wore alpurgatas (rough espadrille sandals made of  dried grass-fibres).

[ii] Nevertheless, Juan  de la Cruz recommended that these two hours of what we would call silent hisbodedut were spent in the  fresh air  in a natural environment where possible.

[iii] A Roman Catholic monk or nun usually takes Simple Vows (in a ceremony of Simple Profession) on an annual basis for several years, and then makes a Solemn Profession of  Permanent Vows after which they are considered dedicated for life.  The two states resemble an engagement followed by a  marriage.

[iv] Progressive/Reform Jewish conversions are not recognised by Orthodox religious courts. For Orthodox Jews, the only valid conversions are those conducted “ki-halacha” (according to traditional Jewish Law) by the court of an Orthodox Beis Din.

[v] Orthodox Jews insist that the oral law (halacha) is authoritative and binding. Reform and Progressive Jews frequently make community and individual choices which do not adhere to the traditional codes of Jewish Law or the directives of contemporary Orthodox halachic authorities.

[vi] Under the tutelage  of the Heins sisters, Andrea also performed as principal dancer, taught some of the other dancers herself, and designed and  made many of their costumes.  Jonathan was a creative genius in both the arts and craftsmanship, but sadly died very young.   Julie became  an Anglican minister, Sorelle a gifted poet and  visual artist, Alison became  a professional composer and  a professor of composition at the Royal School of Music, Penny a lawyer.  Kitty and Gary went on to become practical musicians, Gary as leader of the  pop group “Take That” and Kitty as a Gamelan musician and ethnomusicologist to this day.  These were the “builders” of the gamelan, but actually each and  every one of the Frodsham group was a star.

[vii] The 1983 Queen Elizabeth Hall performance  can be viewed  HERE and  the 1984 Albert Hall performance HERE