Personal Stories
A Hospital Stay That Redefined My Shabbat
In the midst of beeping monitors and ringing phones, one man found Shabbat’s rest as an inner peace no place can steal.
- Naama Green
- פורסם ב' חשון התשפ"ב

#VALUE!
For years I marked Shabbat by the same signs: empty streets, closed shops, the soft glow of candles on a crisp white tablecloth. But when I spent Shabbat in a hospital corridor—alone, watching nurses and clerks bustle as though it were any weekday—I realized I’d never truly known Shabbat.
Alone and restless, I sank into a familiar haze of sadness. Twenty-five hours without my usual comforts felt like a trial, and I asked myself: “What is Shabbat, really?” I pushed aside memories of chicken soup and Kiddush wine and began from the beginning: “Who commanded Shabbat? Hashem did. Why? Because on the seventh day He rested. So I must rest too—my soul, not just my body.”
In that moment, a quiet revolution began in my heart. I understood that Shabbat isn’t just in the streets or on the table—it’s the deep stillness we carry inside. Even surrounded by beeping machines and bright fluorescents, I could pause, breathe, and let go. Hashem placed me there for a reason; this was my Shabbat test.
As I sat by my loved one’s bedside, I whispered prayers and let the hospital’s noise fade. I found a rest that no closed door could create, a calm that no white tablecloth could define. And when I finally returned home, I embraced both the inner peace I’d discovered and the beloved Shabbat traditions I once took for granted. Now, every week I taste the soup, light the candles, and walk the silent streets with new gratitude—knowing that Shabbat’s true gift is its gentle whisper in our souls.