Next to the gasoline pump was a bell-shaped pile of cow manure. Yossi had brought it – wheelbarrow by wheelbarrow  – from our big red barn and was now shoveling the rich brown ordure into a manure spreader. Attached to our Ford-Ferguson tractor, the spreader would scatter the muck to fertilize our fields.

The year was 1948, the place was a 160-acre (624 dunam) farm on the outskirts of Guelph, Ontario. Our senior movement, the Torah Va’Avodah [Torah and Labor] of Toronto, had purchased the farm for agricultural training of a small group of us as future Israeli “pioneers.” The farm was run as a collective since our pioneering destination was an Israeli religious kibbutz. We called it hachsharah; the Hebrew implies something like: a place to make us fit to be pioneers.

That Sunday, 74 years ago, we had invited our parents and a cluster of seniors as well as members of our youth movement, Hashomer Hadati, to see how we lived and worked. The manure shoveler was our group’s funster and showman, Yossi Glatt. We had all chosen our branch of endeavor. Yossi had picked the barn, and was an excellent dairyman. He tended to our 19 milkers, mostly black-and-white Holsteins with one unusually large purple-mottled cow, pedigree unknown, that he named Bubbaleh. Twice a day Yossi would milk by hand, helped if needed by one of us. And with his puckish sense of drama, he chose parents’ day for his shoveling chore.

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