We all know someone who wishes to get married, or have a baby, or recover from health problems, or overcome financial setbacks, or… Perhaps that person is you.

When all our efforts and prayers seem to be going unanswered, the great rabbis of Jerusalem have long recommended a more powerful track—40 days of prayer at the Western Wall. Hundreds, if not thousands, of Jerusalemites will testify that their heart’s desires were fulfilled after 40 consecutive days at the Kotel.

In early 2003, Gershon Burd experienced this for himself: At the time, he was learning in a yeshiva in Jerusalem. After five years of searching for his soul mate, he tried 40 days at the Kotel. During that period, across the city, a young woman named Batya, who had not even been dating, suddenly felt that she was ready for marriage. An acquaintance introduced them and they were engaged two weeks later.

In order to bring the power of the 40-day prayer to the world while raising money for needy Jerusalem families, Gershon and Batya Burd started Western Wall Prayers (www.westernwallprayers.org) in 2004. Users sign up online and are invited to request their prayer. They are then matched with a kollel man or wife who goes to the Kotel for 40 consecutive days, giving charity for them each time, and speaks the prayer, word-for-word, asking for Divine Mercy on their behalf.

Meanwhile, the donor prays the same prayer every day along with their agent, creating a potent partnership and growth experience. In return for spiritual services rendered, the donor gives a minimum $90 donation to support needy kollel families in Jerusalem.

“Under Jewish law, if you appoint an agent to do something for you, it is exactly as if you are doing it yourself,” says Batya Burd. “The donation is a material blessing that we connect to the spiritual blessing of praying at the Kotel. It’s prayer and charity in one—a blessing for all involved.”

Obviously, Western Wall Prayers is not guaranteeing answers to every person’s prayers, as all is ultimately in G-d’s hands. But the Western Wall Prayers website lists 110 “success stories,” from the cute to the downright miraculous.

Brooklyn’s Ella Sanders had been on the shidduch scene for five years when she heard about Western Wall Prayers. When she asked that her agent pray that she marry the man that she was then dating seriously, she was advised to make her prayer more general. “Well, that shidduch didn’t work out,” says Sanders. “Instead, I met another man, with incredible midos, and we got married a few months later! It was amazing. We now have a baby boy.”

After Eli P., of Chicago, was diagnosed with colon cancer, his son contacted Western Wall Prayers and asked them to pray 40 days for a complete recovery. “On the 36th day, the doctors operated and were astounded to find nothing but a small wound,” says Eli. “I was also surprised until I found out that my son had sponsored a prayer agent for me.”

Other notable stories include Dr. Stephen Finstein, of Dallas, who credits the 40-day prayer with the safe return of his son from 12 months in Iraq as an infantry soldier. Paulina Aguilar, of Chile, says that she gave birth to her daughter exactly one year after her agent began praying that she become a mother. Lisa M. says that her mother’s wondrous recovery from cancer has her doctor “looking to the Heavens for an explanation.”

To sign up for prayers for yourself or a loved one, fill out a form online at www.westernwallprayers.org.

By Thanassis Cambanis
GLOBE STAFF

JERUSALEM – Batya Burd is a devout Jew, dedicated to following to the letter every instruction contained in the Torah – from how to dress and what to eat to whether to neuter a pet cat. The 31-year-old former corporate lawyer is also tech-savvy; Burd is the founder of www.WesternWallPrayers.org, a website that enables [people] the world over to order a 40-day cycle of prayers at the Western Wall in Jerusalem – according to many Jews the holiest religious site in the world. Burd lives just up the hill from the Temple Mount in Jerusalem’s Old City, in a cramped walkup with her husband, 2- year-old son Joshua Jacob, and a second baby due in May. From a tiny office on the apartment’s glassed-in balcony, she screens dozens of requests a month on her laptop from people seeking prayers to support them as they look for marriage partners or business help or a respite from cancer – and in one case, even American citizenship. ”I wanted to make a living doing something that advanced my spiritual life,” Burd said. She only denies a few requests, among them e-mails asking agents to pray for a lottery win. Burd corresponds with those whose reasons for prayers pass muster, and then dispatches a prayer agent for 40 days in a row to the Wailing Wall. She left behind a life of career-climbing when she came to Israel five years ago … Two years later she met Gershon Burd, a student at yeshiva who had left his family’s insurance business in Chicago after becoming observant. They decided to marry within two weeks. With their marriage came the idea of www.WesternWallPrayers.org. Gershon Burd had prayed for 40 days at the Western Wall, a holy spot for all Jews.

Why, Gershon wondered, should the benefits of praying at the foundation of the Temple Mount be available only to those able to travel to Jerusalem? Batya Burd opened her website a year and a half ago, when the young couple had a newborn son and was running desperately low on money. ”We were literally waiting for miracles,” Burd said … Revenue from the web-based prayer site, Batya reasoned, could support her and Gershon, a full-time student at the Bircas HaTorah yeshiva in Jerusalem’s Old City. Many members of the ultra-Orthodox community in Israel dedicate their lives to studying Torah, living on little or no income. If the site succeeded, it would also create income for other yeshiva students. Now, Burd said, she accepts several dozen requests a month for a prayer cycle … [Donors] can choose among several packages. An ”individual-cycle prayer” costs [$90 donation], and involves a Torah-observant Jew praying for a group of customers at the same time. At the top of the line, the ”personalized exclusive prayer,” for [$720 donation], involves a prayer agent dedicated to a single request, a group prayer by an entire yeshiva, and special study of religious law on the customer’s behalf.

Burd is quick to note that she won’t reject a person in need of a prayer cycle who can’t afford it. ”We’ll ask them to give whatever they can.” But she says success stories abound among those who [donated for] prayers, including [donors] who found marriage partners or were exonerated in criminal trials or overcame serious health problems. Burd said a recent [donor] sent $2,000 in gratitude after his prayer was answered. Burd said she distributed the money to needy families for Passover. She expanded her offerings recently, sending prayer agents to the town of Safed, at the tomb of a major Kabbalist rabbi. The [donation requested] $540 for 40 days. Daryl Michel, 35, one of the prayer agents, said he sees no difference between praying for [someone donating money] and praying on behalf of a loved one or relative. He’s a fervent believer in the 40-day prayer cycle, a tradition among [religious Jews] that involves saying a prayer every day for 40 days at the Western Wall. It was after visiting the Western Wall for 40 days in a row that Michel’s wife conceived their daughter. ”It’s wonderful to pray at this holy site for those not so fortunate to be here,” Michel said.

One-time Bay St. lawyer Batya Burd delivers prayers by proxy … to the ancient Western WallShe believes heavenly intervention made her the answer to her husband’s prayersNov. 12, 2005. 02:21 AMMITCH POTTERMIDDLE EAST BUREAU

JERUSALEM-You need a wife, a husband, or perhaps just a job. You want a baby, maybe. Your favourite uncle has cancer, and you are hoping you can do something, anything, to ease his pain.

Batya Burd is betting even the believers among you haven’t a prayer. Or rather, you haven’t the time – and the access – to deliver the sort of prayer she has in mind.

Burd, who gave up a future as a Toronto corporate lawyer for a pious existence just steps from the Western Wall, has a novel suggestion… she and her team of 40 Torah-observant Jewish worshippers are ready to pray at God’s last known address, for that which ails you.

Not just any spiritual whim passes muster at http://www.westernwallprayers.org, the Internet-based prayer-by-proxy service [the 39 year old mother of five] established [years back]. Forget about requesting heavenly help in winning the lottery. She will politely say no. When prayer orders smack of such vanity, she seeks the counsel of a rabbi on whether to proceed.

But for those whose intentions are deemed genuine, be they Christian, Muslim or Jew, Burd will dispatch a “prayer agent” through the warren-like streets of Jerusalem’s Old City on a mission to God. For 40 consecutive days, she will do this.

“The idea is not for people to use it like a lucky rabbit’s foot. We’re serious about this,” says Burd, whose spiritual outings request a donation from $90 to [$1,800], depending on how many hours and days your shaliach, or proxy, prays on your behalf.

“There are no guarantees, obviously. But when we agree to do a full cycle of prayers for somebody, they need to be involved as well. We encourage them to do some kind of good deed, wherever they are. We’re only helping the process. But it is not a replacement for their religiosity.”

Burd says the idea came from her husband Gershon, a Chicago native, primarily because it was immediately after he undertook a similar segulah – a 40-day cycle of prayers at the Western Wall, asking God for a wife – that they first met.

Burd says she “knew something was happening” during the 40 days her future husband trekked to the wall to pray for a partner.

“I felt like I had extra help. My poor husband had been dating for five years and it was not happening for him,” she says.

“One of my friends in Jerusalem knew him. She came up to me one day and said, `When you are ready, I know your soul mate.’ And finally it happened. We were introduced. And five dates later we were engaged.”

What pushed Burd from notion to action in developing www.westernwallprayers.org was the poverty she saw around her in the Old City, where the Jewish quarter is devotion-rich but cash-poor …

“It is difficult to see so many people in Jerusalem really living hand to mouth, watching every dime. What they need most is material help,” she says.

“At the same time, there are all sorts of people in North America who have so much in material wealth, but are in spiritual need. We’re trying to match those needs to each other.”

Segulah is a word from the ancient Hebrew with multiple and sometimes mystical meanings, not all of them necessarily flattering. Burd allows that some rabbis dismiss such prayer as less than serious. But she points to a raft of success stories of prayers answered, the most moving of which are posted online. She also acknowledges that occasional visitors to her site leave scathing notes berating the enterprise as offensive.

“We are playing with such tender concepts and people can get so offended. I suppose we’re asking people to judge us favourably for a second. Please understand the context,” she says.

Rabbi Berel Wein, a prominent Jerusalem-based author and one of several Jewish scholars whose name appears as references on Burd’s site, said the motives are beyond reproach.

“I know the family and I know the money goes to legitimate causes,” Wein confirmed.

“What we’re really talking about is an old established custom. Throughout history, it was common that when people travelled to the Holy Land other people would ask them to pray at holy sites,” he said.

“It can’t do any harm. The money is incidental. When we pray, in general, we give money to a charity or a cause. This is pretty much the same thing.”

Burd describes her own circuitous journey to Jerusalem as a wayward road in search of herself. Raised in Toronto as Lisa Fefer – she later Hebraized her name – Burd studied at University of Western Ontario and Osgoode Law School before climbing to the 44th floor of First Canadian Place to what is today Davies Ward Phillips & Vineberg LLP, Canada’s leading corporate tax firm.

It was a second journey from Toronto to India that brought Burd to Jerusalem twelve years ago. Her savings depleted, she chose to take advantage of the Birthright Israel program, an initiative … that entitles young Jews to an all-expenses-paid journey to experience the Holy land. “Birthright was a free ride for me. I just wanted a cheap way to get to India and this got me more than halfway. But in included 10 days in Israel. And 10 days was enough to reel me in.” she explains. Burd’s gradual transition to an Orthodox lifestyle is now complete. The shoulder-length hair is not hers, but a wig, as is customary. “I had serious lifestyle changes to make – [what I ate, how I dressed, what I did]… but Burd eventually “came to a point where I was able to just let go and [accept my chosen purpose in life. I was born a Jew, and it is not a coincidence]. Even today she is reluctant to accept the labels applied to the varied streams of Judaism, other than to say “I [understand] the Torah as God gave it on Mount Sinai, to be the truth, in its full sense and without adaptations.”

The latest marriage of technology and millennia-old traditions enables anyone with a special request, at least $80 to spare and Internet access to pray at the Western Wall in Jerusalem.

Batya Burd, 31, a former corporate lawyer from Toronto now living in the Jewish Quarter of Jerusalem’s Old City, has founded an Internet [non-profit] that offers personal prayers at the Western Wall and other Jewish religious sites.

“Who doesn’t want their prayers answered?,” Burd asked rhetorically during a recent interview in her apartment.

Burd became an observant Jew after a Birthright Israel trip in 2001, and immigrated to Israel soon after. She and her husband Gershon, a full-time yeshiva student, established their [non-profit, www.WesternWallPrayers.org], last year. It took off quickly through word of mouth and advertisements on Google.

The main service offered is 40 days of consecutive prayers at the Western Wall, where God’s presence is said to permanently dwell. The number was selected because of its recurrence throughout the Bible, among others as the number of days that Moses stayed on Mount Sinai before the giving of the Torah.

Burd explained that hiring a proxy is an acceptable religious alternative for people who don’t have daily access to the wall. “People do have to pray for themselves too,” she insisted, “but the more people you have praying for you, the better.”

By Daphna Berman

The latest marriage of technology and millennia-old traditions enables anyone with a special request, at least $90 to spare and Internet access to pray at the Western Wall in Jerusalem.

Batya Burd, 31, a former corporate lawyer from Toronto now living in the Jewish Quarter of Jerusalem’s Old City, has founded an Internet [non-profit] that offers personal prayers at the Western Wall and other Jewish religious sites.

“Who doesn’t want their prayers answered?,” Burd asked rhetorically during a recent interview in her apartment.

Burd…immigrated to Israel [after a Birthright trip in 2001]… She and her husband Gershon, a full-time yeshiva student, established [www.WesternWallPrayers.org] last year. It took off quickly through word of mouth and advertisements on Google.

The main service offered is 40 days of consecutive prayers at the Western Wall, where God’s presence is said to permanently dwell. The number was selected because of its recurrence throughout the Bible, among others as the number of days that Moses stayed on Mount Sinai before the giving of the Torah.

Burd explained that hiring a proxy is an acceptable religious alternative for people who don’t have daily access to the wall. “People do have to pray for themselves too,” she insisted, “but the more people you have praying for you, the better.”

The basic package, for a minimum of $2 a day [donation] for the 40-day period, provides for inclusion in a group prayer at the wall. For $9 a day [donation], a representative prays at the wall exclusively on your behalf. The $18 a day [donation] option includes the exclusive prayer as well as the recitation of all of Psalms and special prayers at an Old City synagogue. For an additional [donation] of $540, Burd can arrange for a 40-day course of prayers at the tomb of King David on Mt. Zion or at that of the Kabbalist Yitzhak Luria (“Arizal”), in Safed. Most clients take the basic package, Burd admitted, “because it’s cheapest.”

Hundreds of people from around the world, most of them Jews, have turned to the site for divine intervention on matters such as fertility, health, or marriage. Unusual requests have included divine help in being released from prison, losing weight and obtaining American citizenship. One Christian client, who sought prayers for the resurrection of Jesus, was politely declined.

In addition to their requests, [donors] provide their Hebrew name and that of their mother, in keeping with Jewish tradition. Some [donors] relate their life stories, while others send pictures. Burd keeps in touch by phone or email. “You’d be amazed at how much a person can care for and connect with a complete stranger,” she said.

Teachers and students whom the Burds know from the Jewish Quarter help to fulfill the requests.

“This feels like such holy work,” Burd said. “My heart is in the job for the first time and I am earning money from something that I believe in.”

Trusting in prayer

Skeptics may scoff at the idea of [donating for] someone on the other side of the world to pray on your behalf. [People can donate] hundreds, if not thousands, of dollars with no proof of performance. But Burd says that with references from rabbis such as Rabbi Berel Wein, a popular Jewish historian and Rabbi Shimon Green of the Bircas HaTorah yeshiva, her pure intentions should be obvious. “If you don’t know the rabbis, it’s true, you need to take a leap of faith,” she admitted. “But anyone who wants prayers at the Kotel has already put their faith in God.”

Burd claims “dozens” of success stories for her [donors], ranging from love discovered to health regained. “It’s not magic, but it is a Torah recipe for success,” she said.

Still, Burd does include a liability clause in the contract. As we cannot play God, we offer no guarantees,” the clause states, “but with heartfelt prayers, good deeds, and Torah-learning, we do our best.”

BY SIMONA FUMA

Photo: Lia Rostenne

Sick, lonely, down on your luck? For centuries Jews have visited the Western Wall in Jerusalem to entreat God for special blessings. According to religious tradition, after the destruction of the Second Temple, God’s presence never left the wall that stood on the western side of the Temple compound.Now, the age of the Internet has brought the Wall closer to the geographically challenged. There are webcams offering streaming video of people at prayer (www.thekotel.org), as well as a free service that allows you to email a note to be placed in the Wall’s crevices (www.aish.com/wallcam).

Most recently, a former corporate lawyer from Toronto foundedhttp://www.westernwallprayers.org/, where for $90 and up you can [donate to have] an observant Orthodox Jew to pray at the Wall on your behalf for 40 consecutive days.“The 40 days is a well-known segula, a kind of kabbalistic recipe [to have your prayers answered],” explains Batya Burd, 31, the company’s founder. “My best friend came [to pray at the Wall] for 40 days. On the fortieth day, a guy she used to date flew in [to Israel] for her and that week he proposed.”

Though Burd believes it is better to appear at the Wall in person, there is a long tradition of [donating to have a Jew] recite prayers on another’s behalf. In the year that the website has been up, Burd has arranged for hundreds of 40-day prayer cycles. She said that about one third of her [donors] would describe themselves as Orthodox, while the rest run the gamut from Conservative to unaffiliated to not Jewish. The most commonly requested prayers involve overcoming personal adversity: illness, infertility or finding a mate.