|
|
Tisha
B'Av
The Saddest Day in Jewish History
Tisha
B'Av or Tish'ah b'Av (Hebrew: תשעה באב or ט׳ באב, tishβh bə-βv)
is the saddest day on the Jewish calendar, is it a month and a day
fraught with tragedy.
Tisha b'Av is a day of national mourning. It is a day of
fasting and rituals of mourning are observed.
A multitude of national calamities occurred on Tisha b'Av
throughout the history of the Jewish People.
-
During
the time of Mosess, as the refugee Israelites traveled the Sinai
Desert, it was on the 9th of Av that they accepted the
slanderous report of the 10 Spies, and the decree was issued
forbidding them from entering the Land of Israel. (1312 BCE)
-
Both the
First Temple and the Second holy Temple in Jerusalem were
destroyed on the ninth of Av. The First Temple at the
hands of the Babylonians, led by Nebuchadnezzar. 100,000 Jews
were slaughtered and millions more exiled. (586 BCE)
-
The
Second Temple was destroyed by the Titus led Romans. Over two
million Jews perished, and another million were exiled. (70 CE)
-
And as
the prophet Yirmiyahu foretold, Jerusalem was ploughed
over - on the ninth of Av. The Temple area and its surroundings
were stamped on and squashed by the Roman general Turnus Rufus.
Jerusalem was rebuilt as a pagan city -- renamed Aelia
Capitolina -- and access to the Jews was forbidden.
-
It was
on t he 9th of Av that the Bar Kochba revolt was
crushed by Roman Emperor Hadrian. The city of Betar --
the Jews' last stand against the Romans -- was captured and
liquidated. Over 100,000 Jews were slaughtered. (135 CE)
-
On the
9th of Av 1492, the Spaniards expelled the Jews from
their country, a culmination of the Spanish Inquisition that
brought the death of countless Jews.
-
On the
9th of Av of 1914 - a World War began. It was on the eve
of Tisha b'Av in 1914 that Germany declared war on
Russia, a war that brought on economic calamity for Germany, and
engendered an anger that festered, and a resentment that set the
stage for the Holocaust and the murder of six million Jews.
-
The 9th
of Av 1942 recorded the first killings started at
Treblinka: "The first transport of 'deportees' left Malkinia on
July 23, 1942, in the morning hours. It was loaded with Jews
from the Warsaw ghetto. The train was made up of sixty closed
cars, crowded with people. The car doors were locked from the
outside, and the air apertures barred with barbed wire."
The 9th of Av
is indeed a sad day in the history of the Jews. It is also promised
to be the day of redemption, when bitter tears will be replaced by
song and dance and lightness of the heart. It is believed by many
that the Jewish Messiah will first show himself on the 9th day of
Av.
Jewish Celebrations Recommends
Tishah B'av:
Texts, Readings, And Insights ~ By Rabbi Avrohom Chaim Feuer
Rabbi Shimon Finkelman / Paperback / Published by Artscroll-Mesorah
A presentation based on Talmudic and traditional sources
This volume details the
significance, history and meaning of this, the most tragic day in the
Jewish year.
A Tzaddik in Our Time : The Life of Rabbi Aryeh Levin
~ Simcha Raz / Hardcover / Published 1989
An amazing tale of an amazing man who lived in amazing times.
A story of goodness and kindness in action!
|
|