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Thoughts on Tisha B’av

 
 
 

The Jews are called the People of the Book. I like that title. It connotes a sense of seriousness, learnedness and a connection to a word and a history that passes from one generation to the next. The only problem with a book, especially one written in history, is it rarely describes tomorrow. When entrenched in our history such book cannot focus on hope for the future.

The Jewish people of the Book are a people that are wedded to history. And, much of our history is riddled with challenge and sorrow. We are a people that are quick to look back and hesitant to look forward. We have good reason. We were hated in almost every land we inhabited before 1776. We faced pogroms and slander and boycott and death all for our beliefs and the manner in which we expressed those beliefs. We pushed forward against the hatred and persevered. As such, we are hard wired to be a people of memory, pain and yesterdays.

One thing changed that: Israel.

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Rabbi David-Seth Kirshner

On November 29, 1947 the United Nations voted in favor of a partition plan of a strip of land in the Middle East to be divided amongst Israel and Palestine.  That date in history began a new dawn for Israel; a time of hope HaTikvah. In the wake of the Holocaust, the Jewish people — some committed to religious observance and some committed to culture and society - joined forces in solidarity and in arms to create a new land and a new opportunity in the hopes of realizing an age old dream.  At that moment, 62 years ago, we became a people of promise instead of desolation, we brought hope where there was once gloom, wholeness to a place of brokenness. That hope, promise and wholeness was fortified in June of 1967 when the small and nascent nation of Israel brought its avowed enemy neighbors to its knees in six miraculous days.

On the third day of the Six Day War, the paratroopers that advanced on the Old City in Jerusalem made the now famous declaration over the radio for all the troops to hear; Har HaBayit Beyadeinu! – The Temple Mount is in our control! It is ours again. For the first time in 2000 years, a Jewish holy site was returned to its Jewish hands again. Obviously, we were not about to start offering sacrifices again, but our connection to our past created a sense of exuberance for our future.

Rabbi Shlomo Goren, z’’l of blessed memory, the former Chief Rabbi of Israel and during the Six Day War, the Chief Rabbi of the Israel Defense Forces, was with the troops throughout the first three days of battle and was with the paratroopers that entered the Old City and made its way to the Western Wall.

Rabbi Goren, in anticipation of the moment, took out his Shofar and blasted it in a clarion call of celebration. He then recited two prayers with slight changes; As Rabbi Goren prayed the afternoon prayer precisely at the appointed time, he inserted the prayer Nachem that is added during the holiday of Tisha B’av – commemorating the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem. Though, instead of reciting the verse that states Jerusalem — City of Mourning He changed it to Jerusalem, — the Liberated City. He then began to sing and dance with the soldiers, “This year in Jerusalem.

We are used to concluding our Seder and Neilah services with the phrase “Next Year in Jerusalem.Rabbi Goren realized that the prayer of hope and opportunity had been answered and he became conscious of it by changing the words to represent the achievement. The prayers were alive and dynamic for him. The occasion required recognition and changing the liturgy to reflect the potency of the moment.

We can trace back our shared challenges to the time of being enslaved in Egypt, to wandering in the desert, to persecution by the Romans, expulsions by the Spaniards, pogroms by the Cossacks, being driven to the death chambers in Europe — and now we are here — Israel. The hope for tomorrow is today. We are in Jerusalem, now. Not next year, not last year. Now. Today.

So, why then do we still have a holiday of Tisha B’Av today? Why in the year 2010, more than 62 years after the establishment of the State of Israel and 43 years after Rabbi Goren’s Shofar blast at the walls of the Temple, do we still flock in droves to the walls of Jerusalem and sit low as mourners to remember a time of destruction of the Temple? Have we not obliterated the necessity for this holiday through the realization of Israel and Jerusalem? Are we only able to be a people of memory and pain? Have we become a people solely focused on history and sadness instead of hope and possibility?

The time has come for us — you and me, the Jewish people in Israel and the Diaspora — to write new chapters to the book that constitutes our people-hood. The time is now and the place, here, to continue and create a new narrative for our people. We no longer need to sit low while wearing sack cloth and recite dirges while fasting to commemorate a place once destroyed that we have since reclaimed and rebuilt and renewed. Today, we have an opportunity to return to that wall and offer Psalms of thanksgiving and praise and participate in feasts and bounties to celebrate our miracle, our home land, Israel.

Tonight, as I sat at the southern portion of the Western Wall and saw thousands of people holding candles and chanting from the book of Lamentations, a strange view was offered me. The candles and moon created shadows reflecting off the ancient stone wall. I am not a particularly touchy-feely person but, I was struck by the images I was witnessing. The shadows appeared like people dancing and moving, reading, singing and playing instruments.  Was this a shadow depicting our past or was this a fore-shadowing of the days to come? It is up to us to decide.

I ask you to join me and pick up a pen or a shovel or a computer — whatever tool you fancy — and begin to be a part of a new history, a new story, a new Hope for the Jewish people. May we continue in that direction until, our children come and read our book and then continue that history in their book, fashioning their shadows for future generations. May their history be like ours; full of appreciated miracles, unbridled opportunity and many blank pages?

Wishing you a meaningful Tisha B’Av from Jerusalem.

Rabbi David-Seth Kirshner

Written on Tisha B’Av - 5770

Jerusalem, Israel

 
 
 
Bwood posted 20 Jul 2010 at 12:54 PM

Thank you for your inspiring article. A couple of comments:

“So, why then do we still have a holiday of Tisha B’Av today? ... Have we not obliterated the necessity for this holiday through the realization of Israel and Jerusalem?”

Because it is not ours. The Temple Mount is not ours.

“The Jewish people of the Book are a people that are wedded to history. And, much of our history is riddled with challenge and sorrow. We are a people that are quick to look back and hesitant to look forward.”

As Rebbetzin Jungreis says, The Torah is not a history book. There is no Hebrew word for “history.” The Israelis say “historia.” The Torah is a manual about the past, present and future.

lwood posted 20 Jul 2010 at 02:31 PM

we still mourn today as a reminder we are still in “Golos” - Occupying Israel while in the same time not interested in moving closer to hashem by following the Torah is two steps backwards…That is why we mourn today.

Kylynn posted 20 Jul 2010 at 05:29 PM

I just got back from a Birthright Trip about a week and a half ago. We discussed the difference between history and memory. History is dry, dates and facts; it’s the past. Memory is bringing everything to you in the present and how it affects you. I won’t say that it’s not important to remember the past, excrutiating lickings that we’ve taken as a people. But though the future is not perfect, I think that the place of Judaism in the world is improving.

Today I’m half fasting and I read the book of Lammentations all the while I keep thinking about how Carlebach after a tour of holocaust sites composed a happy tune because he thought that continuing to be sad and dejected made us victims not survivors.

Judaism cannot survive when we service a single place, nor can it survive if we forget it. I beleive that it survives best when we as a group of very different people celebrate it.

Roshan posted 14 Aug 2010 at 05:07 AM

My wife cannot find the magazine that she bought all the ingredients for. Worse yet, the only thing that she can remember about it is that it has a mint green cover with a picture of a green-frosted Christmas tree. Any bakers out there seen this one?
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RECENTLYADDED

Chanukah happenings

Public lightings, special needs programming, gift-bringing (not just giving), and lots of latkes make up the Chanukah events taking place throughout our area beginning this Sunday. As of press time, here are the highlights, as assembled by Lois Goldrich and Beth Chananie:

December 10

Temple Beth-El in Jersey City will hold a Chanukah tot Shabbat, 10:30 -11:30 a.m. For pre-school children and their parents, it will be led by Sam Pesin, and includes storytelling, arts and crafts, music, and refreshments. Each child must be accompanied by at least one parent. (201) 333-4229 or .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address).

December 11

 

Glowing with thoughts of Chanukah…

These two recipe books make lovely gifts for Chanukah — enjoy some of the featured recipes and remember to check my Cooking With Beth Blog at http://www.jstandard.com for some others.

The first two recipes come from “Temptations: Modern Kosher Recipes for Every Occasion,” published by ATARA (the sisterhood of Congregation Keter Torah in Teaneck). The cookbook is designed for today’s home chef and includes recipes (and spectacular photos of recipes) that are certain to produce mouthwatering dishes. The recipes are clearly marked meat, dairy, or pareve, and have step-by-step, easy-to-follow directions. There are also Pesach recipe conversions to make your favorite recipes available for the Festival of Unleavened Bread. There are wine pairings, too. “Temptations” can be purchased online at http://www.ketertorah.org/cookbook or at local establishments and Judaica emporia, including Glatt Express in Teaneck.

 

Frying high

Keeping culinary traditions — known and not-so-known

JERUSALEM — Latkes and sufganiyot, the jelly-filled doughnuts especially popular in Israel, are well-known Chanukah fare made with oil to signify the holiday tale.

Lesser known is the tradition of cheese and the story of Judith.

The books of the Chanukah story never made it into the Bible — and neither did the book of Judith. It tells of a beautiful widow whose town was under siege by the army of the Assyrians. She decided to visit the commander in chief of the army to ask him not to overtake the town. As the story goes, she gives him wine, he gets fall-down drunk, and falls into a stupor. Judith beheads the king and saves her people and the town.

 
 
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