Tisha B'Av: The Saddest day of the Jewish Year
Dear JCCP/CBT Family,
This Wednesday night, at a
special service beginning at 8:00 PM, we will begin the observance of
Tisha B'Av, the fast of the 9th of Av. Tisha B'Av is the saddest day of
the Jewish year. On this day, we commemorate a
series of devastating events, especially the destruction of the First
Temple by the Babylonians in 586 BCE and the Second Temple by the Romans
in 70 CE.
Other infamous events that occurred on this day in Jewish history include:
• The decree that the Israelites would wander in the desert for 40 years
• Betar,
the fortress headquarters of Simon bar Kochba fell to the Romans in 135
CE, ending the last resistance to the Romans.
• The Roman ruler Hadrian established a pagan Temple and rebuilt Jerusalem as a pagan city in 136 CE.
• The Edict of Expulsion of the Jews from England was signed by King Edward I in 1290
• The Jews were expelled from Spain in 1492.
With
the emergence of the state of Israel, many have questioned the
relevance or even need for this observance, and especially fasting on
this day. I am among those who maintain that despite our gratitude for
Israel and the rebuilding of Jerusalem, Tisha B’Av remains vital,
necessary, and relevant. It connects us to our responsibility to learn
from the past. It reminds us that we, like so many generations before
us, are responsible to build the Jewish future. And it links us to past
generations who suffered, yet carried on and bequeathed the Jewish
tradition to us.
I hope you will make every effort to be with us for this observance.
Rabbi Arthur Weiner
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