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The three week period between the seventeenth of Tammuz and the ninth of
Av has historically been a difficult time for the Jewish people.
From the Torah’s perspective, it certainly cannot be considered
coincidental that all of these events specifically occurred during this
particular period, and specifically on these dates. Surely, G-d did so
with the intent of relaying an important message to us.
The question is what message is G-d trying to convey to us?
Basis for Destruction
In order to answer this question, let us examine the primary Talmudic
source which describes the basis for the destruction of each temple.
It is interesting to note that despite their active violation of the three
cardinal sins of idolatry, immorality, and bloodshed, those who lived
during the first commonwealth were on a collectively higher spiritual
level than their successors.
In fact it was they, not those of subsequent generations, who merited an
open revelation of G-d’s presence. As the Talmud (Yoma 21b) informs us…
More importantly, they were forced to endure a much shorter exile (70
years to nearly two millennia), and knew from the outset as to how long
their exile would last.
The obvious question is why is that so? After all, how can the three
cardinal sins for which one is required to give up his life rather than
violate (see Sanhedrin 74a) be only equal to (or perhaps even less of an
evil than) the transgression of causeless hatred?
Removing Oneself from the Community
I would like to suggest two possible approaches.
One approach is based on the idea that causeless hatred really is not a
graver sin than the “big three”. The reason as to why it brought upon the
current, seemingly endless exile was the fact that it destroyed the
communal framework necessary to overcome our individual deficiencies,
leaving us susceptible to the rigors of individual assessment.
The same idea can be observed regarding the two sinful generations of
antiquity, the eras of Noach and Nimrod. The people of each period were
punished severely for their respective misdeeds (flood and dispersion).
However, when one considers the nature of each one’s primary sin, Nimrod’s
generation emerges as the more decadent of the two.
While the people of Noach’s generation were wicked to each other (“And the
world was filled with violence (I.e. theft)” – Genesis 6:11), those from
Nimrod’s time actually rebelled against G-d Himself! (See Rashi to Genesis
11:1) Still, it was the former, rather than the latter, which was
completely annihilated.
Rashi explains why this was the case.
Despite the fact that they were, as a whole, less sinful than the
generation of dispersion, Noach’s generation was completely destroyed.
Why? Because they failed to foster the requisite degree of love, peace and
harmony with each other. Conversely, the generation of the dispersion
excelled in this area. As a result, they were not destroyed, despite their
sinful, rebellious nature.
Arrogance: A Barrier Against Godliness
There’s another aspect of causeless hatred that causes it to supersede the
other problems. In his work Michtav M’Eliyahu, Rabbi Eliyahu Dessler notes
the underlying differences in the personal motive behind each form of
sinful behavior.
He suggests that violation of the three cardinal sins is based on one’s
drive to satisfy his personal desires. Even the drive to worship idols was
really inspired by a craving for adultery.
Eventually, however, a person reaches his saturation point and the sinful
pursuit diminishes.
Causeless hatred, on the other hand, is motivated by personal arrogance.
Nothing inherent in the person brought about the hatred; it’s “causeless”.
Rather, the very presence of the individual causes the resentment, as
someone who can potentially alter my balance of power (real or imagined)
in some way.
This idea ties in well with another stated reason for our exile.
Ran explains that surely they learned Torah regularly, otherwise why was
the source of their punishment so difficult to discern? Rather, the issue
was more subtle. Not making the blessing before the study of Torah means
that their attitude to learning was not on the spiritual level where it
was supposed to be.
These people were not motivated to learn for the appropriate reasons. They
studied for personal, self serving objectives: practical knowledge,
intellectual stimulation, increased honor, etc., all of which betray a
certain degree of arrogance. Their focus was not on G-d (as indicated in
the idea of blessing Him for giving us the opportunity to study His
Torah), but rather on themselves.
Their Guilt is Ours As Well
Of course, we must realize that as we commemorate the tragic events of
this period, we are not simply recalling someone else’s misdeeds and their
disastrous consequences. As our sages make clear, the root of the problem
is as much a function of our times as it is theirs.
Our mission must be to attempt to counteract the pride within us by
submitting our own will to that of G-d. We must understand that when our
sages refer to something as “causeless”, they are not indicating that
these behaviors were completely arbitrary. Rather, they are describing a
trait or behavior in which the perpetrators allowed their own agenda to
take precedence over G-d’s will.
We can now begin to understand yet another related but seemingly
perplexing statement of our sages.
A very basic question arises from this passage. How could their crying be
considered as lacking a “justifiable reason” when they had just received a
very negative report from the spies?
The answer again is that the people of that generation allowed themselves
to place their own agenda of fear and uncertainty before G-d’s objective
of bringing them to their homeland. In so doing, they helped to foster
similar responses in the future, which consequently led to many more
opportunities for “weeping throughout the generations”.
It is for this reason that we engage in active mourning during this
period: fasting, mourning, lamentations, etc. On the 9th of Av we also
turn our attention away from personal honor (by sitting on floor, removing
our shoes and adornments), and eschew all forms of personal desire (by
abstaining from eating, drinking, marital relations, etc). Instead, we try
to reconnect with G-d and the true objectives of our existence.
Let us hope that this year we can replace the “unjustified” weeping of our
troubled past with a sincere weeping reflective of a true desire to
fulfill G-d’s will and thereby deserve the great opportunity to witness
the complete restoration of G-d’s active and open presence in this world.
Text Copyright © 2008 by Rabbi Naphtali Hoff and Torah.org. Rabbi Naphtali Hoff, M.Ed., is an instructor of Jewish History at the Hebrew Theological College (Skokie, Illinois) and serves as associate principal at Yeshiva Shearis Yisroel in Chicago. More information about Rabbi Hoff can be found on his website, www.rabbihoff.com.
The Three Weeks
The Three Weeks: What Are We Trying to Achieve?
By Rabbi Naphtali Hoff
On the seventeenth of Tammuz the tablets of law were broken (by Moshe at
Mount Sinai), the daily sacrifice was discontinued (in 70 CE), a breach
was made in the city (the wall around the Temple Mount was breached on
that same date), Apustamus (a Greek officer during the second Temple
period) burnt a Torah scroll or scrolls, and placed an idolatrous image in
the Temple sanctuary.
On the ninth of Av it was decreed that our fathers should not enter the
(Promised) Land (following the incident of the spies), both temples were
destroyed, Beitar was captured (following the failed revolt of Bar Kochva –
132-135 CE), and the city of Jerusalem was plowed up. (Talmud, Ta’anis
26a-b)