Tisha B'av - 9th of the month Ab
What happened on the Ninth of Av?
A
Historical Overview
The 9th of
Av, Tisha b'Av, commemorates a list of catastrophes so severe it's clearly a
day specially cursed by G‑d.
Picture
this: The year is 1313 BCE. The Israelites are in the desert, recently having
experienced the miraculous Exodus, and are now poised to enter the Promised
Land. But first they dispatch a reconnaissance mission to assist in formulating
a prudent battle strategy. The spies return on the eighth day of Av and report
that the land is unconquerable. That night, the 9th of Av, the people cry. They
insist that they'd rather go backThe
Jews were shocked to realize that their Second Temple was destroyed the same
day as the first
to Egypt than be slaughtered by the Canaanites. G‑d is highly displeased by
this public demonstration of distrust in His power, and consequently that
generation of Israelites never enters the Holy Land. Only their children have that
privilege, after wandering in the desert for another 38 years.
The First
Temple was also destroyed on the 9th of Av (423 BCE). Five centuries later (in
69 CE), as the Romans drew closer to the Second Temple, ready to torch it, the
Jews were shocked to realize that their Second Temple was destroyed the same
day as the first.
When the
Jews rebelled against Roman rule, they believed that their leader, Simon bar
Kochba, would fulfill their messianic longings. But their hopes were cruelly
dashed in 133 CE as the Jewish rebels were brutally butchered in the final
battle at Betar. The date of the massacre? Of course—the 9th of Av!
One year
after their conquest of Betar, the Romans plowed over the Temple Mount, our
nation's holiest site.
The Jews
were expelled from England in 1290 CE on, you guessed it, Tisha b'Av. In 1492,
the Golden Age of Spain came to a close when Queen Isabella and her husband
Ferdinand ordered that the Jews be banished from the land. The edict of
expulsion was signed on March 31, 1492, and the Jews were given exactly four
months to put their affairs in order and leave the country. The Hebrew date on
which no Jew was allowed any longer to remain in the land where he had enjoyed
welcome and prosperity? Oh, by now you know it—the 9th of Av.
The Jews were
expelled from England in 1290 CE on, you guessed it, Tisha b'AvReady for just one more? World War
II and the Holocaust, historians conclude, was actually the long drawn-out
conclusion of World War I that began in 1914. And yes, amazingly enough,
Germany declared war on Russia, effectively catapulting the First World War
into motion, on the 9th of Av, Tisha b'Av.
What do you
make of all this? Jews see this as another confirmation of the deeply held
conviction that history isn't haphazard; events – even terrible ones – are part
of a Divine plan and have spiritual meaning. The message of time is that
everything has a rational purpose, even though we don't understand it.
http://www.chabad.org/library/article_cdo/aid/946703/jewish/What-happened-on-the-Ninth-of-Av.htm
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