Tisha B’ Av: The Cursed Day

Facebook Twitter Flipboard This coming Saturday evening August 10th begins the Jewish fast day of Tisha B’ Av (literally the 9th of the Jewish month of Av). Since the time of Moses led the children of Israel out of Egypt, through modern times, horrible things have happened to the Jewish people on or around the […]

By Dunetz שמואל בן נח

August 8, 2019 at 9:39 am

This coming Saturday evening August 10th begins the Jewish fast day of Tisha B’ Av (literally the 9th of the Jewish month of Av). Since the time of Moses led the children of Israel out of Egypt, through modern times, horrible things have happened to the Jewish people on or around the 9th day of Av. Even former President of the United States Barack Obama, the most anti-Semitic president in my lifetime has an eerie connection to this sad day.

Tisha B’ Av is one of only two full-day fasts on the Jewish Calendar, the other being Yom Kippur (why do they call it a fast anyway? IMHO the 27-hours of not eating goes real slow). The two fasts are very different in tone and meaning, Yom Kippur is considered a happy fast, the thinking is that people are concentrating so hard on getting close to God that they couldn’t think of eating. It must be my ADHD because even though I am concentrating hard, by Yom Kippur afternoon, it's hard to not think about food.

Tisha B’Av is different, it a sad mournful fast. It is a day associated with great tragedies for the Jews.

The sadness of the day centers around the loss of the two Temples in Jerusalem, but they are only two of the many horrible events that occurred on Tisha B’Av.  Why did all those bad things happen on the 9th of Av? Because as it says in the book of Exodus many times, the Jews are a stiff-necked people. As a kid, I would cry at the drop of a hat.  My mom would tell me that if I continued to cry, she would give me something real to cry about.  My Mom, of blessed memory, didn’t originate that phrase, God did, and he “said it” on Tisha B’Av.

After being freed from slavery and leaving Egypt and getting the Ten Commandments (and the entire Torah) at Mount Sinai, the children of Israel neared the holy land. At the peoples urging, Moses sent twelve spies into Canaan.  Two of the spies returned with a favorable report, “We can surely go up and take possession of it, for we can indeed overcome it.

The other ten came back with what today would be called fake news

“We came to the land to which you sent us, and it is flowing with milk and honey, and this is its fruit. However, the people who inhabit the land are mighty, and the cities are extremely huge and fortified, and there we saw even the offspring of the giant.  In Bamidbar (also known as Numbers) the Torah goes on to explain, “They spread an [evil] report about the land which they had scouted, telling the children of Israel, ‘The land we passed through to explore is a land that consumes its inhabitants, and all the people we saw in it are men of stature. There we saw the giants, the sons of Anak, descended from the giants. In our eyes, we seemed like grasshoppers, and so we were in their eyes.”

The people believed the negative report and freaked out big time. They begged Moses to take them back to Egypt, where they would be slaves, but safe.  It was only a few months after they witnessed all those miracles; the ten plagues, the splitting of the Reed Sea (not a typo), the revelation at Sinai when heard God’s voice and received the Ten Commandments, mana from heaven, etc., but those newly freed slaves lost their faith in God who pledged to help them conquer the land. God’s response was not only that the generation that knew slavery would die out in the desert (taking 40 years) and that day, the 9th of Av will be a horrible day for the Jews until the coming of the Messiah. Just like my mom, God told the Jews he would give them something to cry about.

From that day forward, horrible things happened to the Jewish people on or around Tisha B’Av. Some of them include:

Tisha B’Av became the saddest day in the Jewish calendar because the Jews didn’t trust God and his promise to give us the land of Israel. In a way, our collective egos were too big. Despite witnessing all of those miracles, the nascent Jewish people felt they knew better than God and didn’t believe that he would keep his promise.

Thirty-five hundred years later, we are still weighed down by our massive egos. Many American Jewish leaders sought to gain favor from an anti-Israel President Obama who became famous on Tisha B’av. Jewish organizations, such as the ADL, The AJC, AJ Committee, the Reform and Conservative Jewish movements put progressive politics in front of their Jewish missions.  They worship the “Golden Calf’ of big government,” and to protect their positions in liberal politics they support an Antisemitic Democratic Party.

Thirty-five hundred years ago, the  Israelites said they could not conquer the land and were punished. Today many Jews still show a lack of faith in God and God’s promise.  But even today, God's promises are being proven.  The book of Eichah (Lamentations) is read on Tisha B’Av. Chapter 5, Verse 18 of Eichah, reads, "For Mount Zion, which has become desolate; foxes prowl over it." This video was taken at the "Western Wall" earlier this week.