Beyond the
Three Weeks
The month of Av
brings with it forgiveness similar to the experience of Yom Kippur.
By Michael Strassfeld
Reprinted with permission from The Jewish Holidays: A
Guide and Commentary (HarperCollins
Publishers Inc.).
At first glance, this part of the festival cycle seems out
of step with the cycle of our personal lives. For most of us, summer is a time
of ease and enjoyment of the outdoors. The natural cycle is marked by the
continued growth of spring plantings. But our history, with its mythic
dimensions, forcefully reminds us that there can be another kind of summer, one
whose heat is a consuming furnace rather than beneficent warmth.
Anyone who has spent a summer in Israel can more easily
understand how the Three Weeks is in fact in consonance with the natural cycle.
There the afternoon sun seems to bleach all the color from the landscape.
Movement slows or comes to a halt in the afternoon--for even if the sun is no
hotter than in the United States, it seems to beat down unrelentingly on the
land's inhabitants. One can easily become parched and debilitated just from
spending a few hours outdoors. No longer are the prevalent colors the greens of
spring that decorated the synagogue on Shavuot; rather, the colors are a
blazing white of sun on stone and the contrasting deep blacks of shade. Thus in
Israel it is easy to call up images of a burning temple and a desolate land.
The 17th of Tammuz & the Golden Calf
This aura of desolation reflects the fall from the heady
moments of Egypt and Sinai. No sooner is the unique experience of the
revelation at Sinai over [on the holiday of Shavuot] than Moses and God
disappear for 40 days. Feeling lost, the people turn to a golden calf (on the
17th of Tammuz). [The sin of the golden calf is ascribed by tradition,
if not historical scholars, to the 17th of Tammuz.]
The air is filled with a sense of loss and abandonment: the
people abandoned by God, God abandoned by His people, each longing for the
other, each eager to renew the covenant of Shavuot, the trust of that night of
the Exodus when we faithfully went off into the desert with only God to sustain
us. No rain, no sustenance, no wave offerings, no joy. Illusions or ideals seem
to have melted under the fiery rays, of the summer sun with no sheltering wings
to protect us.
Tisha B'Av [the ninth of Av]erases the last innocence and
brings home the difficulty of living by the covenant, for the covenant means
being chosen for strife, anger, and even destruction and persecution, as well as love. No longer a mountain suspended over
our heads (as at Sinai), nor as yet a sukkah of our own
construction, we cringe in the heat of the day, and even find solace in the
blackness of three long weeks of night and nightmare. We sit as mourners on
Tisha B'Av, first remembering and then bewailing what could have been.
Heading Toward Yom Kippur
The two worst sins of the desert are attributed by tradition
to these two days respectively: the golden-calf incident on the 17th of Tammuz
and the incident of the spies [who reported that the Land of Canaan was
unconquerable] on Tisha B'Av. The first incident, only 40 days after the
Revelation at Sinai, shows how quickly the people forgot the Sinai experience
in seeking a tangible image to worship. The second incident occurred in the
second year of the Exodus. Because they believed the spies' report that they could not defeat the
inhabitants of Canaan, God condemned that whole generation to die in the
desert; only their children would enter the Promised land. These
rejections of God and of Eretz Yisrael can be regarded as prophetic of the
later historical experience when the Jewish people were exiled from both God and the land.
The rest of Jewish history is an attempt to work our way
back. According to tradition, the Israelites received final forgiveness for the
golden-calf incident when Moses came down from Mount Sinai at the end of the
third period of 40 days. That day was the 10th of Tishrei--Yom Kippur.
Just as Yom Kippur brings forgiveness for the golden-calf
incident of the 17th of Tammuz, so the minor holiday Tu B'Av [the fifteenth of
Av](according to one tradition) brings forgiveness for the spies' incident of
Tisha B'Av. It marks, in fact, the end of the 40 years of wandering [with the
death of the generation that had left Egypt] and immediately precedes the
entrance to the promised land. No longer abandoned in the desert, we, as part
of the mythic dimension of Judaism, can end our aimless wandering and finally
move onward.
Rediscovering Joy After Tisha B'Av
Tu B'Av provides a contrast of joyous celebration following
the ever-deepening gloom and mourning of the Three Weeks. Coming seven days
after Tisha B'Av, Tu B'Av symbolically serves as the end of the shiva--theseven days of mourning for the dead. Just as the mourner ends shiva on the
morning of the seventh day, so may we cast off the blackness of despair and go
out of our house of mourning wearing white and dancing and courting in the
fields as did the maidens of old in Israel.
From Tu B'Av we are ready to move on to Elul, a prelude to the
High Holiday season with its themes of renewal and return. In fact, the period
of Elul embodies a process of courtship between us and God. This theme of
courtship is captured in the traditional belief that the Hebrew letters of the
word Elul are an abbreviation for the phrase Ani le-dodi ve-dodi li--"Iam my
beloved's, and my beloved is mine," referring to God and Israel. Estranged
from each other during the Three Weeks, Israel and God rediscover each other
beginning with Tu B'Av and initiate the slow and at times painful process of
becoming lovers again. This process climaxes with Yom Kippur, when we are
forgiven for that original breach of faith, the incident of the golden calf,
which began this whole process of mourning and renewing on the 17th of Tammuz.
Michael Strassfeld
is rabbi at the Society for the Advancement of Judaism in New York City. He is the founding chairperson of the
National Havurah Committee and is the author, editor or co-editor of numerous
articles and books, including
The Jewish Catalogue series.
This article is taken from pages 91-93 of The
Jewish Holidays: A Guide and Commentary by Michael Strassfeld and Betsy
Platkin Teutsch (Illus). Text copyright (c)1985 by Michael Strassfeld.
Illustrations copyright (c) 1985 by Betsy Platkin Teutsch. Used by permission
of HarperCollins Publishers Inc.