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DEVARIM 5761-2001
"Eichah,
The Annual Search for Meaning and Introspection"
Rabbi Ephraim Buchwald
This
week's parasha, parashat D'varim, is the parasha which
is always read on the Shabbat that precedes Tisha B'Av,
the Ninth of Av, which this year will be observed on Saturday
night, July 28th through Sunday night, July 29th.
According
to the commentators, there is an allusion to the observance
of Tisha B'Av in this week's parasha. In Deuteronomy 1:12
we encounter the verse: "Ay'chah eh'sah l'vah'dee
tor'cha'chem u'mas'ah'chem v'riv'chem?" How can
I alone, Moshe asks, carry your contentiousness, your
burdens and your quarrels? Unable to bear the responsibility
alone, Moshe recommends that the people appoint for themselves
men who are wise, understanding and well known who can
serve as leaders of the tribes, and at least partially
relieve the burden from him.
Because
of the allusion to "Eichah" in this verse,
and the confluence with the observance of Tisha B'Av,
when the above verse is read by the Torah reader on Shabbat,
it is read with the mournful melody of Lamentations, of
Eichah. The Book of Lamentations, attributed to
the prophet Jeremiah, is also known in Hebrew as Eichah,
because of the first word of the first verse: "Eichah
yash'vah va'dod ha'eer rah'bah'tee am, hay'tah k'al'mah'nah?"
How is it possible, asks the prophet, that she, the city
of Jerusalem, sits in solitude--the city that was once
great with people has become like a widow?
The
Shabbat which precedes Tisha B'Av is known in the
Jewish calendar as Shabbat Chazon. "Chazon"
which means vision, alludes to the first chapter of the
Book of Isaiah, that is read as the Haftarah, the prophetic
message paralleling the Shabbat Torah portion. In the
first chapter of Isaiah, which is the third and final
of the Shalosh D'puranuta, the three Haftarot
of affliction, the prophet Isaiah laments the underlying
causes of destruction, which he attributes to the lack
of sincerity in the Jews' devotion to G-d. Once again,
in the Book of Isaiah 1:21, we encounter the crucial word,
"Eichah." Isaiah cries out: "Eichah
hay'tah l'zoh'nah, kir'yah neh'eh'mah'nah?" How
is it possible that the faithful city [Jerusalem], has
become a harlot? "M'lay'ah'tee mish'pat, tzedek
yah'lin bah, v'ah'tah m'rahtz'chim." G-d says,
I filled Jerusalem with righteousness, but now she is
filled with murderers.
It
is no coincidence that on the Shabbat preceding Tisha
B'Av, the word Eichah is evoked again and again,
as if it were a theme. "Eichah?"-asks
G-d, How is it possible? How did this all come about?
Why do these resounding tragedies strike the Jewish people
again and again? The rabbis of the Talmud tell us in Berachot
5a that when tragedy strikes a person, "Y'fash'paish
b'mah'ah'sav," the person should examine his
deeds, look for what might be the underlying cause of
the misfortune. This introspection and search is the precise
theme of Tisha B'Av. It's not so much the fasting,
not so much the mourning, it's really the self evaluation
that is essential. It is critical that at times of crises,
that the Jewish people examine their deeds, and see what
they might have done to deserve the calamities that befall
them, so they can learn to do better in the future.
In
chapter 3 of Genesis, after eating of the forbidden fruit
from the Garden of Eden, Adam and Eve hear the sound of
the Al-mighty in the garden as they try to hide among
the trees. Genesis 3:9, "Va'yikra Hashem Eloh'kim
el ha'adam." G-d calls out to the human being:
"Va'yomer loh." And He says to him: "Ah'yeka?"
Where are you? Adam responds, "I heard your voice
in the Garden, and I was afraid because I am naked, and
I hid." Obviously, G-d is not asking Adam and Eve
where they are. He knows precisely where they are! G-d is asking them, Adam and Eve: h'yeka? Where
are you existentially? I endowed you with the gift of
intelligence, that no other creatures possess. I gave
you everything, and forbade just two little trees. How
did you allow this to happen?
The
word A'yeka is the exact same word, composed of
the exact same letters as the word Eichah. How could this
have possibly happened? Eichah and Ay'ekah are
the themes of Tisha B'Av. G-d is asking the Jews:
Where are you? What have you done with your lives? How
could this have possibly happened? How can we improve
ourselves?
If
we focus on this message, then the fast of the Ninth of
Av will indeed be meaningful. If not, then we will find
that we've frittered away another great opportunity for
self improvement that G-d has given us--the gift of Teshuva.
Have
a meaningful fast.
May you be blessed.
Copyright 2006 National Jewish Outreach Program www.njop.org