{"id":1168,"date":"2018-07-08T18:23:44","date_gmt":"2018-07-08T16:23:44","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.jewishlife.co.za\/new\/?p=1168"},"modified":"2018-07-08T18:23:44","modified_gmt":"2018-07-08T16:23:44","slug":"highs-and-lows","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.jewishlife.co.za\/new\/2018\/07\/08\/highs-and-lows\/","title":{"rendered":"Highs and lows"},"content":{"rendered":"<h2>Soaring to incredible heights and crashing to inconceivable depths. When we stare into the abyss, do we see the ladder stretching up to the sky?<\/h2>\n<h2>By: Robert Sussman<\/h2>\n<p>Among the many <em>kinnos<\/em> (dirges or elegies) that we say on <em>Tisha B\u2019av<\/em>, the day on which we commemorate the many tragedies that have befallen the Jewish people throughout our history, is one that compares and contrasts the miracles and wonders of the going out from Egypt at the time that we were redeemed with the mourning and persecution of the going out from Jerusalem at the time that it was destroyed and we were sent into exile; the point being that, as miraculous and amazing as our going out from Egypt was, so too was our going out from Jerusalem. The connection is, perhaps, alluded to in the fact that, according to the fixed Hebrew calendar as we know it, the day of the week on which the first day of <em>Pesach<\/em> falls out will always be the same day of the week on which <em>Tisha B\u2019av<\/em> falls out. Just as the Jewish people have seen and reached heights greater than any other nation \u2013 so too we have seen and plummeted to depths lower than any other nation. These are the two contrasts, opposites and extremes, entirely unique to the nation of Israel.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Penthouse or basement?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>As our Sages teach<sup><a id=\"post-1168-endnote-ref-2\" href=\"#post-1168-endnote-2\">[1]<\/a><\/sup>, \u201c[The Jewish people] are compared to the dust and to the stars. When they descend, they descend to the dust, and when they rise, they rise up to the stars.\u201d As is evident from a quick perusal of a list of Nobel Prize winners (22,5% of whom were Jews, while the total Jewish population comprises less than 0,2% of the world\u2019s population), the Jewish people are anything but average. We do not know mediocrity. Our constant reality is one in which we are either soaring to the heights or falling to the depths \u2013 there is no in between for us \u2013 first or last, there is no middle ground.<\/p>\n<p>The <em>midrash<\/em> teaches<sup><a id=\"post-1168-endnote-ref-3\" href=\"#post-1168-endnote-3\">[2]<\/a><\/sup> on the well-known chapters in <em>Tehillim<\/em> (Psalms) that begin, \u201c<em>Shir HaMa\u2019alos<\/em> (a song of ascents)\u201d \u2013 that it\u2019s not a \u201csong of ascent\u201d, singular, but \u201cascents\u201d, plural \u2013 when Israel goes up, we don\u2019t go up just one step at a time, we go up many steps, and, likewise, when we go down, we don\u2019t go down just one step at a time, but we go down and down, step after step. And, so it says in <em>Eicha<\/em> (Lamentations), the <em>megilla<\/em> that\u2019s sombrely read aloud on the evening of <em>Tisha B\u2019av<\/em>, as we sit on the floor in the dimly lit shul, \u201cHe has cast down from heaven onto the earth the beauty of Israel\u201d \u2013 a tremendous fall by any estimation.<\/p>\n<p><strong>From riches to rags<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Rabbi Yochanan ben Zakai lived during the era of the Roman siege and eventual destruction of Jerusalem and, along with it, the Second Temple. The <em>gemara<\/em><sup><a id=\"post-1168-endnote-ref-4\" href=\"#post-1168-endnote-4\">[3]<\/a><\/sup> tells that it once happened that Rabbi Yochanan ben Zakai left Jerusalem riding on a donkey accompanied by his students. As he rode, he came across a girl who was so desperate for food that she was gathering barley from among the dung (ie. barley that had been previously consumed and then excreted) of animals that belonged to Arabs. When the girl saw him, she wrapped herself with her hair and stood before him. She said to him, \u201cRabbi, feed me.\u201d He said to her, \u201cWhose daughter are you?\u201d She said, \u201cI am the daughter of Nakdimon ben Gurion.\u201d The <em>gemara<\/em><sup><a id=\"post-1168-endnote-ref-5\" href=\"#post-1168-endnote-5\">[4]<\/a><\/sup> includes Nakdimon ben Gurion in a list of three men who had tremendous wealth and lived in Jerusalem at the time of the Roman siege.<\/p>\n<p>Rabbi Yochanan ben Zakai said to his students, \u201cI remember when I signed this girl\u2019s <em>kesuva<\/em> (marriage contract). She was given one million golden <em>dinars<\/em> [coins] from the house of her father, in addition to what her father-in-law gave to her.\u201d To give you an idea of what a tremendous sum of money this was \u2013 consider that our Sages required that a woman be betrothed with an object (such as the plain, simple ring &#8211; without stones or designs) that must have the value of the smallest known coin, a <em>perutah<\/em>, which was made from copper.<sup><a id=\"post-1168-endnote-ref-6\" href=\"#post-1168-endnote-6\">[5]<\/a><\/sup> They likewise required that a husband promise a minimum amount of 200 <em>zuz<\/em> (aka silver <em>dinars<\/em>) to be paid to the wife upon the dissolution of the marriage.<sup><a id=\"post-1168-endnote-ref-7\" href=\"#post-1168-endnote-7\">[6]<\/a><\/sup> A single gold <em>dinar<\/em> was equal to 4 800 <em>perutahs<\/em> or 192 <em>zuzim<\/em> (silver <em>dinars<\/em>), with each gold <em>dinar<\/em> coin having an approximate weight of over 100 grams.<sup><a id=\"post-1168-endnote-ref-8\" href=\"#post-1168-endnote-8\">[7]<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>Continuing the incident recorded in the <em>gemara<\/em>, after explaining to his students who this girl was that was standing before them picking grains of barley out of dung and how fabulously wealthy she had once been, Rabbi Yochanan ben Zakai began crying and said, \u201cHappy are you, Israel! At the time that you do the will of Hashem, there is no nation that can rule over you, and at the time that you are not doing the will of Hashem, you are given over into the hands of a lowly nation, and not even the hands of a lowly nation, but into the hand of the animals of a lowly nation!\u201d<\/p>\n<p><strong>Seeing the heights in the depths<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Our Sages ask an obvious question: how could Rabbi Yochanan ben Zakai say such a thing \u2013 \u201cHappy are you, Israel!\u201d \u2013 at this incredibly difficult time in our history (the siege and destruction of Jerusalem) and upon seeing such a terrible sight of this once phenomenally wealthy woman having fallen so terribly low that she was so desperate from hunger that she was willing to pick through dung in the hopes of finding salvageable grains of barley that had not been properly digested? What on earth was there to be happy about?<\/p>\n<p>From this incident, Rabbi Yochanan ben Zakai was able to see the special relationship that we, the Jewish people, have with Hashem. As he witnessed the terrible sight of this once wealthy Jewish woman kneeling among the dung from the lowliest of animals, belonging to the lowliest of nations on earth, his immediate and initial reaction was to cry. But then, in that very same moment, he also said, \u201cHappy are you Israel.\u201d In this enormous decline to this level of incredible humiliation and degradation \u2013 does it get any lower than sifting through dung to find something to eat? \u2013 Rabbi Yochanan ben Zakai saw the special quality of the Jewish people, that there is no situation of mediocrity or averageness for us. When it\u2019s bad, it\u2019s very bad; when it\u2019s good, it\u2019s very good.<\/p>\n<p>At the time that we fail to fulfil our purpose, we fall to the lowliest place possible, but within this utter devastation is also a hint, an indication of the tremendous heights to which we have the potential to ascend when we do fulfil our purpose \u2013 the true level of the Jewish people. At our spiritual height, we are able to rule over all of the nations on earth, but, when we deny our role and fall to the depths, Hashem instead puts us in their hands and leaves us at their mercy (or lack thereof to be more precise). Nobody falls lower \u2013 nobody else gets made into soap! \u2013 but, at the same time, nobody else can climb higher. In our degradation \u2013 in our utter devastation and state of disrespect and disrepute \u2013 there we see the very proof of the fact that no other nation can rise higher than us, of how special we truly are.<\/p>\n<p>At our height, we experienced the going out from Egypt; we saw the revelation of the <em>shechina<\/em>, Hashem\u2019s Divine presence \u2013 and for the next 40 years as we wandered in the<em> midbar<\/em> (wilderness) we merited a special supervision from Hashem that was beyond the natural order of things: clouds that covered, protected, and guided us; manna that fell each day and sustained us; the well of water which accompanied us \u2013 and all of this was evident to everyone. And, at our lowest point, we experienced the going out from Jerusalem, where, instead of clouds for protection, there was a cloud of <em>hester panim<\/em>, of G-d hiding His face from us, so to speak, among the unspeakable horrors and devastation.<\/p>\n<p><strong>What we can learn about Hashem<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Our Sages teach<sup><a id=\"post-1168-endnote-ref-9\" href=\"#post-1168-endnote-9\">[8]<\/a><\/sup> that Hashem is a King who suffers insults. There is not a single moment that a man exists and is not sustained from the power of Hashem. Even when a person sins \u2013 and even when he sins directly against Hashem! \u2013 at that precise moment that a person is doing such a thing, Hashem is causing his existence, making it possible for him to move and to act. Amazingly, Hashem will not stop such a person at all, but instead Hashem suffers insults like this while simultaneously providing that person the very power to do what he does!<\/p>\n<p>A person\u2019s very existence and life are given to him at every moment anew, like a gift from Hashem, as our Sages teach<sup><a id=\"post-1168-endnote-ref-10\" href=\"#post-1168-endnote-10\">[9]<\/a><\/sup>, \u201cOn each and every breath that a person breathes, he must praise Hashem.\u201d How can a man dare to use his life against the One who gave it to him? Instead of denying him the merit to live and exist, however, Hashem gives the person another breath and another breath, such that a person is even able to destroy Hashem\u2019s house (ie. The Temple), if he so chooses! This is Hashem\u2019s strength \u2013 that He forgoes His own honour, giving power to the wicked to be wicked, while He suppresses the insults that occur to Him. On the one hand, a <em>Kohen Gadol<\/em> who was unfit to enter the <em>Kadosh Kedoshim<\/em> (Holy of Holies) on <em>Yom Kippur<\/em> would die \u2013 and yet, on the other hand, non-Jews were given the power not only to enter Hashem\u2019s house, but to destroy it.<\/p>\n<p>At a time of <em>hester panim<\/em>, Hashem conquers His anger and is silent. But, from His silence, we learn His strength. Strength is not measured by the power to rule over others, but by the power to rule over oneself and to conquer one\u2019s anger \u2013 so, at the same time Hashem, so to speak, conquers His anger and is patient with those who choose to do evil, we see His strength.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Against all odds<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>How is it possible that the nation of Israel manages to exist like a sheep among wolves? It is only by virtue of Hashem\u2019s power and His watching over us. Great nations that once stood at the centre of history \u2013 Rome, Persia, Babylonia, Assyria \u2013 all of them are no more, erased from the world, mere memories left to be studied in history books, and yet, the nation of Israel, the weakest among the nations, lives and exists forever.<\/p>\n<p>Our Sages compare the nation of Israel to the dove, \u201cAll birds, when tired, rest on a rock, but the dove, it rests one wing at a time and continues flying.\u201d So too, at the time that one portion of the world does evil to us, the other part of the world is quiet and calm, enabling us to fly onwards. And, so we saw in the days of the terrible <em>Shoah<\/em>, while one nation sought to destroy us, the others did nothing, and even the schemes<sup><a id=\"post-1168-endnote-ref-11\" href=\"#post-1168-endnote-11\">[10]<\/a><\/sup> of the wicked one, <em>yemach shemo<\/em> (may his name be blotted out), to conquer the land of Israel were cancelled with the <em>chesed <\/em>of Hashem. We see Hashem\u2019s awesome power, one lamb scattered among seventy wolves \u2013 and not a single wolf is able to destroy it. In fact, the <em>gemara<\/em><sup><a id=\"post-1168-endnote-ref-12\" href=\"#post-1168-endnote-12\">[11]<\/a><\/sup> teaches that the fact that Hashem scattered us among the nations is, in fact, a great help, as they cannot destroy us because of this.<\/p>\n<p>There is no nation who has been pursued like us, who has been scattered like us, and who has suffered for as long as us. But, no matter how great our suffering, our enemies still cannot destroy us. We cleave to Hashem and we are all alive today. Throughout this long <em>galus<\/em> (exile), we have not lost so much as a letter or even a vowel from our holy Torah \u2013 and the words of our Sages still stand as well. Did the hand of chance do all of this? Any person who considers our wondrous existence over thousands of years and our long exile \u2013 it is even greater than all of the miracles and wonders that Hashem did for our forefathers in Egypt and in the<em> midbar<\/em> (the wilderness in which we wandered for 40 years). And, even non-Jews, if they are honest, can recognise this:<\/p>\n<p><em>\u201cThe preservation of the Jews is really one of the most single and illustrious acts of divine Providence\u2026 and what but a Supernatural Power could have preserved them in such a manner as none other nation upon earth hath been preserved. Nor is the providence of G-d less remarkable in the destruction of their enemies, than in their preservation\u2026 We see that the great empires, which in their turn subdued and oppressed the people of G-d, are all come to ruin\u2026 And if such hath been the fatal end of the enemies and oppressors of the Jews, let it serve as a warning to all those, who at any time or upon any occasion are for raising a clamour and persecution against them.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>Thomas Newton, Bishop of Bristol (1704-1782)<\/em><\/p>\n<p>The existence of the Jew deviates from and contradicts the laws of history. It\u2019s impossible to label the course of existence of the nation of Israel in every generation as chance. It is only one long miracle that has accompanied us throughout thousands of years. The miraculous supervision of Hashem in the <em>churban<\/em> (destruction of Jerusalem) and the <em>galus<\/em> (exile) is greater than the miraculous supervision at the time of the going out from Egypt \u2013 it proves to all that the <em>chesed <\/em>(kindness) of Hashem protects Israel.<\/p>\n<p><strong>It all will come true<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>This miracle that we call <em>\u201cgalus\u201d<\/em> can inspire us with encouragement and comfort, as all of the prophecies of the <em>churban<\/em> have materialised \u2013 so too the prophecies of consolation will certainly materialise as well. The <em>gemara<\/em><sup><a id=\"post-1168-endnote-ref-13\" href=\"#post-1168-endnote-13\">[12]<\/a><\/sup> famously tells of an incident when Rabban Gamliel, Rabbi Elazar ben Azariah, Rabbi Yehoshua, and Rabbi Akiva once went up to Jerusalem together. When they reached <em>Har HaBayis<\/em> (the Temple Mount), they saw a fox coming out from the <em>Kadosh Kedoshim<\/em> (the Holy of Holies). Rabban Gamliel, Rabbi Eleazar ben Azariah, and Rabbi Yehoshua began to cry, while Rabbi Akiva began to laugh.<\/p>\n<p>They said to him, \u201cWhy are you laughing?\u201d He answered them, \u201cI\u2019m laughing because of this: Uriah the Kohen [who lived during the times of the First Temple] prophesied<sup><a id=\"post-1168-endnote-ref-14\" href=\"#post-1168-endnote-14\">[13]<\/a><\/sup>, \u2018Because of you, <em>Tzion<\/em> will be ploughed like a field\u2019, and the prophet Zechariya [who lived during the times of the Second Temple] said<sup><a id=\"post-1168-endnote-ref-15\" href=\"#post-1168-endnote-15\">[14]<\/a><\/sup>, \u2018There shall yet be elderly men and women sitting in the squares of Jerusalem.\u2019\u201d The two prophecies are considered linked together. \u201cBefore this prophecy of Uriah was fulfilled, I was afraid that the prophecy of Zechariya wouldn\u2019t be fulfilled. Now that this prophecy of Uriah has been fulfilled (ie. <em>Tzion<\/em>, the location of the <em>Kadosh Kedoshim<\/em>, was ploughed like a field and a fox ran through it), I know that this prophecy of Zechariya will also be fulfilled!\u201d They said to him, \u201cYou have comforted us Akiva, you have comforted us!\u201d<\/p>\n<p><strong>Tisha B\u2019av is a mo\u2019ed<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Consider this: there does not exist another nation that celebrates a day of remembrance to recall its downfall \u2013 a special avodah (service) on the suffering and mourning of its destruction and tragedies every year! In fact, it\u2019s just the opposite, all of the nations of the world mark only their triumphs, but the nation of Israel has an annual celebration to mark its destruction, <em>Tisha B\u2019av<\/em> \u2013 and not just like any other day \u2013 but like a<em> mo\u2019ed<\/em> (a festival).<sup><a id=\"post-1168-endnote-ref-16\" href=\"#post-1168-endnote-16\">[15]<\/a><\/sup> Why do we express this day as a<em> mo\u2019ed<\/em>? Because in the future, Hashem will turn this day into a day of rejoicing!<\/p>\n<p>But, even today, <em>Tisha B\u2019av<\/em> is a <em>mo\u2019ed <\/em>for us, to draw out from this day strength and encouragement from considering the miracles of the <em>galus<\/em>, how Hashem watches over us precisely within His hiddenness <em>(hester panim)<\/em> and how the nation of Israel continues to exist and to live against all odds. All of this should give us tremendous comfort and encouragement that, at the end of the <em>galus<\/em>, there will come an awesome and great day when, once again, we will be miraculously redeemed.<\/p>\n<p>The essence of our mourning gives us already, now, the merit to inspire this rejoicing; this knowledge that we continue to live and to exist within the <em>galus<\/em>. It\u2019s like Rabbi Yochanan ben Zakai seeing that poor girl at her absolute lowest point, moved to tears, yet knowing that within the awesome devastation of that very same moment could be seen the potential that we have to climb, just as far and just as high, to the opposite end of the scale. In other words, our mourning can cause joy and comfort right now, as a result of recognising the revelation of Hashem\u2019s supervision over us that has taken place since the going out from Jerusalem \u2013 evident even more so than in all of the open miracles we experienced in the going out from Egypt.<\/p>\n<p><strong><em>Adapted from a sicha by the Sifsei Chaim, Rabbi Chaim Friedlander, ztz\u201dl.<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n<ol>\n<li id=\"post-1168-endnote-2\">Megilla 16a <a href=\"#post-1168-endnote-ref-2\">\u2191<\/a><\/li>\n<li id=\"post-1168-endnote-3\">Shocher Tov <a href=\"#post-1168-endnote-ref-3\">\u2191<\/a><\/li>\n<li id=\"post-1168-endnote-4\">Kesuvos 66b <a href=\"#post-1168-endnote-ref-4\">\u2191<\/a><\/li>\n<li id=\"post-1168-endnote-5\">Gittin 56a <a href=\"#post-1168-endnote-ref-5\">\u2191<\/a><\/li>\n<li id=\"post-1168-endnote-6\">See Rambam Hilchos Ishus 3:1 <a href=\"#post-1168-endnote-ref-6\">\u2191<\/a><\/li>\n<li id=\"post-1168-endnote-7\">Kesuvos 10b <a href=\"#post-1168-endnote-ref-7\">\u2191<\/a><\/li>\n<li id=\"post-1168-endnote-8\">See \u201cThe Practical Talmud Dictionary\u201d, Yitzhak Frank, Appendix 4, Coins and Weights <a href=\"#post-1168-endnote-ref-8\">\u2191<\/a><\/li>\n<li id=\"post-1168-endnote-9\">Tomer Devorah <a href=\"#post-1168-endnote-ref-9\">\u2191<\/a><\/li>\n<li id=\"post-1168-endnote-10\">Yalkut Shemonei on Tehillim 147 <a href=\"#post-1168-endnote-ref-10\">\u2191<\/a><\/li>\n<li id=\"post-1168-endnote-11\">https:\/\/www.ushmm.org\/research\/publications\/academic-publications\/full-list-of-academic-publications\/nazi-palestine-the-plans-for-the-extermination-of-the-jews-of-palestine <a href=\"#post-1168-endnote-ref-11\">\u2191<\/a><\/li>\n<li id=\"post-1168-endnote-12\">Pesachim 87b <a href=\"#post-1168-endnote-ref-12\">\u2191<\/a><\/li>\n<li id=\"post-1168-endnote-13\">Makkos 24b <a href=\"#post-1168-endnote-ref-13\">\u2191<\/a><\/li>\n<li id=\"post-1168-endnote-14\">Micah 3:12 <a href=\"#post-1168-endnote-ref-14\">\u2191<\/a><\/li>\n<li id=\"post-1168-endnote-15\">Zechariya 8:4 <a href=\"#post-1168-endnote-ref-15\">\u2191<\/a><\/li>\n<li id=\"post-1168-endnote-16\">See Shulchan Aruch OC 559:4 <a href=\"#post-1168-endnote-ref-16\">\u2191<\/a><\/li>\n<\/ol>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Soaring to incredible heights and crashing to inconceivable depths. When we stare into the abyss, do we see the ladder stretching up to the sky? By: Robert Sussman Among the many kinnos (dirges or elegies) that we say on Tisha B\u2019av, the day on which we commemorate the many tragedies that have befallen the Jewish people throughout our history, is one that compares and contrasts the miracles and wonders of the going out from Egypt at the time that we were redeemed with the mourning and persecution of the going&hellip;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":6,"featured_media":1175,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[42],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-1168","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-july-2018"],"gutentor_comment":0,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.jewishlife.co.za\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1168","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.jewishlife.co.za\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.jewishlife.co.za\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.jewishlife.co.za\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/6"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.jewishlife.co.za\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=1168"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/www.jewishlife.co.za\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1168\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":1176,"href":"https:\/\/www.jewishlife.co.za\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1168\/revisions\/1176"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.jewishlife.co.za\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/1175"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.jewishlife.co.za\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=1168"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.jewishlife.co.za\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=1168"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.jewishlife.co.za\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=1168"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}