|                                                      "Rabbi Shimon the son of Gamliel              said, 'One who eats and drinks on Tisha  B'Av is akin to one              who eats and drinks on Yom Kippur.' Rabbi Akiva said, 'One who works              on Tisha  B'Av will never see any blessing from that work.' The              sages say, 'One who works on Tisha B'Av and doesn't mourn over the              destruction of Jerusalem will not merit to witness its joy… from              here we derive that anyone who mourns over Jerusalem will merit to              experience her joy, and one who fails to mourn over Jerusalem will              not merit to partake of her joy.'"              Talmud Bavli Tractate Ta'anit              30a              The wicked Babylonian King              Nebuchadnezzar instructed his general Nevuzradan, "The G!d of the              Jews is always ready to accept penitents. Therefore, when you              capture them, do not allow them to pray to Him, so that they should              not be able to repent. Otherwise, He will take pity upon them…              Midrash Eichah  (Lamentations)              "The world can be compared to a              human eyeball – The white of the eye is the ocean surrounding the              world – The iris is this continent – The pupil is Jerusalem – And              the image in the pupil is the Holy Temple."               Derech Eretz Zuta              9              "Each time the Jewish people              were exiled, the Divine Presence accompanied them."               Talmud Bavli Tractate              Megillah 29a               '' A bit of Kabbalah from               Zohar Beresheit: Let us see what the traditional               author, Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai (c. 135 CE) writes.              On Tisha B'Av we read the book of Lamentations (Eichah ). Eichah              does not mean Lamentations in Hebrew, just as B' Midbar does not              mean Numbers in Hebrew. Eichah means 'How,' from the first words of              the Book ,"How [in Hebrew, Eichah] lonely sits the city, that was              full of people! (Lamentations 1:1) .'' R' Shimon teaches that              in  parasha Devarim, Moses asks '' How (in Hebrew, 'Eichah')              can I alone bear your weight, and your burden, and your strife?              (Deut. 1:12).'' And R' Shimon reminds us that the Jewish people's              hatred of one another, caused Jerusalem's downfall. He also teaches              that when God says to Adam " 'Where are you?' [in Hebrew, 'Ayecha'?]              it is a broad hint to all of us, to ask this question to ourselves              each day, as we journey  with Jewish Spiritual Renewal and              daily spiritual growth."              Rabbi Arthur Segal              Rabbi Arthur Segal                                                                           |                     Lamentations                    3:22.                     Truly,  the kindnesses of the Lord never                    cease! Indeed, His mercies never fail!  |                                         |                                          |                                                     23.                    They are new every                    morning; great is Your faithfulness.  |                                         |                                          |                                                     24.                    "The Lord is my                    portion," says my soul; "therefore I will hope in                    Him."  |                                         |                                                              |                                                     25.                    The Lord is good to                    those who wait for Him, to the soul that seeks                    Him.  |                                         |                                          |                                                     26.                    It is good that one                    should wait quietly for the salvation of the                    Lord.                                                                                                        |                           30. Let him offer his cheek to his                          smiter; let him be filled with                          reproach.  |                                                     |                                                      |                                                                       31. For the Lord will not cast [him] off                          forever.                                                     Written by The Prophet Jeremiah,                          circa 586                    B.C.E.  |                       (Pictured below on the                    front cover of the famous stained glass window by Mark                    Chagall )                     |                                         |                                                              |                                  |                     |                                         |                                          |                                  |                     |                                         |                                                              |                                  |                                          ''R. Zvi Elimelech of                    Dinov (1783-1841), the author of the work "Bnei                     Yissachar, " explains that Tu B'Av is a day of                    deep-rooted significance because it falls forty days before                    the date of the world's creation.  The sixth day of                    creation was Rosh Hashanah. On that day God created man.                    Six days before this is the Twenty-fifth of Elul, and forty                    days ahead of this is Tu B'Av (the Fifteenth of Av).                    The rabbis teach: "Forty days before the formation                    of the infant an announcement is made in heaven: "The daughter                    of so-and-so is matched up with so-and-so." Tu B'Av, too,                    because it comes forty days before the creation of the world,                    is a day of much importance as it has a unique                    capacity to initiate life not only for the bride and groom,                    but for the orchards, the trees, and the vines, indeed the                    whole eco-sphere, that these young boys and girls are                    meeting.                      To match human fertility                    with the earth's via fruit trees and  fruits of the vine,                    which both have their own special beracoth, helps remind us,                    us to treat the earth with kindness and love and                    generosity,  as we would when we are courting, and when                    we are in love with that special person.''                    Authored by Rabbi Arthur                    Segal and published By Rabbi Arthur Waskow of the Shalom                    Center in his ''Compilation of Essays on the Jewish Holidays                    from an Eco-Judaic View Point.''                                                               |                    |                                         |                                  |                        |                    |                     |                                  |                 |    |                        |                                                                                                                                                 |                           Tisha B'Av and Tu                          B'Av
  A Holiday Message                          From Rabbi Arthur Segal's Jewish Spiritual Renewal                          July 2010
   |                       |                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           Shalom                                Arthur,
                                 This month we                                celebrate two Jewish holidays. The 9th of Av, or                                Tisha B'Av, falls on July 20 and Tu B'Av follows                                on July 26.
  Tisha B'Av and Tu B'Av are two                                of our lesser-known holidays. In fact, many Jews                                have never celebrated Tu B'Av despite the fact                                that the Talmud calls it the most joyous day on                                the Jewish calendar.                            
   |    |                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                 Sometimes                                the Message is Between the                                Lines
 
   Tisha B'Av is a fast day                                that we celebrate in commemoration of the Temples'                                destruction; the first at the hands of the                                Babylonians in 586 B.C.E, and the second by the                                Romans in 70 C.E. 
  However, these are not                                the only notorious events to have fallen on the                                same date throughout Jewish history. Specifically,                                among many others,:
                                                                  - The Jews'                                  expulsion from Spain in 1492 C.E.
                                                                  - The day that 10 of Moses' 12 spies gave negative                                  reports about the land of Israel, condemning the                                  Israelites to 39 more years in the                                  wilderness.
                                                                  - The outbreak                                  of World War I, which set in motion the events                                  leading up to the Second World War and hence,                                  the Holocaust.
  The spiritual aspects of                                this Holy day are enormous, yet some synagogues                                don't acknowledge Tisha B'Av out of a belief that                                it is only about restoring the                                Temple, the Priesthood and animal                                sacrifices.
  This misses the spiritual                                message of Tisha B'Av entirely. 
  |                                                                                                               |                               |   |                                                              |                                                                                                               Don't Blame it On the                                Rain                                                                                              Talmud Tractate Bavli                                Beracoth 5a teaches us that when bad things happen                                to us, we are to look inward at our own character                                flaws for the reason rather than assigning blame                                to some external cause. This lesson is found in                                stories throughout the text.
  The rabbis                                write that the first Temple fell because Hebrews                                broke up Solomon's kingdom politically, making its                                conquest easier.
  Talmud Bavli Tractate Yoma                                9b explains that the second Temple fell because                                Jews harbored unwarranted negative feelings (sinat                                chinam) toward one another, forming quarreling                                cliques and giving individuals the cold shoulder.                                
  A story in Talmud Bavli Tractate Gittin                                55a - 56b tells of a man who was so humiliated                                when snubbed at a party that he vengefully                                reported to the Romans of a Jewish plot to                                rebel.
  Upon hearing of the supposed                                rebellion, the Romans decided to try a little                                test. They sent a sacrificial calf to the Temple,                                and the fellow who got the brush off at the party                                put a blemish on the calf. 
  Now, according                                to strict Hebraic laws of the Torah, a blemished                                calf may not be sacrificed. However, the rabbis,                                who adhered to the more spiritual Jewish Talmudic                                laws, advised that the sacrifice would bring peace                                between the Jews and Romans. They said that                                promoting peace and love is a greater good                                according to G!d's will than is following Torah                                law to the letter.
  Irrespective of the                                rabbinic advice, the Hebrew priests refused the                                calf as a proper sacrifice, and the Romans came                                crashing through the walls of Jerusalem and                                destroyed the city and its Temple.
  The                                moral of the story is found in Talmud Bavli                                Tractate Bava Metzia 30b, in which the rabbis                                address the consequences of following the letter                                of the Torah law but not the spirit of Jewish                                Talmudic law.
  In plain English, ask                                yourself: if you were in Jerusalem in 70 C.E.                                gazing at the ruins of your city and the Temple,                                would you say that a blemished calf caused this                                tragedy, or was it the anger and hate permeating                                your people? 
  Tisha B'Av mourns a number of                                deficits. Among them; that some Jews lack spirituality and we behave poorly                                towards one another. 
  In Talmud                                Bavli Tractate Shabbat 10a we learn that loving                                your fellow and "Shalom ha gadol" (peace is the                                greatest of virtues) are intrinsic to Judaism.                                
  Other wise teachings of the sages show                                that the root cause of problems with others and                                with ourselves stem from our own defects of                                character. 
  As spiritual Jews, Tisha B'Av                                is a time for mourning our past character defects                                and working toward improving our behavior in the                                future.     |                                                                                                               |                               |   |                                                              |                                                                                                               She's Everything You                                Dream About...But Don't Fall In                                Love                                Tu                                B'Av is the 15th of the month of Av. Talmud                                Yerushalmi Tractate Ta'anit 4:7 teaches that it is                                the happiest day on the Jewish calendar.                                
  Girls and young men would meet                                at the vineyards and dance together. Today we                                might call it a mixer or "singles night," but                                there is one notable difference.
  The girls                                would all wear the same simple white dress so that                                rich and poor would all look alike - none adorned                                with jewelry or make up - and the men would get to                                know their character without being distracted by                                the superficial.
  Talmud Bavli Tractate                                Ta'anit 30b-31a says: "When any Jew is decorated                                with the jewels of Torah learning, he or she is                                not ugly."
  Isn't it interesting to                                juxtapose that Talmudic view from 2,500 years ago                                against the objectification of women that we see                                in today's popular culture?
  For the Tu B'Av                                celebration the young women would dress alike and                                eschew jewelry and makeup so that the men would                                fall in love for the right                                reasons.
  Contrast that to the                                "relationships" between men and women as portrayed                                in supermarket tabloids or the latest episode of                                Two 1/2                                Men.
                                 (Lessons                                about Tu B'Av continue below...)                                
    |                                                                                                               |                               |   |                                                              |                                                                                                               |                                 She's right here behind                                the glass...
                                                                                                ...and                                you're gonna like her, 'cause she's got                                class
  Popular                                culture is a powerful thing, but not always in a                                good way.
  We                                are inundated with images - on television, in                                music, in movies, on the Internet - that purport                                to show us how life is supposed to                                be.
  "Beautiful                                People," fast cars, big houses, cool gadgets and a                                never-ending party; these are the things that we                                should value...or so we are told. 
  So many                                of us pursue these superficial things for years,                                only to wake up one day to find that the one thing                                missing from it all is happiness.
  Look                                around you. Look at the state of our society.                                
  Is it any wonder that our nation's                                literacy rate has the risk of                                becoming abysmal?
  Or that half of                                marriages end up in divorce?
  Or that we                                just can't seem to get along?
  This is not                                how it ought to be, and we all know it.
  We                                also know that we need to make a change; for our                                own happiness, and to save us from a modern-day                                Tisha B'Av.
  But how do we make that change?                                
  Too many of us have put our hope and faith                                in the wrong place for too long. We've expected                                others - the powerful elite - to fix the problems                                for us.
  Now that we've reached the 21st                                Century, how's that working out?
  The change                                that we seek has to come from within. We have to                                change as individuals, one by one.
  We have                                to re-evaluate what is important in life and what                                will truly bring happiness.
  We have to live                                more spiritually.
  We have to address our                                own character flaws and change them.
  I know                                it sounds difficult. The influences against it are                                everywhere and can be hard to resist.
  But                                it is not that difficult.
  You can live your                                life spiritually, and have deep, meaningful                                relationships without caring about fitting in or                                looking cool.                                 
 
  My                                book, The Handbook to Jewish Spiritual                                Renewal: A Path of Transformation for the Modern                                Jew, teaches you how to transform your life                                into one that is happier, more peaceful, and more                                spiritual, regardless of what is going on in the                                world around you.
  And it is all written in                                the context of modern-day                                life.
  In                                this book, I distill the teachings of our sages                                and rabbis that have been passed along for                                thousands of years, along with lessons from the                                Torah and the Talmud. 
  But                                unlike other Jewish spiritual texts that you may                                have read, or sermons you may have heard, this                                book presents these lessons in a concise,                                easy-to-read, easy-to-follow life transformation                                process that you can follow step-by-step at your                                own pace. 
  You                                will learn:
                                                                  - That                                  "normative" Judaism as you have known it                                  throughout your life is not really Judaism at                                  all, why it may leave you uninspired, and how                                  spiritual renewal will help you recapture that                                  inspiration (Chapter 1).
                                    - That your ego                                  can be your own worst enemy, and how to win the                                  battle against it (Chapter 2).
                                    - How to stop                                  struggling for control over things you cannot                                  control, and be happier because of it (Chapter                                  3).
                                                                   - How spiritual                                  renewal conquers the fears and character flaws                                  that are holding you back in life (Chapters 4                                  and 5).
                                                                  - To actually                                  get rid of your character flaws forever (Chapter                                  6).
                                                                  - How to turn                                  negative relationships in your life positive                                  (Chapter 7).
                                                                  - How simple it                                  is to make prayer a regular part of your                                  days...without going back to Hebrew school                                  (Chapter 8).
                                                                  - How to find                                  peace of mind through meditation (Chapter                                  9).
                                                                  - How to                                  simplify life's toughest decisions 
 (Chapter                                  10).                                                                  - How spiritual                                  renewal transforms you into the best individual                                  you can be, and how to stay on track (Chapter                                  11).
                                                                  - How to                                  celebrate the Sabbath and the Jewish Holidays                                  with meaning (Chapters 12 and  13).
                                                                  - How to live                                  with happiness, joy, and freedom every day of                                  your life (Chapter 14).
  The Handbook to Jewish Spiritual                                Renewal: A Path of Transformation for the Modern                                Jew is only $19.99 (plus S&H) when you                                purchase your copy from Rabbi Arthur Segal's online bookstore. That's $5.00                                off the Amazon price.                                
                                                                Click                                the link below to                                order.
                                      |                                                                                                               |                               |   |                                                              |                                                                                                               Good Times, Bad                                Times, You Know I've Had My                                Share
  As the Hebrews wandered the                                desert for 40 years, orphaned girls without                                brothers were forbidden to marry outside of their                                tribe.  This was intended to prevent their                                fathers' inherited land from passing on to other                                tribes upon reaching the Land of Israel.                                
  This ban was lifted on the 15th of Av (Tu                                B'Av) in the fortieth year.
  That same year,                                the last of the generation of the ''sin of the spies,'' who were forbidden from entering                                the Promised Land, died out.
  The Tribe of                                Benjamin was allowed to intermarry with the other                                tribes after the Concubine of Gibeah incident                                (Judges chapters 19-21).
  Cutting of the                                wood for the main altar in the Temple was                                completed for the year. The event was celebrated                                with feasting and rejoicing (as is the custom upon                                the conclusion of a holy endeavor), and included a                                ceremonial breaking of the axes which gave the day                                its name, the Breaking of the Axe.
  What is                                the significance of breaking an axe? We will learn                                about this below.
  The Roman occupiers                                permitted burial of massacre victims at Bethar on                                Tu B'Av. Miraculously, the bodies had not                                decomposed, despite exposure to the elements for                                over a year.
  Hosea ben Eilah opened the                                roads to Jerusalem upon the division of the Holy                                Land into two kingdoms following the death of King                                Solomon. 
  Jeroboam ben Nebat, ruler of the                                breakaway Northern Kingdom of Israel, set up                                roadblocks to prevent his citizens from making the                                thrice-yearly pilgrimage to the Holy Temple in                                Jerusalem, capital of the Southern Kingdom of                                Judea. 
  These were finally removed more                                than 200 years later by Hosea ben Eilah, the last                                king of the Northern Kingdom, on the 15th of                                Av.
  Note that these joyous events occurred                                merely six days (on the calendar) after the                                horrors of Tisha B'Av, and there is a great lesson                                in that fact alone.
  When bad things happen,                                we should not only remember to look inward for the                                cause, but that it is not necessarily the end of                                the world. We can always look forward to better                                times. Hope, Ha Tikva, has sustained the                                Jewish people for millennia.                                 
  |                                                                                                                |                                |                                                              |                                                                                                               When the Moon Hits                                Your Eye Like a Big Pizza                                Pie...
  Tu B'Av is                                called the 15th of Av because it falls on the                                fifteenth day of the month (full moon) according                                to the lunar calendar. 
  We celebrate Tu                                B'Av on July 26 this year - and the exact date                                varies from year to year - so that our celebration                                coincides with the full moon.
  The                                Kabbalah's Zohar explains that we mark time                                with the moon because:
                                 "We rise and fall                                through the nights of history knowing times of                                growth and diminution, our moments of luminous                                fullness alternating with moments of obscurity and                                darkness. And like the moon, our every regression                                and defeat is but a prelude to yet another                                rebirth, yet another                                renewal."
   The full moon is a                                sign of comfort, or nachamu, after the horrible                                events of the 9th of Av. The full moon of Tu B'Av                                gives Tikvah, hope, to the Jews, in the                                Diaspora.
  As already mentioned, the 15th of                                Av also celebrates the Breaking of the Axe. An axe                                was used the to cut firewood for the altar for the                                Temple. 
  It was ceremoniously broken when                                the job was done - rather than saved for the next                                year's cutting - because the axe's destructive                                objective represents the antithesis of that for                                which the Altar, and the Temple as a whole, stood.                                The axe is a tool of destruction and represents                                warlike acts. Breaking the axe symbolizes an end                                to such acts in favor of peace, kindness and                                love.
 
                                 "When                                you build a stone altar for Me, do not build it of                                cut stone; for if your sword has been lifted upon                                it, you have profaned it; Do not lift iron upon                                it... The altar of G!d shall be built of whole                                stones."                                  -- Ex. 20:22; Deut.                                27:5-6
 
   If any                                metal implement as much as touched a stone, that                                stone was rendered unfit for use in the making of                                the altar.
  Our sages explain in Talmud                                Bavli Tractate Middot 3:4: "Iron was created to                                shorten the life of man, and the Altar was created                                to lengthen the life of man; so it is not fitting                                that an object which shortens should be                                lifted upon that which lengthens."
  Iron,                                the instrument of war and destruction, has no                                place in the making of the instrument whose                                function is to bring eternal peace and harmony to                                the world.
  While, it seems to be our                                destiny to wax and wane like the moon, I do pray                                that we have more days and years like a full                                bright moon, with no instruments of war aimed at                                us, or forced into our hands to defend ourselves,                                and that our shovels and backs are used to plant                                fruit trees and see a world full of Shalom                                and                            love. 
 
  |                                                                                                                |                                |                                                              |                                                                                                               Many                                Blessings,
  Rabbi Arthur                                Segal
  |                                                                                                               |                               |   |                                                              |                                                                                                               |                                 The                                Torah and Talmud
  A Modern                                Interpretation
   In                                my years of Rabbinic Counseling I've noticed that                                many modern Jews are not as familiar with the                                Torah and the Talmud as they might be.
  They                                find it difficult to understand and interpret in a                                way that makes sense and has relevance to their                                lives in the modern world. 
  The spiritual                                disconnection that this causes inspired me to                                write a second book, A Spiritual and Ethical Compendium                                to the Torah and Talmud.
 
  This                                book instills Jewish values and an understanding                                of the Torah and Talmud's teachings in plain                                English and from a modern point of view.                                
  The                                Talmud teaches that the Torah is about loving our                                fellow man and that we are to ''go and study.''                                The rest is commentary. 
  A                                Spiritual and Ethical Compendium to the Torah and                                Talmud clarifies the commentary                                and allows one to study the Torah and the Talmud                                to learn the Judaic ideals of love, forgiveness,                                kindness, mercy and peace.
  A Spiritual and Ethical Compendium                                to the Torah and Talmud is only $24.99 (plus                                S&H) when you purchase your copy from my online bookstore.                                
  That's a $5.00 savings from the Amazon                                price, and certainly                                a small amount to pay for the priceless wisdom                                contained within the Torah and the                                Talmud.
                                                                Click                                the link below to                                order.                                                                
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