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WHY DO WE CRY? by
Yonoson Blumenthal On Tisha B'av we commemorate and memorialize the sum total of all tragedies that befell the Jewish people since the formation of the Jewish nation.
On Tisha B'av we commemorate and memorialize
the sum total of all tragedies that befell the Jewish people since the formation
of the Jewish nation.
The Holocaust survivors who read the following insight will nod their
heads in agreement, sigh, and shed a tear. How are we different from those
who came from "the old country"? Is it that we have advanced
in technology, in affluence, in medicine? Yes, we have reached and continue
to aspire to levels of achievement in all walks of life never dreamed
of even twenty years ago. But, are we better?
The Jew of Europe, Asia, and Africa throughout the ages was tortured,
crushed, decimated, and beaten to a pulp, yet his inner fire never was
extinguished. His simple faith and trust in Hashem, dedication to morals
and values, nurturing of family life with parents, grandparents, spouses,
children, and grandchildren, blossomed under the most trying of situations
in the most volatile environments.
Today, we have the security. We have the comfort. But where have our
advances brought us?
For this irreplaceable loss - from profundity, depth, self sacrifice,
and unity, to spiritual and moral bankruptcy, we cry. Let us return and
beseech Hashem with the closing words of the Scroll of Eicha which we
read on Tisha B'Av this coming Thursday: "Prompt us to return and
we will return; renew our days as of old." May we see the
full redemption of the entire world speedily in our days. Let us all contemplate
this thought on Tisha B'av and see how we can implement a change for the
better.
Yonoson
Blumenthal, who hails from Atlanta, is presently studying in Baltimore
at Ner Israel Rabbinical College.
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