 Tears For Jerusalem
A Tale of Two Cities
How can a Jew weep on Tisha B'Av for the
destruction of Jerusalem and the Beis
Hamikdash which took place thousands of
years ago, when he sees how beautifully
Jerusalem has been rebuilt in our days?
Perhaps we can learn a lesson from Rabbi Gershon Kitover,
brother-in-law of the Ba'al Shem Tov, who arrived in
Jerusalem two and a half centuries ago with the first group of
Chassidim to settle in the Holy Land. He looked around at a
city which sported foreign legations and all the signs of a
serene community restored, in sharp contrast to the
desolation described by Rabbi Moshe ben Nachman
(Ramban) in his famous letter reporting on his visit to the city
some five centuries earlier.
Rabbi Gershon broke into tears. Now, he said, I fully
understand the words of the prayer that Jews say at the end
of the final ne'ilah service on Yom Kippur, when the gates of
Heaven are about to close. As they stand at this dramatic
moment, weakened in body from a long day of fasting and
strengthened in spirit from prayer and repentance, they strive
to send one more prayer heavenward, invoking the 13
attributes of Divine mercy. The opening lines, sounding more
like a Tisha B'Av lamentation than a Yom Kippur prayer, cry
out: "I recall, O G-d, and I am overcome by emotion, as I see
every city solidly built on its foundation, while the City of
G-d is reduced to the depth of the grave. Nevertheless, we
are with G-d and our eyes are turned to G-d."
Until Rabbi Gershon saw the rebuilt Jerusalem of his day, he
assumed - as we all do - that the above lament contrasts a
desolate Holy City with the mighty capitals of the world,
Rome, Paris, London and Berlin. But when he saw the
beginnings of a rebuilt Jerusalem and contrasted it with the
ruins of the Beis Hamikdash he sensed a deeper meaning in
those words:
'Every city' - said Rabbi Gershon - refers to the Jerusalem of
Below, the city of brick and mortar; while the 'City of G-d'
refers to the Jerusalem of Above, the heavenly city
characterized by the Beis Hamikdash.
It is certainly painful to contrast these ruins with the
prosperity of foreign cities. But the pain is indescribably
greater when one sees the contrast between material
prosperity and spiritual ruin before his very eyes. Small
wonder that this great man of spirit, who finally realized his
lifelong dream of reaching Jerusalem, was moved to tears
when he sensed the awful contrast.
The above account of Rabbi Gershon Kitover's experience
and observation is recorded by one of the great halachic
authorities, Rabbi Yosef Tumim, who served as rabbi of
Frankfort, Germany two centuries ago. In his classic
commentary on Shulchan Aruch Orach Chaim, "Pri
Megadim" (661a Eshel Avraham), he quotes his father as the
source for this moving story about Rabbi Gershon Kitover.
A footnote to this is the sentiment expressed in the last line of
the above mentioned prayer - "Nevertheless, we are with G-d
and our eyes are turned to G-d." This sense of hope amidst
mourning reminds us of the story of a father who took his
young son to the Western Wall for the first time. It was Tisha
B'Av, and the youngster asked his father why grown men
were weeping.
"Here," said the father, "our Beis Hamikdash once stood. The
Har Habayis (Temple Mount) on which it stood was
surrounded by four large walls. Now the Beis Hamikdash is
destroyed, as well as the walls around the Har Habayis. All
we have left of all our sacred glory is this one wall where you
see people praying. Is it any wonder that they cry when they
remember what once stood here?"
"But Father," responded the son, "isn't it true that Mashiach
will soon come to redeem us, rebuild the Beis Hamikdash and
the four walls around Har Habayis? We should take comfort
in the fact that one of those walls is already standing, and
there are only three more to go!"
This comes courtesy of the Ohr Somayach Tisha B'Av website.
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