17th of Tammuz: History, Laws and Customs



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    17th of Tammuz: History, Laws and Customs

    The fast of the 17th of the month of Tammuz, known as Shivah Asar B’Tammuz, is the start of a three-week mourning period for the destruction of Jerusalem and the two Holy Temples • Full Article

    The fast of the 17th of the month of Tammuz, known as Shivah Asar B’Tammuz, is the start of a three-week mourning period for the destruction of Jerusalem and the two Holy Temples.

    The fast actually commemorates five tragic events that occurred on this date:

    1. Moshe broke the tablets when he saw the Jewish people worshipping the Golden Calf.
    2. During the Babylonian siege of Jerusalem, the Jews were forced to cease offering the daily sacrifices due to the lack of sheep.
    3. Apostomos burned the holy Torah.
    4. An idol was placed in the Holy Temple.
    5. The walls of Jerusalem were breached by the Romans, in 69 CE, after a lengthy siege. (Three weeks later, after the Jews put up a valiant struggle, the Romans destroyed the second Holy Temple on the 9th of Av.)
      The Jerusalem Talmud maintains that this is also the date when the Babyloniansbreached the walls of Jerusalem on their way to destroying the first Temple.

    A fast day is an auspicious day, a day when G‑d is accessible, waiting for us to repent:

    • Healthy adults—bar- or bat-mitzvah age and older—abstain from eating or drinking between dawn and nightfall.
    • Pregnant and nursing women may not have to fast.
    • Someone who is ill should consult with a rabbi.
    • Even those exempt from fasting, such as ill people or children, shouldn’t indulge in delicacies or sweets.
    • It is permitted to wake up early before the fast begins and eat, provided that prior to going to sleep one had in mind to do so.

    Abstaining from food and drink is the external element of a fast day. On a deeper level, a fast day is an auspicious day, a day when G‑d is accessible, waiting for us to repent.

    The sages explain: “Every generation for which the Temple is not rebuilt, it is as though the Temple was destroyed for that generation.” A fast day is not only a sad day, but an opportune day. It’s a day when we are empowered to fix the cause of that destruction, so that our long exile will be ended and we will find ourselves living in messianic times; may that be very soon.

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    17th of Tammuz: History, Laws and Customs



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