torah

Thinking about the Three Weeks

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A crucial aspect of the Three Weeks that is often ignored is that of introspection —cheshbon hanefesh. In my estimation, this period is precisely the time for looking in the mirror of our souls and reflecting upon where we have been, where we are, and where we should be going. It is the perfect moment to examine our thoughts and actions so that we may come to live more meaningful Jewish lives. 

One way we can begin our introspective journey is to focus upon the well-known Gemara in Talmud Bavli, Yoma 9b:

“The first Holy Temple, why was it destroyed? Because of three different aspects that had become part of its very nature: idol worship, illicit relations and murder … The second Holy Temple, why was it destroyed? Because of baseless hatred (sinat chinam). This comes to teach us that baseless hatred is the equivalent of the three cardinal prohibitions of idol worship, illicit relations, and murder.”

Is our age similar to the time of the Second Beit HaMikdash? On the positive side, there is ample evidence to suggest that we are studying more Torah today than at any other time in Jewish history. Mitzvah observance continues to grow, and acts of loving-kindness are performed by more institutions and individuals than one can possibly count or know. In some ways, we are experiencing a renaissance of Jewish growth and identity.

On the negative side, however, sinat chinam, baseless hatred, which our Talmudic passage teaches us is the equivalent of the three heinous sins that destroyed the First Beit Hamikdash and the sin that destroyed the Second, seems to grow stronger each day. Powerful and disruptive rifts fracture our Jewish communities. Little wonder, then, that we have not yet merited the building of the Third Beit Hamikdash.

Fortunately, there is a strong countermeasure to the pernicious sin of sinat chinam. Rabbi Yitzhak Avraham Kook zt”l, the first Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi of Palestine under the British Mandate, offers us a valuable insight. He proposes ahavat Yisrael —unconditional love for the Jewish people — as the antidote for sinat chinam, and conceptualizes it in the following poetic manner:

“Listen to me, my people! I speak to you from my soul, from within my innermost soul. I call out to you from the living connection by which I am bound to all of you, and by which all of you are bound to me. I feel this more deeply than any other feeling: That only you — all of you, all of your souls, throughout all of your generations — you alone are the meaning of my life. In you I live. In the aggregation of all of you, my life has that content that is called ‘life’” (Shemonah Kevatzim 1:163).

Continuing his love song to the Jewish people with the following stirring words, Rav Kook exclaims: 

“Without you, I have nothing. All hopes, all aspirations, all purpose in life, all that I find inside myself — these are only when I am with you. I need to connect with all of your souls. I must love you with a boundless love ... Each one of you, each individual soul from the aggregation of all of you, is a great spark, part of the torch of the Light of the universe which enlightens my life. You give meaning to life and work, to Torah and prayer, to song and hope. It is through the conduit of your being that I sense everything and love everything.”

It is crucial to realize that Rav Kook’s unlimited love for all Jews was far more than a mere theoretical construct. He embodied ahavat Yisrael in all aspects of his life, and in the most pragmatic of situations.

A vocal group of ultra-Orthodox Jerusalemites vociferously opposed Rav Kook, due to his positive attitude towards secular Zionists. Often they would publicize posters along the city streets, attacking the Chief Rabbi and discrediting his authority.

One day, Rav Kook returned from a brit milah ceremony in Jerusalem’s Old City, accompanied by dozens of students. Suddenly a small group of hotheaded extremists attacked the rabbi, showering him with wastewater. The chief rabbi was completely drenched by the filthy water. Emotions soared and tempers flared.

By the time Rav Kook had arrived home, news of the attack had spread throughout the city. Prominent citizens arrived to express their repugnance at the shameful incident. One of the visitors was the legal counsel of [the] British Mandate. He advised Rav Kook to press charges against the hooligans, and promised that they would be promptly deported from the country.

The legal counsel, however, was astounded by Rav Kook’s response. “I have no interest in court cases. Despite what they did to me, I love them. I am ready to kiss them, so great is my love! I burn with love for every Jew.” 

For Rav Kook, the opposite of sinat chinam was not ahavat chinam, baseless love. In his understanding of the world, such a concept simply did not exist. Rather, this great and holy soul considered every Jew, by definition, to be worthy of love and respect. As such, he is famous for the following powerful statement (Malachim Kivnei Adam, pages 483-485): “There is no such thing as ‘ahavat chinam’ — groundless love. Why groundless? He is a Jew, and I am obligated to love and respect him. There is only ‘sinat chinam’ — hate without reason. But ‘ahavat chinam’? Never!”

As we seek to infuse the Three Weeks with profound meaning, let us engage in the depth-level soul-searching that is fitting for this period, and endeavor to remove all aspects of sinat chinam from the deepest recesses of our being. Then, and only then, will we be prepared to honestly embrace Rav Kook’s noble words, and replace sinat chinam with ahavat Yisrael.