I love spicy food. I love salsa, jalapeƱos, hot wings, and
jambalaya. I love curry, spicy noodles, paella, and chili. On Passover, my
friends and I used to see who could pile the most horseradish on his Matzah
without crying. I just can’t get enough of the heat. And yet, every time I
scarf down a plateful of Kung Pao chicken, somewhere in the back of my mind I
know that in two hours I’ll inevitably be lying on the couch rubbing an upset,
full belly. And I’ll vow never to do it again.
It often seems that life presents us with the same pitfalls
time and time again. Yesterday, on Shabbat morning, we found the Israelites
standing for a second time overlooking the Promised Land. Moses recounts their
previous experience in this place. Forty years earlier, the previous generation
had stood in the same location, about to cross the Jordan River, and they
balked. Fear of the unknown overcame them and they failed to seize the
opportunity. God, in frustration, banished the Israelites to wander in the desert
for 40 years. It is easy to imagine why Moses chooses to retell this particular
story now. It is a sort of remembering, an acknowledgement of past failure, in
hope that the Israelites will this time fulfill their destiny.
Today, Jews all over the world observe Tisha B’Av, a fast
day remembering the many failures and tragedies of Jewish history: the
destruction of the First and Second ancient Temples in Jerusalem, the
unsuccessful Bar Kokhba revolt, and countless expulsions, massacres, and
pogroms. Tisha B’Av also marks the informal beginning to the High Holiday
season. A full seven weeks before Rosh Hashanah, this day of remembering—of
acknowledging—sets the tone for this time of deepest self-reflection. On Tisha
B’Av, we collectively and as individuals revisit that business which is as yet
unresolved, that tripping wire upon which we continually stumble, those
destructive tendencies that we again and again habituate, that border to which
we always return but are seemingly never able to cross.
Maimonides, the great medieval Jewish philosopher, taught
that true teshuvah—true repentance—has
occurred only when a person finds him or herself in the exact same situation in
which he erred, but this time chooses to behave differently. Similarly, Tisha
B’Av represents not only remembrance and destruction, but also the opportunity
to begin rebuilding. Today, as we turn towards the High Holidays, let us all
strive to acknowledge and take ownership of our own shortcomings, of our own
destructive tendencies, in order that we may begin the work of reconciliation.
Otherwise, we’ll continue to find ourselves lying on the couch, rubbing our
full bellies.
-Daniel