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	<title>A Still Small Voice &#187; Tisha B&#8217;Av</title>
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	<description>The Teachings of Sarah Yehudit Schneider</description>
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		<title>Tisha B&#8217;Av in the Old City 5770</title>
		<link>http://astillsmallvoice.org/2010/07/news-tishabav/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 19 Jul 2010 14:47:43 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[News Updates]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tisha B'Av]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://astillsmallvoice.org/?p=1040</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Dear Friends, With the hope that this year we will celebrate rather than commemorate Tisha Be&#8217;Av, we would like to warmly invited to join us, in the old city of Yerushalaim, as Chana Yaffe shares the traditional chanting of Eicha (Lamentations),which will be followed by a shiur with Sarah Yehudit Schneider. DATE: Monday 19th July [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Dear Friends,<br />
With the hope that this year we will celebrate rather than commemorate Tisha Be&#8217;Av, we would like to<br />
warmly invited to join us, in the old city of Yerushalaim, as Chana Yaffe shares the traditional chanting of<br />
Eicha (Lamentations),which will be followed by a shiur with Sarah Yehudit Schneider.</p>
<p>DATE:         Monday 19th July</p>
<p>TIME:           20.45</p>
<p>ADDRESS:  10 Rechov HaShoarim Street, &#8211; home of Family Sokol  (just<br />
off the main street, Rechov Tiferet Yisrael, cnr  Burgers Bar,)</p>
<p>You might want to bring a flashlight and cushion, we&#8217;ll be sitting on the roof.</p>
<p>Call Chana Yaffe at 0547 &#8211; 922 &#8211; 969 for details.</p>
<p><iframe width="425" height="350" frameborder="0" scrolling="no" marginheight="0" marginwidth="0" src="http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&amp;source=s_q&amp;hl=en&amp;geocode=&amp;q=HaShoarim+10,+Jerusalem,+Israel&amp;sll=37.0625,-95.677068&amp;sspn=34.176059,78.134766&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;hq=&amp;hnear=HaSho'arim+10,+Jerusalem,+Israel&amp;ll=31.776078,35.232614&amp;spn=0.002239,0.004769&amp;z=14&amp;output=embed"></iframe><br /><small><a href="http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&amp;source=embed&amp;hl=en&amp;geocode=&amp;q=HaShoarim+10,+Jerusalem,+Israel&amp;sll=37.0625,-95.677068&amp;sspn=34.176059,78.134766&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;hq=&amp;hnear=HaSho'arim+10,+Jerusalem,+Israel&amp;ll=31.776078,35.232614&amp;spn=0.002239,0.004769&amp;z=14" style="color:#0000FF;text-align:left">View Larger Map</a></small></p>
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		<title>Tisha B’Av, 5770/2010 &#8211; By Sarah Yehudit Schneider</title>
		<link>http://astillsmallvoice.org/2010/07/tisha-b-av-5770/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 19 Jul 2010 14:41:07 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Muse]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tisha B'Av]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[eicha]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fast]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mourning]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[the night of av]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://astillsmallvoice.org/?p=1038</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Tisha B’Av, 5770/2010 Sarah Yehudit Schneider Everyone knows that Tisha B’Av (the 9th of Av) is the lowest point of the Jewish calendar. HaShem’s protective aura thins, and we grow vulnerable to error and to harm. The downward tug of this time is ancient, and nearly impossible to resist. It started when Essav’s guardian angel [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em><strong>Tisha                     B’Av</strong></em><strong>,                    5770/2010</strong> <strong>Sarah                    Yehudit                    Schneider</strong></p>
<p>Everyone knows                    that Tisha B’Av (the 9<sup>th</sup> of Av) is the  lowest point                    of the Jewish calendar. <em>HaShem</em>’s protective                    aura thins, and we grow vulnerable to error and to  harm. The                    downward tug of this time is ancient, and nearly  impossible to                    resist. It started when Essav’s guardian angel  attacked Yaakov                    on this day and dislocated his hip.<sup>1</sup> Since  the hip                    area includes the generative triad (comprised of the  three <em>sefirot</em>: <em>netzach, hod, yesod</em>)                    kabbala interprets this as an impurifying of the  generations                    to come. The angel could not penetrate Yaakov’s  protective                    aura, says R. Tsadok, but it <em>was</em> able to                    contaminate the seed-stock of the Jewish people with a  smudge                    of its narcissistic filth.<sup>2,3</sup></p>
<p>In the Torah’s                    lexicon of symbols, Essav is the forbear of Amalek,                    Israel’s                    archenemy—the fearsome embodiment of unrepentant                    evil.<sup>4</sup> Every other creature has at least a  sliver                    of soul, a ray of God that dwells within and sustains  its                    life. Yet these progeny of Essav are hollow men, who  absorb                    their life juice through their skin.<sup>5</sup> They                    feed off the sparks that fly from the clashing of  matter and                    psyches in conflict. They are chronic provocateurs,  for their                    survival requires exactly this. If conflict would  cease, so                    would they, for they have no inner wellspring from  which to                    draw life. These empty creatures with a void at their  core are                    the spiritual offspring of Amalek. Like viral spores  they                    float through history, invisible, until they find a  host who                    is susceptible to their hate-filled contagion.<sup>6</sup></p>
<p>Hitler and his                    Nazi thugs are textbook specimens of the Amalekian  profile                    which features the following traits:</p>
<p>-                       extreme narcissism                    and grandiosity (<sup>7</sup>.אני                    אמלוך.<sup>8</sup> כחי ועוצם ידי)</p>
<p>-                       causeless hatred                    (<sup>9</sup>אל אחר שאין לו  דעת                    אסתרס&#8230;)</p>
<p>-  capacity                    for unconscionable cruelty (מי                    שיש בו ואכזריות&#8230; חוששין לו                    ביותר&#8230;<sup>10</sup>)</p>
<p>-                       aspiration to                    supplant G-d, and rule the world in His stead.                    (<sup>12</sup>ולית דיין.)</p>
<p>The  Jewish                    I-center views Amalek as the polar opposite <em>other</em>—the  one who                    possesses all the traits that we, as a people, revile.  Yet it                    is equally true (from the teaching above) that we also  carry a                    smidgen of Amalekian stain as descendents of Yaakov’s                    (otherwise) holy seed.</p>
<p>Perhaps this is                    why our conflicts in this country often deteriorate  into                    name-calling, with the N-word at the top of the list.  We can’t                    seem to quarrel about matters close to heart without  reducing                    the <em>other</em> to an                    irredeemable louse. It is most telling that these nazi                     accusations go both ways. <em>You </em>are a nazi  because                    you dare to impose secular values above God’s law. And  <em>you</em> are a nazi because                    of your racism which amounts to causeless hatred  toward people                    of different descent.                     Y<em>ou</em> are a                    nazi because you follow orders like a robot without                    questioning their ethics and relevance to the modern  world.                    And you are nazi for betraying the Jewish people by  providing                    ammunition to their detractors.  And you  are a nazi for                    creating an apartheid Jewish state. And so it goes, on  and on                    and on.</p>
<p>If it is true that                    causeless hatred prompted the Temple’s demise and only  its                    opposite can save us…then we have got to find another  way to                    disagree among ourselves. Wherever we stand on the  political                    spectrum, the most nazi-like behavior is to reduce our                     adversary to his most disagreeable feature, fixate on  that                    point alone, and then brand him a loathsome nazi with a  clear                    conscience, for in our narrow vision he shrinks to  only that.</p>
<p>And this is what                    distinguishes a political frame from a spiritual one.  In                    politics the power of one’s position comes from  proving that                    there is not one shred of truth on the other side—<em>you</em> are completely wrong, and <em>I</em> am completely  right. This                    has its pros and cons. On the pro side, its (illusion  of)                    certainty fires passion and reduces anxiety. On the  con side,                    it is just not true, for it is the nature of our  complex world                    that real truth is never purely black and white. There  is                    always a sliver of legitimacy to the other side.</p>
<p>And that is                    Judaism’s <em>chidush</em> to the world.  Centuries  before the                    word, “paradox” appeared in the English language, the  Talmud                    asserted the (higher) truth of paradox as the  rectified model                    for approaching dispute.1<sup>3</sup> “These and                    these [which totally contradict them], are both words  of the                    living G-d…Yet in practical matters we follow the  ruling of                    X.”<sup>14</sup></p>
<p>This is the                    Talmud’s simple approach to conflict: (1) Identify the  truth                    of <em>both</em> sides. (2)                    After exploring the full range of perspectives and  finding the                    merit in each—only then is it time to pick the best  one to                    guide the action at hand. The Talmud’s approach honors  truth,                    promotes peace and stretches the mind. But it also  produces                    anxiety—decisions are harder when options are  perceived as                    shades of gray instead of clearly demarcated blacks  and                    whites.</p>
<p>You might argue                    that I am taking the Talmud’s teaching out of  context—that it                    only accorded the status of “G-d’s truth” to the words  of a                    Torah scholar. You might argue that it never intended  to                    extend this principle to the simple, heretical (and  ignorant)                    masses. And you might be technically                    correct.</p>
<p>Yet, along with                    the Torah of ink on parchment there is also the Torah  of                    souls. Just as there are 600,000 letters of the  written Torah,                    so are there 600,000 root souls in the spiritual  community of                    Israel.<sup>15</sup> Each individual that comes into  the world                    embodies some unique piece of one of these sixty  myriad                    letters. And so, says R. Tsadok,<sup>16</sup> just as  there is                    a scroll of ink on parchment, so is there a scroll of  souls                    that includes the entire unfolding of generations. The                     sum-total of the soul-sparks of Israel comprise a  single and                    complete Torah…the <em>real</em> Torah…the one that <em>HaShem </em>studies on His side of the heavenly mechitza.<sup>17</sup> And just as “there is no truth that is not                    Torah,”<sup>18</sup> so there is no Torah that is not  holding                    some deep and eternal truth. That applies to the Torah  on                    parchment as well as the Torah of souls, which means  there is                    always some truth, perhaps very hidden, in the  perspective of                    every Jew.  That                    doesn’t mean you have to accept it as your own guiding                     light.  But it                    does mean (if the Talmud be our guide) that you must  search it                    out, appreciate its point, and then you can decide  against it,                    if it doesn’t accord with the priorities of your view  of the                    world.</p>
<p>Let us draw from                    the tools of our tradition and apply the Talmud’s  model to the                    interpersonal challenges of our time. Let us take our                    teachings out of the books and into the streets,  households                    and (<em>batei</em>)                    <em>kenesset</em>. If we want to remove the  smidgen of                    Amalek from our souls, we <em>must</em> learn to                    respectfully disagree. HaShem should grant us the ears  to hear                    the “words of the living G-d” as they radiate from  each letter                    of His precious Torah of souls. And let the peace that  is born                    from this practice <em>mach’zik</em> the                    <em>brocha</em><sup>19</sup> of <em>mashiach</em>, our  fasting                    should turn to feasting and we should celebrate  redemption,                    NOW.</p>
<p>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-</p>
<p>Zohar 1:170b; R.                    Tsadok Hokohen, <em>Kometz                    Mincha, </em>(<em>Yahadut</em>, Bnei Brak,                    5735 / 1975), p. 71-78 (*74); R. Natan Sternholz of  Beslov,                    <em>Likutey Halachoth, Orach Chaim, Hilchoth Hodayah</em> 6:25.</p>
<p><sup>2</sup> R. Tsadok Hokohen,                    <em>ibid</em>.</p>
<p><sup>3</sup> Gen. 36:1                    identifies Essav with <em>Edom</em>, and Gen. 36:31-39                    describes the “kings that ruled in Edom before there  was a king to                    the children of Israel.” R. Isaac                    Luria (<em>Ari</em>) reads                    this passage as hinting to the seven primordial  universes                    created and destroyed before our own, or eighth in the                     sequence. These first seven kings (or primordial  worlds) were                    riddled with narcissism and shared a lust to rule the  world                    (“<em>ani emlokh</em>”).                    Consequently, in kabbala, Edom becomes                    synonymous with power-lust and                    narcissism.</p>
<p><sup>4</sup> Gen.                    36:12.</p>
<p><sup>5</sup> <em>Leshem, HDOH,                    chelek 2, drush 4, anaf 18, siman 7.</em></p>
<p><sup>6</sup> R. Tsadok HaKohen,                    <em>Yisrael Kedoshim</em>, chapter 8 (p. 97, first                    edition).</p>
<p><sup>7</sup> Deut.                    8:17.</p>
<p><sup>8</sup> Kings 1:1:5. The                    <em>sefira</em> of <em>daat</em> is the place where  empathy                    originates, and Kabbala explains that “the other god,  is                    castrated, and has no daat (ie no capacity for true                    empathy).</p>
<p><sup>9</sup> Zohar 2:103a; Ari,                    Eytz Chayim, shaar 48, perek 2; Gra, Sifra d’Tsniuta,  perek                    3,4.</p>
<p><sup>10 </sup>שו&#8221;ע אבן העזר סימן                    ב, TB Yevamot                    78b-79a.</p>
<p><sup>11</sup> BR                    26:6.</p>
<p><sup>12</sup> BR 26:6.</p>
<p><sup>13</sup> The word, <em>paradoxus</em> is                    of Greek origin, but its original meaning was  “something                    surprising and unexpected.”</p>
<p><sup>14</sup> TB Eruvin                    13b</p>
<p><sup>15</sup> Zohar Chadash 74d, Megalla                    Amukoth 186.  This                    count includes the subletters (for example, that  letter <em>alef</em> is built from                    two<em> yuds</em> and a vav.                    Otherwise, there are 304, 805 letters in the                    Torah.</p>
<p><sup>16</sup> ר&#8217; צדק                    הכהן, צדקת הצדיק אות קצ&#8221;ו (סוף).</p>
<p><sup>17</sup> ר, שלמה עליאשאוו, ספר  הכללים, כלל ח&#8221;י ענף י&#8217; סימן ג&#8217;                    אות י&#8221;ב.</p>
<p><sup>18</sup> TY RH  3:8.</p>
<p><sup>19</sup> Mishna, Uktzin 3:12.                    “﻿R. Simeon b.                    Halafta said: the Blessed Holy One found no vessel  that could                    grasp and contain blessing for Israel save that of                    peace, as it is written: the Lord will give strength  unto his                    people; the Lord will bless his people with                    peace.”</p>
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