by Larry Domnitch
After Tisha B'Av, the burning of the Temple continued for another day.
Its affects continue to be felt throughout Jewish history.
The fires that consumed the first Jerusalem Temple began on the ninth
of Av, and continued to burn until middle of the following day. The
Talmudic sage Rabbi Yochanan stated, "Had I been alive in that
generation, I would have fixed [the day of mourning] for the tenth [of
Av], because the greater part of the Temple was burnt on that day."
As Tisha B'Av has been a day of misfortune throughout Jewish history,
so too has been the Tenth of Av:
Expulsion from France
On July 22, 1306, the tenth of Av, the Jews of France were arrested and
ordered to leave the country. Approximately 100,000 were forced to
wander in search of new homes, and many perished along the way.
The Jewish community was not aware of the planned expulsion, as
France's king, Phillip the 'Fair', did not want them to flee in advance
with their assets. One of the monarch's motives for expelling the Jews
was financial. Phillip saw plundering Jewish wealth as a way to shore
up France's economic woes. No doubt, frustration at centuries of failed
attempts to force the Jews into apostasy was also a contributing
factor.
The expulsion had serious consequences beyond the immense human
suffering. It ended the great era of Jewish scholarship of the
Tosaphists of France, whose commentaries illuminated Talmudic texts.
Some local European provinces had previously expelled their Jews, but
this decree -- which applied to most of France -- was by far the most
significant expulsion to date in Medieval Europe. The expulsion also
set a precedent for other mass expulsions, which plagued the Jews of
Europe in the Middle Ages. The existence of Jewish communities within a
European country became precarious. Jews never knew for sure if they
might be compelled by law to pack their bags.
Ten years later, Louis the X invited the Jews back to France. Some
accepted his offer. The return of the Jews of France would not last,
however. They were expelled again in 1396 by Charles VI.
Barred from England
While Jews in some countries were being expelled, other countries
simply denied Jews entry.
In the late 19th century, England was a haven for tens of thousands of
Jews fleeing oppression in Russia. Many of the immigrants made their
way to the East End of London. Their continuous flow had slowly aroused
the opposition of many British lawmakers. Some as far back as the
1880's dubbed the immigration wave, "the alien invasion." Many viewed
the these Jews as a pariah, or a "state within a state." With the
increase of xenophobia, laws were proposed to limit this flow into
Great Britain.
On August 11,1905, the tenth of Av, the Aliens Act was passed. This
entitled an immigration officer to deny entry to an 'undesirable
immigrant,' defined as one who had no means of earning a living, one
who is judged to be a lunatic, or one who was convicted of a
nonpolitical crime. The bill also allowed for the expulsion of those
who had already immigrated and were deemed undesirable.
With the passage of the Alien Act, immigration restriction had become
law. This British anti-immigration policy would become increasingly
stricter over time. It also impacted American policy, and in 1924, the
U.S. Congress passed the Johnson Reed Act which severely restricted the
flow of immigrants from Eastern Europe. These restrictions remained in
force throughout the Holocaust, having grave implications for European
Jewry in desperate need of sanctuary.
In Israel
On the tenth of Av in 1929, Arab hatred of Zionism once again boiled
over into full-scale riots.
The Arabs of Jerusalem were well aware of the significance of the
Western Wall to the Jews and used this holy site to incite against
Zionism. A few months earlier, the British consented to Arab demands to
limit prayers at the Western Wall. In the middle of Yom Kippur
services, British soldiers entered the grounds of the Western Wall and
removed the mechitza, the divider separating men from women when in
prayer.
Meanwhile, the Mufti of Jerusalem, Haj Amin Al-Husseini, whipped Arab
masses into a rage by charging that the Jews were attacking the Muslim
holy places. On August 16, 1929, as a newly constructed door near the
Wall was opened, Jewish worshippers were attacked, despite British
assurances.
The next day, thousands of Arabs armed with clubs, swords and daggers
converged upon the Mosque of Omar to hear impassioned hate speeches.
The cry of "slaughter the Jews" spread throughout the Holy Land. Over
the next ten days, Arab riots would take the lives of 133 Jews and
leave 339 wounded. In Hebron and elsewhere, Jewish communities were
ravaged by Arab mobs.
Throughout the Arab world, mass demonstrations were held in sympathy
with the Palestinian Arabs. In Iraq, 10,000 assembled in anger over the
victims of "British Zionist aggression." This pressured the British to
yield to Arab terms: Passfield White Paper of 1929, and the MacDonald
White Paper of 1939 imposed severe restrictions on Jewish immigration
into the Land of Israel -- subject to Arab consent.
In 2005, on the tenth of Av, the government of Israel began the Gaza
Disengagement, where 9,000 Jewish residents were evicted from their
homes. Despite mass rallies against the disengagement, and an
orange-ribbon campaign, Prime Minister Ariel Sharon implemented the
plan with the hope of reducing security concerns and diffusing the
demographic problem of Gaza's 1.5 million Arabs. Upon completion of the
evacuation, all 21 Jewish communities in Gaza were bulldozed and
destroyed. Only the synagogues were left standing; these were then
torched by Arab mobs.
The destruction of the Temple, which continued into the tenth of Av,
was an unfortunate harbinger of more tragedies to befall the Jewish
people on that fateful day.
Original
Source
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