Author Topic: Tomorrow is Asara B'Tevet (10th of Tevet) which is a Fast Day  (Read 3074 times)

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Offline muman613

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Tomorrow is Asara B'Tevet (10th of Tevet) which is a Fast Day
« on: January 04, 2012, 06:12:47 PM »
Tomorrow observant Jews are obligated to fast in order to commemorate the beginning of the fall of Jerusalem. Since it involves the downfall of the Jewish state at the hands of the Babylonians we have instituted the custom of fasting on this day. This fast is considered a 'minor fast' because it only lasts from sunrise to sunset (8-10 hours) as opposed to other fast days which last from sundown to sundown (24 hours)...

Here are some articles and commentary on the importance of observing this fast:



http://www.hebcal.com/holidays/asara-btevet

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The Tenth of Tevet
Yom Ha-Kaddish HaKlali

In the State of Israel, Kaddish (the Jewish prayer for the deceased) is recited on this day for people whose date or place of death is unknown. Consequently, many rabbis have designated it as a day of remembrance for the Holocaust.


Historic Significance

'And it was in the ninth year of his reign, in the tenth month, in the tenth (day) of the month, that Nebuchadnetzar, King of Babylon came, he and all his hosts, upon Yerushalayim, and he encamped upon it and built forts around it. And the city came under siege till the eleventh year of King Tzidkiyahu. On the ninth of the month famine was intense in the city, the people had no bread, and the city was breached.' (Second Melachim 25).

We see then, that the tenth of Tevet - on which the siege of Yerushalayim began, was the beginning of the whole chain of calamities which finally ended with the destruction of the Beit Hamikdash.

The Purpose of Fasting

'The essential significance of the fast of the Tenth of Tevet, as well as that of the other fast days, is not primarily the grief and mourning which they evoke. Their aim is rather to awaken the hearts towards repentance; to recall to us, both the evil deeds of our fathers, and our own evil deeds, which caused anguish to befall both them and us and thereby to cause us to return towards the good. As it is said (Vayikra 26): 'And they shall confess their transgressions and the transgressions of their fathers.' (Rambam: Hilchot Ta'anit Chapter 5).

'The aim of fasting, therefore, is to subjugate our evil inclination by restriction of pleasure; to open our hearts and stir us to repentance and good deeds through which the gates of Divine mercy might be opened for us.' (Chayei Adam; Klal 33)

'Therefore, each person is obligated to examine his deeds and to repent during these days. As it is written of the people of Nineveh: 'And the Lord saw their actions' (Yonah 3), upon which the Rabbis say: 'It is not said, He saw their sackcloth and fasting, but rather their actions ' (Ta'anit 22). We see hence that the purpose of fasting is repentance.' (same as above)

'Therefore, the people, who fast but engage in pointless activities, grasp what is of secondary importance and miss what is essential. Nevertheless, repentance alone without fasting is also insufficient, because there is a positive commandment of Rabbinic origin to fast on this day.' (same as above)

The Observance of the Fast

The fast begins, as do all the public fasts with the exception of Tisha B'Av and Yom Kippur, at "alot haShachar," "dawn."

These four public fasts: Asarah B'Tevet, Tzom Gedaliah, Shiva Asar B'Tammuz, and Ta'anit Esther, are also alike in that there do not apply any additional physical constraints, such as the prohibition of washing or of wearing leather shoes, etc.

One who is in the category of being ill-even-without-danger, or who is a pregnant or nursing woman, for whom fasting might be difficult, and all children, are exempt from fasting.

All those who are exempt from fasting should not, in any case, eat publicly or indulge in purely pleasurable forms of consumption (such as eating black-'n-whites), but should eat only that which is necessary for good nutrition.

If a public fast falls on Shabbat, it is delayed until after Shabbat since fasting is not permitted on Shabbat. The one exception is Yom Kippur, which, based on a verse in the Torah, is observed even if it falls on Shabbat. The Geonim also write that the same was once true of the tenth of Tevet, since it is written of the tenth of Tevet: 'On this very day' (YechezkeI 2). In our calendar calculation, however, the tenth of Tevet can never fall on Shabbat.

If a public fast occurs on Erev Shabbat, we fast the entire day till the conclusion of the fast, even though it means entering Shabbat while fasting. Neither "Avinu Malkeinu" nor "Tachanun" are recited at Mincha.  The fast continues until after the completion of Maariv for Shabbat (after the appearance of the stars).  One should not eat or drink anything until after Kiddush.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tenth_of_Tevet

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History

According to II Kings (25:1-25:4), on the 10th day of the 10th month (which is Tevet when counted from Nisan, the "first month" according to Exodus 12:1-2), in the ninth year of Zedekiah's reign (425 BCE), Nebuchadnezzar, the Babylonian king, began the siege of Jerusalem. A year and a half later, on the 17th of Tammuz in the eleventh year of Zedekiah's reign[1] (427 BCE) (Jeremiah 52.6-7), he broke through the city walls. The siege ended with the destruction of the Temple three weeks later, on the 9th of Av, the end of the first Kingdoms and the exile of the Jewish people to Babylon. The Tenth of Tevet is thus considered part of the cycle of fasts connected with these events, which includes: Shivah Asar B'Tammuz (17th of Tammuz) and Tisha B'Av (9th of Av).

The first reference to the Tenth of Tevet as a fast appears in Zechariah (8:19) where it is called the "fast of the tenth month." One opinion in the Talmud (b. Rosh Hashana 18b) states that the "fast of the tenth month" refers to the fifth of Tevet, when, according to Ezekiel (33:21), news of the destruction of the Temple reached those already in exile in Babylon. However, the tenth is the date observed today, according to the other opinion presented in the Talmud.[2] Other references to the fast and the affliction can be found in Ezekiel  24:1-24:2 (the siege) and Jeremiah (52:4-52:6).[3]

According to tradition, as described by the liturgy for the day's selichos, the fast also commemorates other calamities that occurred throughout Jewish history on the tenth of Tevet and the two days preceding it:

* On the eighth of Tevet one year during the 200s BC, a time of Hellenistic rule of Judea during the Second Temple period, Ptolemy, King of Egypt, ordered the translation of the Hebrew Bible into Greek, a work which later became known as the Septuagint.[4] Seventy sages were placed in solitary confinement and ordered to translate the Torah into Greek. The expected outcome would be a multitude of different translations that would then be compared and critiqued by the Greeks. This would demonstrate the muddled meanings of the Torah and the divergent opinions of Jewish interpreters. However, all seventy sages independently made identical translations into Greek. The Greeks saw this as a most impressive feat. However, various rabbinical sources see this event as a tragedy, a debasement of the divine nature of the Torah, and a subversion of its spiritual qualities. They reasoned that upon translation from the original Hebrew, the Torah's legal codes & deeper layers of meaning would be lost. Many Jewish laws are formulated in terms of specific Hebrew words employed in the Torah; without the original Hebrew code, authenticity of the legal system would be damaged. The mystical ideas contained in the Torah are also drawn from the original Hebrew. As such, these would not be accessed by individuals studying the Torah in Greek (or any other language) alone. Other ancient sources, such as Philo, consider it a miraculous achievement, a cause for jubilation rather than mourning. Philo in fact suggests that the day was marked by celebration.

* Ezra the Scribe, the great leader who brought some Jews back to the Holy Land from the Babylonian exile and who ushered in the era of the Second Temple, died on the ninth of Tevet.[5]

You shall make yourself the Festival of Sukkoth for seven days, when you gather in [the produce] from your threshing floor and your vat.And you shall rejoice in your Festival-you, and your son, and your daughter, and your manservant, and your maidservant, and the Levite, and the stranger, and the orphan, and the widow, who are within your cities
Duet 16:13-14

Offline muman613

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Re: Tomorrow is Asara B'Tevet (10th of Tevet) which is a Fast Day
« Reply #1 on: January 04, 2012, 06:20:33 PM »
Nice talk on the issues to contemplate on this date:

http://www.naaleh.com/viewclass/381/single/
You shall make yourself the Festival of Sukkoth for seven days, when you gather in [the produce] from your threshing floor and your vat.And you shall rejoice in your Festival-you, and your son, and your daughter, and your manservant, and your maidservant, and the Levite, and the stranger, and the orphan, and the widow, who are within your cities
Duet 16:13-14

Offline muman613

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Re: Tomorrow is Asara B'Tevet (10th of Tevet) which is a Fast Day
« Reply #2 on: January 05, 2012, 04:08:17 PM »
Here is an article which discusses the reason why some fasts can occur right up till Shabbat...



http://www.israelnationalnews.com/Articles/Article.aspx/11080

The Tenth of Tevet

If the 10th of Tevet falls on Friday (as it did last year), then we fast on Friday: we enter Shabbat fasting, and do not eat until after Kiddush, in contrast to other fasts. Why?
From Daniel Pinner


 

“Thus said HaShem, Lord of Legions: The fast of the fourth [month, i.e. 17th of Tammuz]; and the fast of the fifth [month, i.e. 9th of Av]; and the fast of the seventh [month, i.e. Tzom Gedaliah, 3rd of Tishrei], and the fast of the tenth [month, i.e. 10th of Tevet] will turn into rejoicing and gladness and festivities for the House of Judah. So love truth and peace” (Zechariah 8:19).

As I write these words, the Beit ha-Mikdash, the Holy Temple, has not yet been rebuilt, the Temple Mount is still desolate under the gold-plated desecration of foreign worship, and mashiach has not yet come; so the 17th of Tammuz, the 9th of Av, the 3rd of Tishrei, and the 10th of Tevet have not yet turned into rejoicing and gladness and festivities. Only if this would have changed before Thursday would we be feasting rather than fasting from dawn until nightfall (Rambam, Laws of Fasts 5:19).

The 10th of Tevet commemorates the day, 2,436 years ago, that Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon, began the siege of Jerusalem, which would last a year and a half until he would conquer the city and destroy the Holy Temple: “And it happened in the ninth year of [Zedekiah’s] reign, in the tenth month [i.e. Tevet], on the tenth of the month, that Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon came – he and all his army – against Jerusalem, besieged it and built a siege-tower around it. And the city remained besieged until the eleventh year of King Zedekiah. In the fourth month [Av], on the ninth of the month, when the famine in the city strengthened, and there was not [even] bread for the nation of the land, the city was breached, and all the men of war fled, leaving the city by night” (Jeremiah 52:4; almost identical in 2 Kings 25:1-4).

Additionally to these four fasts (the 17th of Tammuz, the 9th of Av, the 3rd of Tishrei, and the 10th of Tevet) a fifth fast was added, the Fast of Esther (Rambam, Laws of Fasts 5:5; compare the wording of Aruch ha-Shulchan, Orach Chaim 686:3). Of these five fasts, the 9th of Av is the most severe: it is the only one on which showering, anointing with oil (in modern usage, body lotion or hand-cream), wearing leather shoes, and marital relations are also forbidden (Shulchan Aruch, Orach Chaim 550:2).

Of these five fasts, the only one whose date can never fall on Shabbat, the Sabbath, is the 10th of Tevet. This, of course, applies to the fixed calendar as calculated by Hillel II (Hillel ben Yehudah, Nasi or head of the Sanhedrin) and adopted in 4119 (359 C.E.); before that, when Rosh Chodesh was determined by witnesses sighting the moon, the 10th of Tevet could have fallen on Shabbat.

The only fast which overrides Shabbat is, of course, Yom Kippur, the only fast which is commanded in the Torah; other than Yom Kippur, it is forbidden to fast on Shabbat. Hence if any of these fasts fall on Shabbat, they are postponed to Sunday, “because we do not hasten [the commemoration of] disasters” (Prishah, commentary on Aruch ha-Shulchan, Orach Chaim 550, paraphrasing a rule cited in Tractate Soferim 17:4).

This, then, applies to 17th Tammuz, 9th of Av, and Tzom Gedaliah; Ta’anit Esther, by contrast, which does not commemorate a disaster, is instead advanced to the previous Thursday. The Mishnah Berurah explains why Ta’anit Esther is advanced two days to Thursday, and not just one day to Friday: “A priori, we do not set fasts for Erev Shabbat, out of respect for Shabbat, because on fasts we are accustomed to saying selichot [penitential prayers] and tachanunim [pleas for forgiveness from sins]; but we would not do this on erev Shabbat, because it would interfere with respect for Shabbat” (Mishnah Berurah 686:3). Or, as others have expressed it, “we do not want to enter Shabbat fasting” (Mishnah Berurah 249. s.v. tzarich le-hit’anot; Novellae of the Ritv”a on Tractate Eiruvin 41b, s.v. Halacha mit’aneh u-mashlim; Shulchan Aruch ha-Rav, Orach Chaim, Laws of Shabbat 249; Aruch ha-Shulchan, Orach Chaim, Laws of Megillah 686:3).

Indeed, so central is this principle that the Talmud (Eiruvin 41a; Yerushalmi Ta’anit 2:14) cites Rabbi Yuda’s opinion that “if the 9th of Av falls on a Friday [which can never happen with our fixed calendar], then an egg’s bulk of food is brought for him and he eats, in order not to enter Shabbat fasting”. That is to say, according to this opinion, the principle of not entering Shabbat fasting is so important, that it even supersedes the fast of Tish’a be’Av!

But the exception to this rule is the 10th of Tevet: if it falls on Friday (as it did last year), then we fast on Friday: we enter Shabbat fasting, and do not eat until after Kiddush. And there is more: the Beit Yosef cites the Abudraham (Rabbi David ben Yosef Abudraham, 14th century Spain): “Rabbi David Abudraham wrote in Laws of Fasts (page 254) that the 10th of Tevet is different from the other fasts, in that if it falls on Shabbat, then we cannot postpone it to another day, because it is written as happening ‘on this very day’ [Ezekiel 24:2], the same words as describe Yom Kippur [three times in Leviticus 23:28-30]” (Beit Yosef, Orach Chaim 550).

The Aruch ha-Shulchan, Orach Chaim 549:3 says similarly: “We find in the name of that the earliest authorities that if the 10th of Tevet would have fallen on Shabbat, then [the fast] would overrule Shabbat…even though we do not follow this ruling”.

So though this ruling is disputed, what is undisputed practical halakhah is that if the 10th of Tevet falls on Friday, then the fast continues until nightfall – that is, into Shabbat.

Clearly, the 10th of Tevet has such fundamental import that it overrides other principles, in ways which even the 9th of Av cannot. And this is so startling that it demands an explanation.

As we have seen, the 10th of Tevet was the day when Nebuchadnezzar began the siege of Jerusalem. The disaster would culminate a year and a half later with the destruction of the Holy Temple; but the Jewish perspective identifies the beginning of the process as the most critical juncture. This is why we mourn the destruction of the Holy Temple on the 9th of Av, even though the main destruction occurred on the 10th: the Babylonians (1st Temple) and the Romans (2nd Temple) ignited the fires on the 9th, so we commemorate the disaster on the day it began.

The 10th of Tevet marks the beginning of the end of Jewish independence; Nebuchadnezzar’s siege was G-d’s final warning, the final period of grace that He granted His nation to repent.

The Midrash gives a moving and graphic account: “When that evil man came with other kings to Jerusalem, it appeared to them that it would take them only a short time to capture it; but G-d strengthened the people of Jerusalem until the third year – perhaps they would repent – and there were heroes beyond number in Jerusalem who were fighting against the Chaldeans [i.e. Babylonians], bringing down many of them as war dead. There was a hero there called Avika ben Gavtari who, when the enemy soldiers would launch boulders to destroy the city wall, would catch them in his hands and throw them back at the soldiers, killing many of them. By the time that he began to catch those boulders with his feet and return them to the enemy soldiers, the [Jews’] sins caused a wind to come which blew him off the fortified wall, and he was smashed up and died. That was the time when Jerusalem was breached, and the Chaldeans [i.e. Babylonians] entered” (Yalkut Shimoni, Eichah 909).

During that year and a half, from the ninth to the eleventh year of King Zedekiah’s reign, the nation had its last chance to avert disaster. The sentence was only executed on the 17th of Tammuz and the 9th of Av – but the judgement had begun on the 10th of Tevet. That was the origin of all the subsequent disasters; that was the day when the countdown began.

The final sentence could have been delayed, or even averted altogether, if only the nation had repented. But the date of the beginning of judgement could no longer be altered.

And this is why the 10th of Tevet overrides Shabbat in a way that even the 9th of Av cannot. For sure, the 10th of Tevet is halakhically more lenient than the 9th of Av, in terms of what hardships and what medical conditions justify breaking the fast, also in terms of what activities are prohibited (as we saw above, showering, anointing with oil, wearing leather shoes, and marital relations are forbidden on the 9th of Av but permitted on the 10th of Tevet), and also in terms of time (the 9th of Av lasts 25 hours, the 10th of Tevet only dawn till dusk). But in terms of when the fast occurs, the 10th of Tevet has a stringency which is matched only by Yom Kippur itself.

Let us learn from this: even after G-d’s judgement has begun, He always gives us warning, always allows us time and opportunity to repent and avert the disaster. Even if the sentencing cannot be delayed, it is yet within our power to stay the execution.

And the fast of the 10th of Tevet will yet turn into rejoicing and gladness and festivities for the House of Judah.
You shall make yourself the Festival of Sukkoth for seven days, when you gather in [the produce] from your threshing floor and your vat.And you shall rejoice in your Festival-you, and your son, and your daughter, and your manservant, and your maidservant, and the Levite, and the stranger, and the orphan, and the widow, who are within your cities
Duet 16:13-14