The Ninth of Av

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The Ninth of Av
The Ninth of Av in Yeshiva.co
  • 5. Havdala on Tisha Be-Av When It Begins on Motza’ei Shabbat
    The fast begins immediately at the end of Shabbat, making it is impossible to recite havdala over a cup of wine. Therefore, we postpone reciting havdala over a beverage until after Tisha Be-Av ends.
  • 2. Which Foods Are Prohibited?
    During the se’uda ha-mafseket, one may eat as much raw food that he wants. If one cooks them, however, they are considered cooked dishes, despite the fact that they are edible even when uncooked.
  • 3. Customs of the Se’uda Ha-mafseket
    The Talmud relates how R. Yehuda b. R. Ila’i would act at his se’uda ha-mafseket: He would be given dry bread with salt, and in an undignified place – between the furnace and the oven – eat it with a flask of water, as though in the presence of a newly-deceased relative.
  • 1. Se’uda Ha-mafseket
    What is the se’uda ha-mafseket? It is the last meal before the fast, eaten after midday.
  • 4. Tisha Be-Av
    The Sages state in the Mishna: Five tragic events befell our forefathers on the ninth of Av
  • The loss of the world as we knew it
    When the Holy Temple was destroyed, the loss was of a whole way of life.
  • Tisha B'Av Today
    A survey recently published reveals that a third of American Jewry has completely disconnected from the Jewish people. Another weighty survey reveals that a quarter of American Jews have become addicted to the anti-Semitic belief that Israel commits genocide against Palestinians, just as the Germans did to the Jewish people during the Holocaust.
  • What do we mourn during this time of Redemption?
    When half of the People of Israel reside in the Land of Israel, Jerusalem is continually being built, the birth-rate increases, our enemies destroy themselves, the Land gives of her fruit luxuriously, and anti-Semitism becomes less frequent, it is incumbent on us to define for ourselves what we mourn on the 9th of Av, and what we lament during the weeks of "between the straits".
  • Why is Tisha B'Av Called a Festival?
    Just before the somewhat sorrowful Tachanun prayer in our prayerbooks appears a small notation saying that we are not to say it on Tisha B'Av – because this day is a mo'ed, a festive day. How can it be that a day commemorating such a grave national calamity as the destruction of the Holy Temples and the exile of the nation could actually be considered, in any way, a festival?
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