by Rav Ehud Achituv, Rabbi of Bnei Dekalim, yeshiva.org.il, translated by Hillel Fendel.
Today, the Tenth of Tevet, is one of
the five minor fast days instituted by the Sages of old, and it has received
extra significance in modern times.
On this day some 2,500 years ago,
shortly before the destruction of the First Holy Temple, the Babylonian siege
on Jerusalem began. As the Prophet Yechezkel wrote (24,1-2): "G-d's
word came to me in the ninth year [of King Tzidkiyah's reign], in the tenth
month, on the tenth of the month, saying: 'Son of man, write for yourself the
name of the day, this very day; the king of Babylon has besieged Jerusalem on
this very day.'"
The beginning of this siege that led
to destruction and exile marks the start of the "hiding of G-d's
countenance" from Israel. This is as the Talmud tells us (B'rachot 32b):
"From the day that the Temple was destroyed, an iron wall divided between Israel and their Father in Heaven, as G-d said to Yechezkel (2,4): 'Take for yourself an iron skillet and make it an iron wall between you and the city.'"
G-d continued to hide His
countenance from us, in varying degrees, not only with the destruction of the
First Temple, but even during the period of the Second Temple, to a certain
extent – and of course very notably throughout all the tribulations of our long
bitter national exile since then. The climax was reached during the devastating
Shoah of the past century. The famous words of the Piaseczna Rebbe, R.
Kalonymus Kalman Shapira of Poland - who himself was murdered al Kiddush
Hashem, sanctifying G-d's Name, during the Shoah - speak for themselves regarding how
historically catastrophic was this period. In one of his inspiring talks during
the height of the horrific years of the Holocaust, he said:
"The unprecedented tribulations
and terrible methods of death innovated by the evil murderers upon us, the
House of Israel, from the end of 5642 (summer 1942) – according to my knowledge
of the words of our Sages and of the general history of Israel, they have no
precedent in the chronicles of Israel. May G-d have mercy upon us and save us
from them in the blink of an eye."
So too did Rav Tzvi Yehuda Kook,
Rosh Yeshivat Merkaz HaRav, relate to the terrors of the Holocaust. It was his
custom to recite the Av HaRachamim prayer, which was composed in memory of the
victims of the Crusades, every single Shabbat, even on those when it is not
customary to say it.
This is why the Chief Rabbinate
instituted the 10th Day of Tevet every year as the General Day of
Kaddish, for the holy martyrs of the Shoah – because the "hiding of G-d's
countenance" that began on this day reached its climax with the
liquidation of a third of our nation by the accursed Nazis and their
accomplices.
The Kaddish for All
It is commonly and mistakenly
believed that the Day of General Kaddish is a memorial day only for those whose
date of death in the Holocaust is unknown, so that they will have a day on
which their relatives can say Kaddish and observe all mourning customs for them.
However, there is even more to the
General Day of Kaddish. The Rabbinate's 10th of Tevet regulation continues:
"This day is a memorial day for
the myriads of families that were totally wiped out without a trace, leaving no
survivors to say Kaddish for them. For these people, the entire House of Israel
is their redeemer. Each person must therefore light, on the night of the 10th
of Tevet, a memorial candle in his home. In addition, one whose parents are not
alive should take part in the recitation of Kaddish for all those families who
have no one else to say Kaddish for them."
In this spirit also wrote one of the
members of the Chief Rabbinate Council in those days, Rabbi Mordechai Fogelman,
Chief Rabbi of Kiryat Motzkin, north of Haifa. He wrote in his work of responsa:
"The 10th of Tevet was declared by the Chief Rabbinate to be a
date for reciting the General Kaddish. We say the Kaddish all together in the
synagogues in memory of the millions of brothers and sisters who were killed
and destroyed in the Holocaust years of the European exile."
Similar sentiments were expressed by
Rav Katriel Fishel Tchurash, another member of the Chief Rabbinate Council at
the time. He wrote: "It is clear that even one who does not have relatives
who were killed in the Holocaust, but is only an observer taking part in the communal
sorrow, should try to do something on behalf of the victims' souls and say
Kaddish for them."
The
Vizhnizer Rebbe agreed, saying that on this day, "the entire congregation
recites the Mourner's Kaddish."
For
this reason, the current Chief Rabbi of the city of Ramat Gan wrote to arouse
the public: "We must try and try again to have the public not forget that
which the Amalek of our generation did to us. Everyone should say Kaddish on
this day… and at least those whose parents are not alive should derive a kal
vachomer [an a-fortiori argument] for themselves and join in as well for
the communal Kaddish."
May it be G-d's will that we merit to see the fulfillment of the Prophet's words: "The fast of the fourth and the fast of the fifth and the fast of the tenth [month, Asarah B'Tevet] will be for the House of Judah rejoicing and happiness, and may you [plural] love truth and peace" (Zechariah 8,19).
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