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The Pinch
From the straits I call G-d; He answers
me with the expanse of the Divine
Psalms 118:5[1]
"Between the strictures"[2]
is the prophet Jeremiah's description of the period between the 17th of Tammuz,
the day the walls of Jerusalem were breached, and the 9th of Av, when the Holy
Temple was destroyed and the exile of Israel commenced. To date, these two days
are observed as days of fasting, and the three-week "strait" between
them as a period of mourning and repentance.
The narrow strait, however, is not a roadblock; on the contrary, it is a mechanism
for increased productivity. Hydraulic power plants, rockets and garden hoses
employ it to squeeze a greater degree of power and velocity from the element
they constrain. The shofar, sounded to waken man to repentance, is also such
a device, its narrow mouth pinching the stream of air expelled from the blower's
lungs into the piercing note that emerges from its wide, upward-sweeping end.
The same is true of the strictures of Tammuz 17 and Av 9 and the two thousand
years of physical exile and spiritual darkness they mourn. Twenty centuries
of suppression have wrenched the Jewish soul through the funnel of galut,[3] revealing its deepest convictions and provoking
its highest potentials. From these terrible straits we have never ceased to
seek G-d, and it is this seeking that will yield the "divine expanse"
of ultimate Redemption and the perfect world of the Messianic Age.
"On that day," proclaims the prophet, "the great shofar will
be sounded. And they will come, those lost in the land of Assyria and those
forsaken in the land of Egypt,[4] and bow before G-d on the Holy
mountain, Jerusalem."[5]
On that day, the goodness and perfection of G-d's creation will burst through
the straits of concealment and blossom into unconstrained realization.
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[1] Recited before the sounding of the shofar on Rosh
Hashanah.
[2] Lamentations 1:3; see Midrash Rabbah on verse.
[3] Exile and spiritual displacement.
[4] The Hebrew Eretz Mitzrayim (Land of Egypt)
literally translates as "the land of the strictures."
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