Celebrating
Romantic Love
Tu B'Av carries an
important lesson for modern relationships.
By Yosef I. Abramowitz & Rabbi Susan Silverman
Though Tu B'Av is a holiday mentioned in the Talmud, the
observance of this holiday has only recently been revived--most notably in
Israel--where it is celebrated as the Jewish equivalent of Valentine's Day,
with dancing, the giving of red roses, and dedicating love songs on the radio.
Because of this renewed popularity, Tu B'Av is included in the modern holiday
section of this website. Reprinted with permission of the authors from Jewish
Family and Life: Traditions, Holidays, and Values for Today’s Parents and
Children, published by Golden Books.
The walls of Jerusalem have historically been a source of
inspiration for romance and love. Thousands of years before anyone heard of
Saint Valentine or Sadie Hawkins, the Jewish people created a
Jerusalem-centered love festival for couples. This custom is quite in keeping
with the sensuous poetry of the Song of Songs, canonized in the Hebrew
Scriptures.
In the glow of a full
summer moon, young women, robed in white, would dance in the fields outside the
walls of Jerusalem. The men would follow in hopes of finding a bride. This
ancient Jewish love festival is called Tu B'Av because it was celebrated on the
15th day of the Hebrew month of Av (the Hebrew letters for "Tu" equal
the number 15). Coming one week after Tisha B'Av, the saddest day of the Jewish
year, Tu B'Av is celebrated outside of the walls of the city, away from the
Temple Mount, the site of the destruction.
Whereas Tisha B'Av is
the day when [tradition says] God declared that the Jews would wander 40 years
in the desert (until the generation that knew slavery died out), Tu B'Av is the
day when, 40 years later, the remaining 15,000 Israelites of the desert
generation were told they would be able to enter the Promised land. God was
able to forgive the Jewish people on this day, even for the sin of having built
and worshiped a Golden calf.
In the Talmud (Ta'anit
4:8) we read that Rabbi Simeon ben Gamliel said there never were in Israel
greater days of joy than the 15th of Av and the Day of Atonement. On these days
the daughters of Jerusalem used to walk out in white garments that they
borrowed in order not to put to shame anyone who had none. The daughters of
Jerusalem danced in the vineyards exclaiming, "Young man, lift up your
eyes and see what you choose for yourself. Do not set your eyes on beauty but
set them on good family. Grace is deceitful and beauty is vain. But a woman
that fears God, she will be praised."
Rabbi Simeon's
linking of Tu B'Av and Yom Kippur is at first disturbing. Why does the Jewish
year end with a celebration of love? The answer says a lot about Judaism's
unique perspective on relationships, a perspective that could enhance courtship
today.
Tu B'Av, like Yom
Kippur, is about introspection and new beginnings concerning our relationships
and personal values. How courting was done is indicative of this view. The
young girls borrowed white dresses so that the young men could not choose among
them according to materialistic concerns. The Talmud teaches that women set the
rules; the women admonish their suitors to pick not according to beauty, but by
the good name of the women's families and by their fear of God. Today we live
in a world that is status and fashion conscious, a world of beauty pageants and
beauty ideals set by television and movies, and some synagogues are even
described as "meat markets" where one goes to look over the unmarried
merchandise.
Tu B'Av tells us to look beneath the surface when looking
for (or at) a life partner, just as Yom Kippur forces us to look deep into
ourselves before God grants us life anew. Like Yom Kippur, Tu B'Av is a time
for reflection and introspection. But instead of being an individual process,
it is a mutual, shared experience between two people.
Tu B'Av is a great
day for weddings, commitment ceremonies, renewal of vows, or proposing. It is a
day for enhancing current relationships or defining anew what you are looking
for in a partner. It is a day for romance, explored through singing, dancing,
giving flowers, and studying. The rabbis teach that on Tu B'Av one begins to
set more time for studying Torah as the High Holidays approach.
Yosef I. Abramowitz and Rabbi Susan Silverman are
co-founders of Jewish Family & Life!,
of which he is CEO. They live in Newton, Mass.
Copyright 1997 by Yosef I. Abramowitz and Susan Silverman