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Judaism

Dark story behind the festival of love

The disturbing biblical tale linked to the Fifteenth of Av

August 11, 2014 13:57
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By

Simon Rocker,

Simon Rocker

1 min read

Tu b’Av, which falls today, is probably the least-known festival on the Jewish calendar. Probably only regular daveners of shacharit will notice because the prayers of supplication which would normally be said that morning are omitted.

After the Three Weeks of mourning for the Temple, it is an ostensibly happy occasion, a kind of ancient Valentine’s Day (see right). It could also be said to be a day of Jewish unity.

The Talmud offers a number of explanations of its origin. During the wilderness, for example, Moses prohibited Jewish women marrying into a different tribe — a measure designed to prevent one tribe’s allotted portion of the Land of Israel passing to another through marriage. But on Tu b’Av, according to the rabbis, the tribes were permitted to intermarry again.

There is also a darker story behind the day — one of the most disturbing in the Bible — which goes back to the final chapter of the book of Judges. There was a Levite who had a concubine; she deserts him and goes back to her home. But he follows her and persuades her to return.

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