ELIZABETH APPLEBAUM AppleTree Editor T he name most associated with Tisha b'Av is Jeremiah (in Hebrew, Yirmiyahu) the prophet. By tradition, Jeremiah is the author of Eichah, or Lamentations, which we read on the night of Tisha b'Av. Jeremiah has come through the ages as a tragic figure, a lonely voice exhorting his people to return to the ways of the Torah and imploring the government to avoid war, lest they witness the down- fall of Jewish independence and the destruction of the Holy Temple and Jerusalem. (His warnings, alas, proved true.) One cannot read the Book ofJeremiah without feeling a sense of closeness to the author. Of all the prophets in the Tanach, none is so self-revealing as Jeremiah. He tells us of his feelings, his reaction to having been chosen as the conscience of the nation. Jeremiah was born into a priestly family in Anatot, a village north- east of Jerusalem, around 645 B.C.E. It was a troubled time. The Jewish state had gone through 52 years of political and religious decadence under King Menashe. The country was forced to submit to the authority of Assyria, its feared northern neighbor. Religiously, As Tisha bAv nears, the tragic story of the author of "Lamentations." the people descended into paganism, and Judaism was so repressed that the Torah completely disappeared. Succeeding King Menashe was his son, Amon, who reigned less than two years before he was assassinated. King Amon's brother, Josiah, followed. It was in the 13th year of King Josiah's reign that Jeremiah heard the call to begin his mission. Although at that time it was common for men to marry early, Jeremiah entered his ministry at a young age and remained celibate (married, as it were, to his prophetic mission). In fact, Jeremiah fre- quently brought up the image of husband and wife to describe the relationship of God and the Jewish people. To Jeremiah, an apostate Jew was like an adulterous wife. Jeremiah welcomed the news that occurred in the 18th year of Josiah's, reign. During repairs to the Temple, the high priest found a scroll under the rubbish. He gave it to a scribe, who, in turn, read it to the king. The scroll was the Torah, and for the first time, King Josiah real- ized the extent to which Judaism had been corrupted by the people's pagan ways. The king undertook national religious reform, purging the coun- try of idols and rural sanctuaries. He ordered the Temple purified and reintroduced the celebration of Pesach (Passover). During Josiah's reign, Israel's old enemy, Assyria, was on the decline. The Scythians, a Central Asian people, overran Western Asia. Assyria and Egypt, erstwhile rivals, joined hands to face the new peril. Meanwhile, a new power, Babylonia, had come on the scene and threatened to overtake all the old empires. The Egyptians marched up the coast of Israel to aid the Assyrians, but Josiah, fearing an empowered Assyria, sought to block their advance. At Megiddo, King Josiah was killed. The pro-pagan forces saw it as a defeat of the king's reforms, as well. The successive monarchies were manipulated by Egypt. When Jeremiah exhorted the government and people to resist political manipulations and return to Judaism lest the Temple itself be destroyed, he was charged with treason and threatened with death. Impact On Israel Israel had more to fear than an angry prophet, with Assyria in decline and Babylonia the new force in the region. Jeremiah saw immediately what lay in store for the Jewish nation and urged alle- giance to Babylonia. • At first, the new Jewish king, Jehoiakim, heeded Jeremiah's advice. But three years later, believing he could resist the region's super power, King Jehoiakim broke off.with Babylonia, which immediate- ly roused its allies to attack. The king lost his life-in the battle, and his son and successor, Jehoiachin, foolishly continued his father's policy. King Jehoiachin ended up surrendering. He, along with the rest of the royal court, the nobility and 1,000 craftsmen, were exiled to Babylon. The next Jewish king, Zedekiah, began his reign by acknowledg- ing Babylonia's dominance. But soon King Zedekiah was swept along by a wave of optimism and false security that led him to believe that the Jews could revolt against Babylonia and win. Jeremiah counseled against such nonsense. He even appeared on the streets of Jerusalem with a wooden yoke around his neck, to symbolize the dominance of Babylonia and the futility of trying to fight it. Jeremiah was scorned and mocked. King Zedekiah took Judea into an anti-Babylonian military coalition. He rejected Jeremiah's counsel to remain loyal to Nebuchadnezzar, the Babylonian king. The war began and Jerusalem was laid siege. The Judean authorities arrested Jeremiah and threw him in prison. The Babylonians closed in. Ultimately, even though he tried to escape, King Zedekiah was captured by the Babylonians, blinded and sent in chains to Babylon. One month later, Jerusalem and the Temple were destroyed and much of the Jewish population was deported to Babylon. The Babylonians appointed Gedaliah, grandson of the scribe who read the recovered Torah to King Josiah, as governor of the Jewish remnant in Israel. Then, the neighboring Ammonites, in collusion with members of the defunct Jewish royal house, had Gedaliah assassinated. Gedaliah's followers feared vengeance from Nebuchadnezzar. They fled to Egypt with Jeremiah, taking him against his will. Jeremiah continued his prophecy in exile. Chapter 44 of the Book ofJeremiah includes the last recorded words of the prophet. The rigors of exile probably were too much for Jeremiah, and pre- sumably, not long after he was taken away, he died. ❑