The Nine Days — Halacha & Soul-Work of Bein HaMetzarim
"Mishenichnas Av memaatin b'simcha" — when the month of Av enters, we reduce joy. The mourning customs are not sadness for its own sake: they re-open the wound of the Beith HaMikdash (the Temple) so that we feel the loss and set to work rebuilding.
The Second Temple fell in a generation full of Torah, mitzvot and kindness — brought down by sinat chinam (baseless hatred), Yoma 9b. So the repair is not more stringency but ahavat chinam (baseless love) and the hardest of the middot: to be maavir al midotav (to let go of one's due).
On the halacha: this shiur follows the Sephardic ruling of Yalkut Yosef. The Nine Days restrict meat and wine, laundry and fresh clothes, bathing for pleasure, new garments and Shehecheyanu (the blessing of renewal) — with clear leniencies for children, the ill, Shabbat and a se'udat mitzvah. Tisha B'Av carries its five prohibitions. Every ruling below is marked MOUTTAR or ASSOUR.
And the engine of it all: study mussar in these days, as Rav Yisrael Salanter zatsal taught — for while the candle still burns, it is always possible to mend.
1When Av enters — reducing joy
These weeks are not a season of gloom for its own sake. The Sages legislated avelut (mourning) — real, structured, halachic mourning — so that the destruction of the Temple would not stay an abstraction. We lower our joy in order to feel what is missing, and feeling it, to want it back enough to build.
2Why the Temple fell — sinat chinam
The generation of the Second Temple learned Torah, kept mitzvot and did acts of kindness — and still it fell, because of baseless hatred. That is the terrifying lesson: a person can be observant and still corrode the world. The measure of our repair is therefore not how much we add, but how we treat one another.
3The middot that rebuild — savlanut and vatranut
People assume patience is the summit of character. It is only the floor. Savlanut (patience) — enduring, gritting your teeth, bearing the other — nearly everyone has some of it. The real work begins one storey higher.
4Mussar in these days — the candle of Rav Yisrael Salanter
Late one night Rav Yisrael Salanter zatsal passed the window of a shoemaker still bent over his last, a stub of candle guttering beside him. "It is late," said Rav Yisrael, "and your candle is almost out." The shoemaker answered: "As long as the candle still burns, it is still possible to mend."
Rav Yisrael carried the words for years. This is the whole avodah of these weeks, and of teshuva (return) itself: ner Hashem nishmat adam — the soul is the candle of God. As long as it burns, nothing is beyond repair. The Three Weeks are not a verdict; they are the shoemaker's late-night workshop.
5What Torah to study now
Because Torah gladdens the heart, on Tisha B'Av itself one learns only its grieving chapters: Eichah and its midrash, the book of Iyov, the churban passages of the Gemara, the laws of mourning, and mussar. The good news hidden here: mussar and the aggadot of the churban are MOUTTAR — this is precisely the season the Sages hand us to work on the heart.
Halacha Léma'asé — The Nine Days (Sephardic · Yalkut Yosef)
The Seudah Mafseket & Tisha B'Av
The Seudah Mafseket (the final meal before the fast) is eaten seated low, with a single cooked dish and bread dipped in ash — unless Tisha B'Av falls on or after Shabbat, when no signs of mourning are shown at the meal.
These are the mainstream Sephardic rulings per Yalkut Yosef, given for study. For your own situation — illness, pregnancy, a se'udat mitzvah, or your community's specific minhag — ask your rav.
The Bein HaMetzarim calendar
Four steps for the Nine Days
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