A closer look at the Kinnot.
Podcast Host(s): Rabbi Jay Kelman
Listen to Three Weeks of Poetry: A Closer Look at the Kinnot on Spotify
Podcast Episodes
The Rhineland is in Flames: The Crusades of 1096
This kinnah provides eyewitness accounts of the destruction of the flourishing communities of Speyer, Worms sand Magence. We will discuss the heart rendering debates as to the appropriateness of committing suicide of oneself and family rather than submit to forced conversion.
Al Ben uBat: Two Beautiful Siblings Die
In today’s kinnah we focus on the sale into slavery of the son and daughter of Rabbi Yishmael and their tragic deaths.
The Ten Martyrs
The story of the 10 martyrs is recounted–in very different ways–twice a year. Once on Yom Kippur and again on Tisha b’Av. We will discuss the links between the story of Yosef, making a widow wait and the deaths of Rabbi Yishamel and Rabbi Shimon.
Your Justice, Our Shame
How do we make peace with our own failings? What do we do when we desire mercy but receive Justice?
V'Ata Amarta: More Broken Promises
Despite the fact that God does not keep His word, the paytan lays the blame on the Jewish people. How can the covenant remain intact when promises are broken?
Woe Unto Me: The Pain of Hunger
The real human cost of the destructions of the temples is sometimes lost in our desire to make it meaningful for Judaism as a whole. Rav Elazar Hakalir brings us right back into the awful pain and hunger of the day.
The Enemy Enters: Titus in the Temple
Despite the wanton destruction of all the is sacred Titus decided not to destroy the western wall. In this kinnah we will learn why and discuss how a heavenly voice tries to awaken God.
Ei Ko: Where are all the Promises?
In this kinnah we ask G-d why He does not fulfil His promises. Yet at the same time we discuss why the destruction of the Temple is a reason for joyous song.
And Jeremiah Cried: The King Who Did Everything Right, Until He Didn't
There was no greater leader since Moshe Rabbeinu. Then one fateful decision cost him his life. Why did one of Judah's greatest kings ignore Yirmiyahu's warning—and what can his tragic mistake teach us about the limits of conviction and the necessity of humility?
Eicha Yashva Chavatzelet HaSharon: We Did This to Ourselves
The Temple fell because of war. But this Kinah says something darker: we destroyed it from within. We had everything, community, purpose, daily ritual, and we threw it away. This is the mourning of a people who woke up too late to what they'd lost.