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Tu B'Av (Hebrew: ט"ו באב, the fifteenth of the month ''Av'') is a minor Jewish holiday. In modern-day Israel, it is celebrated as a holiday of love ((ヘブライ語:חג האהבה), ''Hag HaAhava''), similar to Valentine's Day.〔(Tu B'Av: Reclaiming old traditions ), Yedioth Ahronoth, Yoav Friedman, August 4, 2009〕 It has been said to be a "great day for weddings". ==Historical significance== According to the Mishna, Tu B'Av was a joyous holiday in the days of the Temple in Jerusalem, marking the beginning of the grape harvest. Yom Kippur marked the end of the grape harvest. On both dates, the unmarried girls of Jerusalem dressed in white garments, which they borrowed,〔In order not to shame those who can not afford new clothes.〕 and went out to dance in the vineyards ''(Babylonian Talmud, tractate Ta'anit 30b-31a)''.〔(About Tu Be'av )〕 That same section in the Talmud states that there were no holy days as happy for the Jews as Tu B'Av and Yom Kippur.〔(Torah learning )〕 The holiday celebrated the wood-offering brought in the Temple (see Nehemiah 10:35). Josephus refers to it as the Feast of Xylophory ("Wood-bearing").〔Bellum Judaisum 2:17〕 Various reasons for celebrating on Tu B'Av are cited by the Talmud and Talmudic commentators:〔Mishna Taanit 4:8 and Babylonian Talmud 30b and 31a, Rashi on these〕 * While the Jews wandered in the desert for forty years, female orphans without brothers could only marry within their tribe, to prevent their father's inherited land in the Land of Israel from passing on to other tribes. On the fifteenth of Av of the fortieth year, this ban was lifted. (''See'' Daughters of Zelophehad.) * That same year, the last of the generation of the sin of the spies, which had been forbidden to enter the Promised Land, found that they were not destined to die. For forty years, every Tisha B'av night, the Jews made graves for themselves in which they slept on Tisha B'Av; every year a proportion of them died. In the 40th year, the fifteen thousand who had remained from the first generation went to sleep in the graves and woke up the next day to their surprise. Thinking they made a mistake with the date, they did this until they reached Tu B'Av. Only then did they know they were allowed to live. *The Tribe of Benjamin was allowed to intermarry with the other tribes after the incident of the Concubine of Gibeah (see Judges chapters 19-21). *Cutting of the wood for the main altar in the Temple was completed for the year. *The nights, traditionally the ideal time for Torah study, are lengthened again after the summer solstice, permitting more study. *The Roman occupiers permitted burial of the victims of the massacre at Bethar during the Bar Kochba rebellion. Miraculously, the bodies had not decomposed, despite exposure to the elements for over a year. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Tu B'Av」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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