The Kosher Terroir

Wine and Tisha B'Av

Solomon Simon Jacob

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The somber days leading to Tisha B'Av bring us face-to-face with profound loss and spiritual yearning. Why do we refrain from wine during this period of mourning? The answer lies not just in ancient texts but in the very soil of Jewish history and practice.

Wine flows through Jewish tradition as a symbol of both celebration and sanctification. When we abstain before Tisha B'Av, we're acknowledging the absence of true joy without the Temple service, where wine libations once accompanied sacred offerings. This practice varies among communities – Sephardim typically observe during the week of Tisha B'Av, Ashkenazim from Rosh Chodesh, and some Hasidic traditions from the 17th of Tammuz. As Rav Soloveitchik taught, this isn't merely about grief but about profound yearning for spiritual wholeness.

Remarkably, recent archaeological discoveries have unearthed 1,500-year-old grape seeds in the Negev Desert, revealing an ancient wine culture that thrived against impossible odds. These desert vineyards – with their ingenious irrigation systems and terraced landscapes – flourished until cultural shifts buried this knowledge beneath centuries of sand. The story of these forgotten vineyards mirrors our own cyclical narrative of loss and rediscovery.

As we approach the ninth of Av, remember that beneath the surface of mourning lies dormant hope. Like those ancient grape seeds, waiting for the right conditions to flourish again, we await the day when wine will be poured not in remembrance of loss but in celebration of redemption. Join us in this exploration of wine, memory, and the seeds of future joy.

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S. Simon Jacob:

Welcome to The Kosher Terroir. I'm Simon Jacob, your host for this episode from Jerusalem. Before we get started, I ask that, wherever you are, please take a moment and pray for the safety of our soldiers and the safe return of all of our hostages. There is a time to plant and a time to uproot what is planted. Kohelet Ecclesiastes. Welcome back to The Kosher Terroir, where wine is more than just a beverage it's history, halacha, heart and heritage.

S. Simon Jacob:

As we enter the solemn days that lead up to Tisha B'Av, the ninth of Av, we find ourselves not just reflecting but mourning. Mourning the destruction of two temples, Mourning exile, mourning disconnection from Kaddish Baruch Hu, from Hashem God. And, intriguingly, jewish tradition calls on us to express that mourning through our food and drink, or rather through what we refrain from eating and drinking Meat and wine, the celebratory pair, become off-limits during the days before Tisha B'Av. But why? What does wine, so often associated with joy and holiness, have to do with mourning? If you're driving in your car, please focus on the road ahead. If you're home and it's your custom to refrain from drinking wine, please do so, and I look forward again after Tisha B'Av next week, to share and enjoy wine together. More surprisingly, what to ancient grapeseeds discovered in the Negev Desert by Israeli archaeologists and halakhic prohibitions like Orla and Kilayim not mixing species have to teach us about destruction and renewal, even in today's vineyards. These stories of restriction, of remembrance and of resilience, to show how halakha, history and teruah converge in one of the most sacred and somber seasons on the Jewish calendar.

S. Simon Jacob:

Why no wine or meat? Let's begin with the halakha. The Mishnah in Ta'anit sets the foundation. When the month of Av begins, we decrease in joy. The Shulchan, aruch or Chaim lists customs to express this, including refraining from building laundering, bathing and from eating meat or drinking wine. But when exactly do we abstain? Many Sephardim only abstain during the week in which Tisha B'Av falls, the Shavua Shechal Bo Ashkenazim abstain from Rosh Chodeshav, the beginning of the month. Abstained from Rosh Chodeshav, the beginning of the month. And some Hasidim and Kabbalists abstain even from the 17th of Tammuz, marking the breach of Jerusalem's walls.

S. Simon Jacob:

Why meat and wine? In the Gemara in Pesachim and later Rashi connects wine and meat to the temple service. Sacrifices were accompanied by wine libations and meat from offerings. With the loss of the temple, we symbolically lose the joy they represent. Rav Soloveitchik famously taught that refraining from these foods isn't just about grief from these foods isn't just about grief, it's about yearning. By not drinking wine, we underscore that we lack true simcha. We await the day when wine will again be poured in holy vessels and meat will again come from sacrifices of peace.

S. Simon Jacob:

Recently, israeli archaeologists uncovered grape pips seeds in Avdat, an ancient Nabataean and later Byzantine outpost in the Negev. The seeds date back 1,500 years, suggesting not only wine production but a thriving desert viticulture. It's hard to overstate the significance. These were people growing grapes and making wine in the desert. They carved out terraces, channeled water through clever irrigation and cultivated vines under a brutal sun. Shivta, halutsa and Nitsana entire settlements supported the wine industry. Professor Guy Baroz of the University of Haifa called it a desert wine culture, a culture built with the sweat of ingenuity and perhaps with faith, because to plant grapes in the desert is to believe in the possibility of a harvest not yet seen. So what happened? The wine economy vanished after Muslim conquest, when the consumption of wine fell out of religious and cultural favor, the vineyards were lost, the knowledge was buried, and only now, literally, are we unearthing it.

S. Simon Jacob:

The halakhic thread continues in the vineyard. The Torah tells us in Vayikra that fruit from newly planted trees are forbidden for the first three years. This is Orla. Grapes are included. What does this teach? That it's not just agricultural patience, it's spiritual timing. You don't rush, holiness. The first three years are a type of sanctified restraint. Only in the fourth year is the fruit permitted, and even then, in the times of the temple, it was brought to Jerusalem as Netarevai. In a world where we want quick returns, orla says wait, let things root, let them deepen, let them be worthy. In Devarim we are warned you shall not sow your vineyard with two kinds of seed. This is kilayim, the prohibition against mixing species. It's deeply symbolic. Each species, halakha teaches, has a role. Mixing grapevines with other crops blurs boundaries. Rav Kook saw in Kilayim a message about preserving identity, about respecting distinctions in a world that too easily muddles them Today. Even modern viticulturists must navigate this. Israeli kosher vineyards must be planted with careful separation, not just for halachic reasons, but to uphold a deeper value integrity of creation.

S. Simon Jacob:

Let me share a story. A few years ago a young Israeli winemaker stood at his new vineyard in the Judean hills. He had planted vines but couldn't yet harvest, as it was still Orla. A secular friend asked him why wait? No one will know. The winemaker answered this vineyard is my temple, these grapes are my offerings and halakha is my priest. What a powerful image. In the absence of the Beit HaMikdash, the vineyard becomes a mikdash ma'at, a small sanctuary, and every choice, even when no one is looking, becomes a prayer.

S. Simon Jacob:

Today, we explored the halakhic customs around abstaining from wine and meat during the days before Tisha B'Av, reflecting loss and spiritual longing. The ancient vineyards of the Negev, rediscovered beneath centuries of sand. A story of resilience and forgotten wine culture. The laws of Orla and Kilayim, which embedded sacred boundaries and patience into the very soil of Jewish agriculture. Together they form a mosaic of discipline, devotion and hope. As we approach the ninth of Av, we remember not only what we've lost, but what might be rebuilt. Vineyards may lie fallow, the temple may be destroyed, but beneath the dust, seeds remain, and just like those ancient pips, seeds discovered at Avdat. All it takes is care, halakha and time, and something long-dormant may once again bear fruit. May we merit to drink soon from the wine of redemption, pouring not in mourning but in joy.

S. Simon Jacob:

This has been The Kosher Terroir. I'm your host, Simon Jacob, and until next time, l'chaim, even as we wait to say it fully, this is Simon Jacob, again your host of today's episode of The Kosher Terroir. I have a personal request. No matter where you are or where you live, please take a moment to pray for our soldiers' safety and the safe and rapid return of our hostages. Please subscribe via your podcast provider to be informed of our new episodes as they are released. If you're new to The Kosher Terroir, please check out our many past episodes.

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