The
Fall of Betar
[Note: When the Jews rebelled against Roman rule,
they believed that their leader, Simon bar Kochba,
would fulfill their messianic longings. But their
hopes were cruelly dashed on Tisha B'av 135 CE as
the Jewish rebels were brutally butchered in the final
battle at Betar. The following account is from the Talmud (Gittin 57):]
Betar was destroyed. For they [the residents of
Betar] had a custom: When a
boy was born they would plant a cedar tree, and when
a girl was born, they would plant an acacia. At the
time of a marriage, the trees were cut down and the
wood was used to make the bridal canopy.
One day Caesar's daughter was passing by and the
spoke of her chariot broke. Her attendants cut down
a cedar and took it to fix the chariot. The residents
of Betar came and attacked them, and the attendants
went and told Caesar: "The Jews are rebelling
against you." The Romans attacked them [and destroyed
the city].
R. Yochanan taught: There were eighty thousand Roman
soldiers who beseiged Betar. [The city was defended
by] Bar Koziva who had two hundred thousand soldiers
with severed fingers [for the test of admission into
Bar Koziva's army called for one to cut off his own
finger to show his bravery].
The Sages asked him: "How long will you continue
to make cripples of Israel?" He replied: "How
else shall I test them?" They answered: "Anyone
who is incapable of uprooting a cedar of Lebanon while
riding by on his horse should not be counted among
your troops."
He [Bar Koziva] had two hundred thousand like this
[capable of uprooting a cedar] and two hundred thousand
like that [who had severed their own fingers]. Hadrian
sent armies against them but they came out [of Betar]
and slaughtered Hadrian's forces.
Once, when Bar Koziva's forces were going out to
battle, an elderly man came and said: "May your
G-d give you assistance." They misspoke and replied:
"Let Him not assist us nor hinder us! (Psalms
60:12): Is it not so, G-d, that You have abandoned
us, and will not accompany our armies!"
What was an example of Bar Koziva's great strength?
He would block the catapult stones with his knee and
hurl them back, killing many soldiers.
When R. Akiva saw him, he declared: "A star
has come forth from Ya'akov (Numbers 24:17) - Bar
Koziva has come forth from Ya'akov, he is the Mashiach!"
R. Yochanan ben Tursa told him: "Akiva! Grass
will grow on your cheeks and the son of David will
not have arrived [i.e., Bar Koziva is not the Mashiach]!"
For three-and-a-half years Hadrian Caesar besieged
Betar. R. Elazar ha-Moda'i was there and wore sackcloth
and fasted, praying: "Master of the World! Do
not sit in judgment today."
Hadrian decided to return [i.e., to end his unsuccessful
siege of Betar], when a Cuthite [from the arch enemies
of the Jews] came to him and said: "Master! As
long as this rooster [R. Elazar ha-Moda'i who prayed
repeatedly] sits there in ashes, you will be unable
to conquer it. Wait for me and I shall enable you
to capture it today."
He [the Cuthite] went into Betar through the main
gate and found R. Elazar who was busy praying. He
made believe that he was whispering in his ear. The
people reported this to Bar Koziva, telling him: "Your
uncle, R. Elazar, seeks to deliver the country into
the hands of Hadrian."
Bar Koziva sent a messenger to bring the Cuthite
before him. "What did you say to R. Elazar and
what did he answer?"
The Cuthite replied: "If I tell you, the king
[Hadrian] will kill me and if I don't tell you, then
you will kill me. Better that I allow myself to be
killed than to reveal the secrets of the king."
Bar Koziva assumed that R. Elazar sought to deliver
the country [into the hands of Hadrian). Bar Koziva
sent messengers to bring R. Elazar to him, and asked
him: "What did the Cuthite say to you?"
R. Elazar replied: "I don't know what he whispered,
for I was in the middle of my prayers and heard nothing."
"And what did you say to him?"
"I said nothing."
Bar Koziva became very angry and kicked him, causing
him to die. A voice was then heard from Heaven, saying:
Woe to the shepherd of the idol, who has abandoned
the flock, a sword on his forearm and on his right
eye (Zecharyah 11:17). You have broken the forearm
of Israel and blinded her right eye. Therefore the
forearm of that man [Bar Koziva] shall wither and
his right eye shall be struck. The Jews' own sins
thus brought it about that Betar was captured and
Bar Koziva was put to death.
His head was brought to Hadrian, who asked: "Who
killed him?" A Cuthite came forward and said:
"I did." Hadrian told him: "Go and
bring his body." He went and brought it and they
found a snake curled around his neck. Hadrian declared:
"Had his G-d not killed him, who would have been
able to do so?"
Eighty thousand Romans entered Betar and slaughtered
the men, women, and children until blood flowed from
the doorways and sewers. Horses sank up until their
nostrils and the rivers of blood lifted up rocks weighing
forty se'ah and flowed into the sea where its stain
was noticeable for a distance of four mil.
Hadrian had a large vineyard, eighteen mil [approximately
11.5 miles] by eighteen mil - the distance between
Tiberias and Tzippori and he surrounded it with a
wall made from the bodies of those slain in Betar.
He also ordered that they not be brought to burial.
The Sages taught: for seven years the gentiles harvested
their vineyards without having to fertilize them because
of the blood of Israel.
The Book of Our Heritage
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