Categories: Halacha & Hashkafa / In Print
How Should Camps Conduct Themselves With Campers During The Three Weeks?

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The three weeks – Bein Ha’Metzarim and the period from Rosh Chodesh Av – culminating in Tisha B'Av represent the most tragic days of the Jewish nation's calendar, commemorating the destruction of our Holy Temple in Jerusalem and our descent into exile.
As comfortable as we make ourselves in these the lands of our exile, Diasporan Jewry must never forget the land that was promised to our patriarchs, Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, the land that Moses led us to and that Joshua conquered and over which three Kings reigned, Saul, David and his son Solomon. It is the land for which every G-d fearing Jew yearns.
Yet, here we are in galus and we are charged with transmitting our inheritance, the Torah and love of Eretz Yisrael to our next generations. And summer camp has become a crucial component in educating our children.
I remember many years ago I was a counselor in Camp Gan Yisrael in Swan Lake, NY. The rabbanei Chabad ruled that we may even play music (possibly because recorded music does not constitute live music) on the public address system, as there needs to be an uninterrupted spirit in the camp. There were activities that were curtailed, but for the most part it was summer fun as usual. However, in the learning groups there was great emphasis on relating that tragic period in our history.
We must always remember that children are children and we can’t be overimposing. As such, at the conclusion of a summer of sports and learning, they will be ready to resume their full yeshiva/Beis Yaakov schedule of learning on their path to becoming wholesome G-d fearing Jews.
– Rabbi Yaakov Klass is chairman of the Presidium of the Rabbinical Alliance of America; rav of Congregation K’hal Bnei Matisyahu in Flatbush, Brooklyn; and Torah editor of The Jewish Press. He can be contacted at yklass@jewishpress.com and Rabbi@igud.us.











