Rabbinic Constructions of the Past: The Destruction of the Temple and its Aftermath
The Rabbis Try to Make Sense of the Destruction
In an extended narrative in tractate Gittin of the Babylonian Talmud, the rabbis grapple with the events that led to the destruction of the Temple and its aftermath. While there are kernels of fact embedded in the story, it also includes imaginative and fantastical elements.
The rabbis struggled to explain why the Second Temple was destroyed. Tosefta Menaḥot 13:22 attributes the destruction to the people’s love of money and hatred of one another. (A later parallel text in b. Yoma 9b attributes it to “baseless hatred.”) The narrative in b. Gittin traces the destruction to a mix-up in which a servant mistakenly invites his master’s enemy bar Kamtza, rather than his friend Kamtza, to a feast. The master expels bar Kamtza from the party, and bar Kamtza, angry that the sages who were present did nothing to prevent his humiliation, informs on them to the Romans.