Jewish Daily Forward
 
 
If You Don't Know the Way to Hell, You Can Find It on a Map
Few Places Were Hotter Than the Valley of  Hinnom




By _Philologos_ (http://forward.com/authors/philologos/) 
Published May 04, 2014, issue of _May 09,  2014_ 
(http://forward.com/issues/2014-05-09/) .




George Jochnowitz writes about “gehenna,” an English synonym for “hell” 
that  comes, via Greek and Latin, from the Hebrew word gehinnom. This in turn 
 derives from gey ben hinnom, “the valley of the son of Hinnom” (or  
simply “the Valley of Hinnom,” as it is known in English), which is the 
biblical 
 name of a wadi in Jerusalem that is indeed remembered by Mr. Jochnowitz as 
 being, on his first visit to Israel in 1974, “as hot as hell.” 
No doubt it was, though probably no hotter than other places in Jerusalem 
on  a broiling summer day. Any of you who have been in Jerusalem for even a 
day or  two have surely been in, or overlooked, Gey Ben-Hinnom. More of a 
ravine than a  valley, it cuts downward between the western, Ottoman wall of 
the Old City with  its Jaffa Gate, on one side, and the posh Jewish 
neighborhood of Yemin Moshe and  Jerusalem’s Cinematheque building, on the 
other, 
before dipping in a  southeasterly direction past the neighborhood of Abu-Tor 
and into the Judean  desert.

Rather, it was the custom, observed in the Valley of Hinnom  in biblical 
times by adherents of the cult of the Canaanite-Phoenician god  Moloch or 
Melekh, of passing their children through fire as part of a religious  
initiation rite. Although the youngsters were probably harmed no more than is  
one’s 
finger when passed quickly through a flame, the rite was considered a  
particularly barbaric form of idol worship by the biblical prophets, who  
repeatedly denounced it. And so, since the idea of punishment for sin after  
death, 
when it first began to develop in early post-biblical Judaism, was  
commonly conceived of as a casting into fire, it was not unnaturally linked to  
the 
ravine — or more precisely, to the earth beneath it. This was because in  
biblical Judaism (where the concept of hell as a place of punishment did not  
exist), as in many pagan religions, the souls of the dead were thought to 
reside  in an underworld beneath the earth’s surface, called She’ol in the 
Bible and  Hades in Greek mythology.
 
Thus, in the Talmudic tractate of Eruvin is the statement that the 
underworld  of gehinnom has three hidden entrances, “one in the desert, one in 
the  
sea, and one in Jerusalem,” where puffs of smoke rising from the Valley of  
Hinnom mark the underground fires burning there. Although the association of 
 hell with the ravine was supposedly reinforced by its alleged use in 
Second  Temple times as a garbage dump where Jerusalem’s refuse was burned, so 
that  palls of smoke hovered constantly over it, there is no reliable ancient  
documentation of such a practice. The historical memory of the cult of 
Moloch is  explanation enough. 
The existence of hell inside the earth, with openings through which it is  
possible to come and go, sets the scene for a medieval tale about Rabbi 
Akiva  that helps answer a query of Mr. Jochnowitz’s. He writes: “I remember 
reading or  hearing something about mourners saying Kaddish for the dead for 
eleven months,  because the maximum time the dead spend in Gehenna is a year, 
and one hopes the  person one is praying for will not have to serve the 
full sentence. Do you have  any idea what I am referring to?” 
Mr. Jochnowitz is referring to a belief that has its roots in a Talmudic  
saying and a post-talmudic story, both ascribed to the first-century figure 
of  Rabbi Akiva. The saying is in the Mishnah, where Akiva is cited as 
asserting  that “the wicked are sentenced to gehenna for [no longer than] 12 
months.” The  tale occurs in various medieval texts, all of which tell how, 
while 
walking  along a lonely road, Akiva encountered a soot-blackened man 
hurrying beneath a  heavy load of wood. Asked who he was, the man replied that 
he 
was a great sinner  residing in hell, and that he was required to bring to 
it the daily supply of  firewood over which he was roasted. Only if the son 
he had not bothered to  circumcise were to praise God in prayer in a 
synagogue could he be released from  his ordeal. The story ends with Akiva’s 
tracking down the son, seeing to his  circumcision, and teaching him the 
rudiments 
of Judaism, after which he says the  required prayer and his father is freed 
from hell and admitted to paradise. 
In time, this prayer came to be identified with the Kaddish, although this  
wasn’t the case to begin with. As for the story of Akiva and the sinner, it 
only  makes sense if it is assumed that gehenna is an accessible place with 
exits and  entrances, even if these are unknown to earth’s inhabitants. 
Keep an eye out the  next time you’re in the Valley of Hinnom.

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