Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Post-Denominational Outreach

I recently read Dr. Jonathan Sarna's outreach book, A Time to Every Purpose, and I saw something brilliant there that I have not seen in any other outreach book. Dr. Sarna is a leading scholar of American Jewish history and a professor at Brandeis. This book is written as letters to his daughter but that is clearly just a literary device for letters intended for uncommitted Jews.

The main theme of the book is that the holidays throughout the year raise significant theological and existential issues. As each holiday passes, Dr. Sarna writes a letter that discusses the relevant subjects. While that is interesting, it's not the brilliant part. Neither is the general content, which I found fairly standard, albeit with a few insights here and there. That is to be expected from a beginner's book.

Click here to read moreThe brilliant part is that the book does not proselytize. Yes, an outreach book that doesn't proselytize! At first I found it jarring, maybe even offensive. But then I realized that, as a college professor, he is around young people all the time and he really gets it. He understands what young people today are all about. The entire book consists not of him telling readers what to think, but of him putting the onus on the reader -- study more and make your own decisions. He never tells any of them that they should become Orthodox, although he does recommend becoming more observant so that they understand Jewish life better.

He recognizes that his readers will likely reject authority automatically so instead he encourages people to learn more and reach their own conclusions. What's the worst that can happen? They'll become more knowledgeable, but not Orthodox, Jews? That's pretty much a success story, given his audience. And it is likely that those who study more will realize that they need to become part of the Orthodox community because that is where they will find a critical mass of knowledgeable, observant Jews.

This also helps him tackle some of the difficult theological issues without actually addressing them. He simply says, "Some say this and some say that. Study it yourself and make your own decision." It's brilliant. It pushes off the difficult issues until people are more familiar with the basics and are already sufficiently committed to Judaism to retain a Jewish identity. This is a very different approach to outreach than I am used to, one that is quite intriguing and, at the very least, a good tool to keep in your back pocket.

However, Sarna's tactic does get hard to swallow when he says "Not being a Bible scholar myself..." (p. 3). He isn't, but as the son of a world-famous Bible scholar writing to the granddaughter of one, it comes across as a little disingenuous.


Clarification

Allow me to sincerely apologize if any readers were offended from my most recent post which I have decided to remove. I can assure you that any offense was unintended.

Thank you to those who emailed me offline and shared their thoughts with me on why different people may have found the post upsetting for different reasons. I take reader feedback very seriously and very much appreciate those who take the time to share their thoughts, criticisms, questions, and comments.

I look forward to re-posting next Tuesday.

Ari Enkin


The Three Heroic Drug Smugglers

Thanks to a local organization, I received a free copy of Mishpacha magazine this week. I've never read it before but I've heard great things about it. This week's cover story is about a group of activists who are working tirelessly to free three yeshiva boys who were caught smuggling drugs into Japan (link - PDF).

When I read newspapers and magazines, it is usually online articles from secular sources. Maybe that's why this article bothered me so much. The language was so superlative and laudatory, the issues were so black and white. It's nauseating. One picture caption refers to an activist as "an angel in human garb." There are references to various rabbis who are famous for their "command of legal nuances" or "giving freely of his medical expertise." In other words, superhuman bundles of brilliance, knowledge and righteousness. I suspect that some people actually believe these exaggerations.

Click here to read moreAdditionally, there is no impartiality whatsoever in the article. One section is titled "Indisputable Innocence." Is it really indisputable? Is it so inconceivable that yeshiva students would knowingly smuggle items and then pretend to be innocent? It's possible, although I choose to assume that it is not the case here. But is their innocence indisputable?

From what I can tell, and maybe I'm mistaken here, the entire story was taken from these activists working on behalf of the accused. Was there any effort made to verify their accounts? Was there any fact-checking done at all? These are the kinds of articles and speeches I've also heard on behalf of Jonathan Pollard. A rabbi or "reporter" goes to speak to him and then repeats whatever Pollard tells him. Did they do any independent verification? Invariably, the answer is no.

But that is all beside the point. From the article and everything else I've seen about this case, it seems that these kids stumbled into this mess by making some naive but not terribly malicious decisions. It makes sense to me that their friends and relatives should be trying to free them from a very long and difficult jail sentence over these crimes. And if their friends and relatives cannot do this, then other members of their communities (i.e. other Jews) should step in.

But when you make this a global crusade, when you organize prayer rallies and publicize it widely, when you give frequent updates to popular frum news websites (link), you are sending two bad messages:

1) To our children and ourselves, we are glorifying the accused as heroes and demonizing the Japanese justice system as evil. They aren't. The kids are stupid and they committed crimes, and the Japanese police caught them smuggling drugs and are trying them accordingly. The kids did everything wrong. Again, I agree that their suffering should not be incommensurate with their crimes -- hence the efforts to free them -- but they are certainly not heroes.

2) We are telling the world that we, the Jewish community, are in favor of drug smugglers. We are turning a Chillul Hashem into a massive Chillul Hashem. We, as a community, will stand by other Jews even when they commit crimes that negatively impact the world, such as drug smuggling.

How about keeping things on the down low and working behind the scenes? Why would we want to publicize the issue? We should be embarrassed about these boys and hang our heads in shame over them. Keep up the good work in helping them attain the best defense possible, and also work to transfer those convicted to Israeli prisons where they will be able to serve their terms with full religious freedom. But why turn this into a communal crusade?


Sunday, June 28, 2009

Torah as Music

The Forward has an article about a recent trend of mainstream Israeli singers using passages from the Bible and other religious texts in songs (link). While it is not clear to me how much of this is a sincere attempt to reach out to God and the Jewish tradition, and how much is making a mockery of Judaism. For a particularly egregious example, try searching YouTube for the group אשת חיל (note that you should pause these videos immediately because listening to them is kol ishah according to almost all views, but you can read the post and the comments to the videos).* What does Jewish tradition say about this?

Click here to read moreThe Gemara (Sanhedrin 101a) writes: "Someone who reads a verse from Song of Songs and turns it into a song or reads verses in a bar at the wrong time brings evil to the world." Rashi explains the case of reading verses in a bar as using the verses to joke around, as a source of entertainment and fun.

Rashi explains the case of turning a verse from Song of Songs into a song as meaning that any verse -- even from Song of Songs -- cannot be made into a song. R. Moshe Feinsten (Iggeros Moshe, vol. 2 YD no. 142) rules that this also applies to any sacred text, even prayers. None of them may be made into songs. However, he suggests that there might be reason to say that it only applies to verses from Song of Songs, not like Rashi, and therefore there is room to be lenient. (I have heard people sing actual verses from Song of Songs!)

However, the Sedei Chemed (Assifas Dinim, zayin no. 12) suggests that we can see from Rashi's comments on the second case that the prohibition is to sing verses for a non-religious purpose. But if you are doing it to praise God or to encourage religiosity, then it is considered at the "right time" and is permitted. This is generally accepted and is the religious justification for the contemporary Orthodox music business (cf. Piskei Teshuvos 560:14; Responsa Le-Horos Nassan 4:45; DafYomi website).

What does this mean for the contemporary Israeli music scene? If musicians are singing Jewish texts as a way of praising God, then it is permitted. But if they are just using words that are familiar and turning them into songs, then it is a bad thing. If they are intentionally mocking religion, then it is even worse. Yet, without negating any of that, there seems to be me to be something positive about Israeli youths being sufficiently fluent in Jewish texts to respond to these songs.
* You can also see the description posted by Esther (link), but note that unless you have YouTube blockes, a video begins playing immediately.


Friday, June 26, 2009

Audio Roundup XLVII

by Joel Rich

  • Rabbi Menachem Nissel - America Without Compromising: link

    Opening – don’t listen to Rabbis back home who tell you that you have to adjust which he defines as compromising – swing back to middle.
    Know your enemy (the environment = “out country” {for non-Vietnam era readers – that’s the opposite of “in-country” – in this context Rome vs. Jerusalem [for Zionist history buffs]}, have a plan and have guts.
    The plan 1) your room should be a makom kadosh; 2) have a good chaver; 3) keep Shabbat spiritually too; 4) have a Rav; 5) start and end each day with learning; 6) have kviut in learning; 7) have a bet medrash.
    Can’t argue with the plan but one might walk away thinking that a 19-year old who spent a year completely in learning on someone else’s dime will never have to make any adjustments. V’ein kan makom l haarech – but we can in the comments if you like.

  • Click here to read more
  • Aviva Bieler-similarity between uncertainty of reality in physics, and in halacha: link

    Dedicated by me to Professor Gerald Lambeau, in a certain way my soul mate – can anyone guess why?
    Hint: Good Will Hunting

    How to understand Tanur Shel achnai; (my summary)
    1. Sociological – need for central order overrides need for absolute truth.
    2. Legal – Absolute truth only exists when bet din decides it
    3. Physics – Truth is a probability distribution function which quantum physics tells us is resolved by our observation.

  • Dr. Yael Ziegler - Eicha and the Power of Biblical Poetry: link

    Interesting insights to the uninitiated (meaning me) on the use of biblical poetry.

  • Rabbi Aryeh Lebowitz - Contemporary Case Studies in Lashon Ha'Ra: link

    Some practical Shailot. Can a rabbi ask talmidim to tattle on each other? R’MF – no, it’s teaching Lashon hara (unless 100% Lshem Shamayim), R. Sternbuch disagrees – you can explain the specifics to talmidim.
    Can a rabbi give a meshulach names? Yes.
    Question (me): What if Baalei Batim specifically ask not to be exposed?

  • Rabbi Eli Ozarowski - The Yad Binyamin Stimulus Package-Business Ethics Halacha-Maaser Kesafim: link

    Good basics – some specifics on calc’s and what you can use $ for.

  • Rabbi Barry Freundel - Today's Health Care System: A Halakhic and Jewish Historical Perspective: link

    Survey of Jewish sources on permission to heal, doctors fees and resource allocation.

  • Rabbi Aharon Lichtenstein - Kodshim in the Rav's Perspective: link

    R’A Lichtenstein on R’YBS. The title is not expressive of the power of the presentation. Kodshim within Brisk as representative of true “Ishma” learning and as the “Hakrava”, drawing near, that HKB”H wants of us per R’YBS – giving and sacrifice.

  • Rabbi Reuven Ziegler - Self Creation and Self Return-The Rav and Rav Kook on Teshuva: link

    R’Kook and R’YBS from similar background. Yet, R’Kook focused on the mystical and R’YBS on the halachic tradition. Both were dialectical thinkers. R’Kook synthesized the dialectic and viewed tshuva as a perfection of one’s inner self; R’YBS lived with the dialectic and viewed Tshuva as remaking oneself.
    Fascinating insight into R’YBS’s experience of illness and the impact on his thought.

  • Rabbi Eli Ozarowski - The Yad Binyamin Stimulus Package-Business Ethics & Halacha-Part VII:Idling during work time: link

    How hard do you have to work for your employer? What breaks can you take? Can you use office supplies? Answer – it depends on the employer’s Employee Value Proposition [me – I make a living from such things as EVP’s!]

  • Rabbi Michael Rosensweig - Parshas Shelach: Was the land's reconnaissance doomed to fail or doomed through failure?: link

    Sometimes you have to give people a chance to fail.

  • Rabbi Dovid Gottlieb - Where is Avram Going?: link

    Not just to a physical place but spiritual journey as well. Why didn’t HKB”H tell him where to go? (or did he?). If not, how did he know? R’YBS on Abraham demonstrating the Jews native attraction to kedusha and Jerusalem being the lodestone. [country roads take me home, to the place I belong]

  • Rabbi Ari Zahtz - Parshas Naso To be a Nazir or not to be: link

    Torah’s seeming ambivalence? It’s a tool for self-control (me – not an extra credit project).

  • Rabbi Michael Taubes - Reading from a Torah That is Posul Elsewhere: link

    If an error in one of the five books of Moses, can you still use that scroll for reading in a different book? (maybe)

  • Rabbi Baruch Simon - 18 B'Inyan Nichum Aveilim: link

    Discussion of the basics. Nice insight from R’YBS on communal vs. individual responsibilities.

  • Rabbi Zvi Sobolofsky - Halachot of the 'Three Weeks' (Shaving, Music, and Parties) - Part 1: link

    Review of some of the basics. Interesting thoughts on general issue of do we say shechiyanu today on fruits or clothes (me – I guess that one isn’t inherent in the briah). Also, Brisker kula on not fasting based on we’re all like choleh shein bo sakana and why we can’t rely on it without accepting Brisker chumrot (me – I guess this one is inherent in the briah, or is it an argument (gasp!) in mitziut?)

  • Rabbi Ari Kahn - Yom Yerushalayim: link

    The God, mashiach ben Yosef and Yerushalayim. R’Kahn was very enthusiastic about these insights.

  • Rabbi M Taragin - Avot 8: link

    R’Akiva’s message – the dynamic tension of the universal and particular messages of Judaism.

  • אגדות חלק #08, מאת הרב עזרא ביק - עולם הבא ותחיית המתים: link

    Yetzer hara – is it mans’ primary nature? Nature of the world to come.

  • Thursday, June 25, 2009

    Rav Chesed

    Here is the table of contents for the new two-volume festschrift for R. Haskel Lookstein, Rav Chesed: Essays in Honor of Rabbi Dr. Haskel Lookstein:
    VOLUME 1
    • Editor's Note - Rafael Medoff
    • Introduction - Eli Wiesel
    • Foreword - Natan Sharansky
    • Citation - Richard M. Joel
    • There Never Again Rose a Prophet Like Moses: Except Perhaps Ezekiel? - Hayyim Angel
    • זרמים ביהדות ואיחודם - הרב שלמה אבינר
    • Abraham: Pioneer Religious Educator, Paradigm for Contemporary Teachers of Judaism - Yaakov Bieler
    • "The Hair of a Woman is Erotic:" An Explanation of the Contemporary Practice of Many Married Orthodox Women Not to Cover their Hair - Michael J. Broyde

    • Click here to read more
    • I Do? Consent And Coercion in Sexual Relations - Mark Dratch
    • Tradition at the Cusp of Modernity: A Sermon by Rabbi Jonathan Eybeschutz - Adam S. Ferziger
    • For This Very Time: Parshat Zachor and Purim for Orthodox and Nono-Orthodox Jews in 21st-Century America - Sylvia Barack Fishman
    • The Gardener of East of Eden - David C. Flatto
    • Bringing the "Russians" Back In: The Ambiguities of Rejoining the Jewish World - Zvi Gitelman
    • Helping Students Find Their Own Voice in Tefilla: A Conceptual Framework for Teachers - Jay Goldmintz
    • American Orthodoxy in the 1950s: The Lean Years - Lawrence Grossman
    • Devotees and Deviants: A Primer on the Religious Values of Orthodox Day School Families - Jeffrey S. Gurock
    • Father and Sons: The French Rothschilds and the Yishuv - Jonathan Helfand
    • From the Rav's Pen: Selected Letters of Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitchik - Nathaniel Helfgot
    • Gersonides on Immortality - Arthur Hyman
    • The Political Consequences of Trivializing the Holocaust - Gilbert Kahn
    • A King Like Nobody Else's: Parshat Ha-Melech as a Primer for Parents and Educators - Jeffrey Kobrin
    • Educating the "New" Jewish Woman: Nation Building, Social Change, and Ethnicity in Vocational Schools for Jewish Women in Palestine, 1911-1914 - Rebecca Kobrin
    • The Rise and Fall of the Progressive Talmud Torah: The Central Jewish Institute and Interwar American Jewish Identity - Jonathan Krasner
    • Are Women "Lightheaded"? Three Troublesome Passages in Halakhic Literature - Norman Lamm
    • ארבעה צריכין חזוק ואלו הן: תורה ומעשים טובים, תפילה ודרך ארץ - ד"ר בריינה יוכבד לוי

    VOLUME 2
    • Talmud and Ma'asseh in Pirkei Avot - Aharon Lichtenstein
    • Standing Up Against Holocaust Deniers: A Memoir from David Irving v. Penguin Books and Deborah Lipstadt - Deborah Lipstadt
    • Dayeinu - Haskel Lookstein
    • Sephardi Traditionalism in Ceremonial Art and Visual Culture - Vivian B. Mann
    • Meeting Again (and Again): Reading Pinkhos Curgin's Essay Seventy-Five Years Later - Peter N. Miller
    • Is Coca-Cola Kosher? Rabbi Tobias Geffen and the History of American Orthodoxy - Adam Mintz
    • Middle Eastern Antisemitism: Indigenous Affliction or Imported Plague? - Michael Oren
    • Compulsion or Choice? The Jewish War and the Problem of "Necessity" according to Josephus - Jonathan J. Price
    • A Man of Egypt Becomes A Man of God: Examining the Relationship Between Moses and Yitro - Sandra E. Rapoport
    • Correcting the Ba'al Koreh: Punctilious Performance vs. Public Embarrassment - Moshe Rosenberg
    • The Halakhah According to B'nai B'rith - Jonathan Sarna
    • Tikkun Olam: Defining the Jewish Obligation - Jacob J. Schacter
    • בגדר קדושת ישראל - הרב צבי שכטר
    • To be German and Jewish: Hermann Cohen and Rabbi Samson Raphael Hirsch - Meir Soloveichik
    • The Right of Others to Think Differently from Us - Joseph Telushkin
    • Becoming Human: What's in a Name? - Shera Aranoff Tuchman
    • קבע בתפילה הערות על מושג הקביעות בפרק ד' של מס' ברכות - הרלן ג'יי ווכסלר
    • Nationa as Family: The Key to Redemption in Tanakh - Avraham Weiss
    • Law and Narrative in the Book of Ruth - Avivah Zornberg
    • On Sunday the Rabbi Stayed for Bensching - Joshua Lookstein
    • Rav Chesed: The Life and Times of Rabbi Haskel Lookstein - Rafael Medoff (yes, the entire softcover biography)
    • Contributors
    • Jubille Volume Patrons


    Traveling Torah

    R. Gedalia Dov Schwartz, Sha'arei Gedulah, pp. 250-252:
    The author of Shulchan Aruch, Rabbi Yosef Karo, rules that it is prohibited to bring a Sefer Torah to a prison for the people who are confined there, even for Rosh Hashana and Yom Kippur.[20] The source of this is a text from the Yerushalmi which states that it is proper respect to go to the Torah, rather than to bring it to another place.[21] However, Rema comments that if the Sefer Torah is prepared a day or two beforehand, then it would be permissible in all circumstances. This is explained by the later poskim to mean that it should remain in an ark or befitting closet after its reading for a day or two.

    Click here to read moreHowever, there exists a seemingly popular view that there is a minhag that it should be read three times in that place,[22] and if not, then the Torah should not be taken there. Nevertheless, this minhag of necessarily reading from the Torah three times is not mentioned by any of the poskim regarding the prison situation. The consensus of the rabbinic decisors following the ruling of the Rema interprets his statement as explained above concerning placing the Sefer Torah in an Aron Kodesh or closet to establish a sense of permanence for a day or two.[23] In the commentary Shaarei Rachamim on the classic sefer Shaarei Ephraim on the laws of Torah reading, the author cites poskim who categorically reject the application of the minhag.[24]

    Of course the ramifications of the Rema's ruling apply to such situations as in the house of a mourner or a special minyan convened for a particular event, such as a Bar Mitzvah, conventions at hotels, etc. Nevertheless, for actual practice the local rabbinic authority should be consulted as in all matters of halacha and minhag, since the congregation or community might have a certain custom regarding this matter.

    [20] Orach Chaim, 135:14
    [21] Yoma, perek 7
    [22] See Aruch Hashulchan, 135:32
    [23] See Mishna Brura and Beiur Halacha, which do not mention the necessity for these readings
    See also: this post.


    Wednesday, June 24, 2009

    Parashah Roundup: Korach 5769

    by Steve Brizel

    The Common Sense Rebellion Against Moshe Rabbeinu and the Mesorah
  • Rav Soloveitchik, ZTL, explains the nature of the challenge of Korach to the authority of Moshe Rabbeinu ,cautions against appeasing similar challenges to the Mesorah and urges us to reject challenges to Halacha that are not rooted within the Halachic system: link
  • R Herschel Schachter reminds us that the acceptance of Torah SheBaal Peh is the ultimate form of rejecting the claims of Korach: link
  • R Mosheh Lichtenstein suggests that the supporters of Korach wanted to take the sacred out of the domain of the physical and remove the physical element out of the realm of the sacred: link
  • R Jonathan Sacks reminds us that arguments for the sake of Heaven are always preferred over an argument for the sake of victory: link
  • Click here to read more
  • R Berel Wein suggests that the objective of Korach was to deny the critically important element of Divine Revelation of the Torah and to substitute ersatz human created ideologies: link 1, link 2
  • R Yissocher Frand explains why On Ben Peles did not meet with the same fate as Korach's other supporters: link
  • The Nesivos Shalom, as explicated by R Yitzchak Adlerstein, suggests why Korach and his followers met such a harsh fate: link
  • R Yitzchak Etshalom analyzes the relationship between the Mitzvah of Tzitis, the Anan and the Ktores: link
  • R Ephraim Buchwald, based upon the teachings of Nechama Leibowitz , Zicronah Livracha , and the insights of Akeidas Yitzchak and Netziv explains the symbolic role of the fire pans and why we should avoid the contemporary equivalents of the fire pan: link
  • R Asher Brander discusses the viewpoints of Ramban and Ibn Ezra in determining when the rebellion of Korach occurred: link
  • R Eli Baruch Shulman, based upon an observation of R Shneur Kotler ZTL, suggests that Korach erred in viewing HaShem's closeness as limited to any one geographical location and reminds us that wherever Torah is studied, HaShem is near: link (audio)
  • R Avigdor Nevenzal warns against being a Nogea BaDavar: link
  • R Avraham Gordimer explores and discusses why Korach targeted the role of Aharon and Kehunah: link

  • The Election of the Tribe of Levi
  • R Ezra Bick discusses the election of the Tribe of Levi: link
  • R Zvi Sobolofsky explains the unique role of the Levi: link

  • Shmiras HaMishkan, Maaser and Trumas Maaser
  • R Avraham Gordimer discusses so many mitzvos associated with the Kohanim and Leviim appear in this Parsha: link

  • Almonds, Blossoms, Aharon HaKohen and the Congregation
  • R Dovid Horwitz, based upon a Drasha of R Fabian Schonfeld and a famous discussion between the Vilna Gaon and the Magid of Dubno, explains why the staff of Aharon HaKohen was placed together with the staffs of the other tribes: link

  • The Prohibition of Machlokes
  • R Dovid Gottlieb and R Daniel Z. Feldman explore the probibition of Machlokes: link 1 (audio), link 2 (audio)

  • The Matnos Kehunah
  • R Herschel Schachter discusses the Matnos Kehunah: link (audio)

  • Special Features
  • R Assaf Bednarsh discusses combatting Kfirah on college campuses: link (audio)
  • R Baruch Simon explores the halachos of Kavod Sefer Torah: link (audio)

  • Shoalin Vdorshin Department
  • R David Brofsky discusses the Halachos of the Fast Days commemorating the Churban HaBayis: link
  • Last year's roundup: link


    Was Nehama Leibowitz Too Traditional?

    The final chapter in Yaul Unterman's Nehama Leibowitz: Teacher and Bible Scholar discusses the next generation(s) of scholarship after Nehama. It lists approaches and techniques that Nehama did not use but many of her students developed and adopted. This theme also comes up in some other chapters. It seems to me that the author was too sympathetic with these new approaches and failed to adequately defend Nehama. However, a few weeks ago I had a pleasant conversation with a prominent educator who is a Nehama traditionalist, and he gave me a spirited defense of Nehama's approach.

    The main competition for Nehama's approach is that of R. Yoel Bin-Nun. R. Bin-Nun's approach is described by R. Hayyim Angel in an article in Tradition (link). R. Bin-Nun and those who loosely follow his approach (and that of R. Mordechai Breuer) read the Bible with fresh eyes and, using a number of innovative methods, arrive at fascinating interpretations of familiar passages.

    Click here to read moreNehama, on the other hand, generally surveyed the commentaries and evaluated their various interpretations. On rare occasions she offered her own interpretations, but mainly she dealt with the merits of previous commentaries and how they relate to the biblical text.

    In other words, Nehama dealt with commentaries while R. Bin-Nun deals with the Bible itself. That is how someone partial to R. Bin-Nun's approach would put it. A defender of Nehama would say that she believed that part of studying the text and exploring interpretive possibilities is to find out what earlier commentators said. Confident in their wisdom and insight, although reading them criticially, she first looked at the great commentaries of the past before offering her own innovation. In fact, ignoring those commentaries can be seen as a sign of arrogance. You think you are smarter than them and will be able to figure out everything that they have? If you understand them properly and still don't find them convincing, then offer your own explanation. But first study what those greater than you had to say.

    I'm no expert in R. Bin-Nun's approach but from what I've heard, he does, in fact, look at other commentaries. However, and this is the real critique, he doesn't teach them. Therefore, his students receive mainly his own insights and not primarily those of earlier great commentators.

    Personally, I always look at the commentators first. But I consider R. Bin-Nun and those with similar approaches to be new commentators, whose ideas I include in my collection of commentaries. I'm not sure why Nehama did not do this as well, unless it is simply a matter of age and timing.


    Tuesday, June 23, 2009

    Belief and Ancestry

    I was puzzled for a long time over a passage in the Rambam's Iggeres Teiman. He writes (Kafach edition, p. 27) that anyone whose ancestors stood at Mt. Sinai will never dispute Moshe's prophecy, since it says (Ex. 19:9), "And they will believe in you forever". However, there have been siblings and children of famous rabbis who have become disbelievers. Does that put the ancestry of famous rabbis into question?

    I saw an interesting answer to this given by R. Yitzchak Sorotzkin in his Rinas Yitzchak (Num. 16:28). He quotes the Brisker Rav as saying that Korach and his men deviated from two of the thirteen fundamental principles of Jewish faith: they rejected that Torah was from heaven (principle 8) and the veracity and uniqueness of Moshe's prophecy (principle 7).

    Click here to read moreWith this, the Brisker Rav explained the repetition in Num. 16:28: "And Moses said: 'By this you shall know that 1) the Lord has sent me to do all these works, 2) for I have not done them of my own will.'" The first phrase refers to Moshe receiving prophecy and the second phrase to the Torah being from God and not Moshe's creation.

    However, if Korach and his men really did reject these principles, how can the Rambam state that anyone who was at Mt. Sinai will never reject them? Korach and his men were at Mt. Sinai!

    R. Sorotzkin suggests that the Rambam was only referring to someone rejecting Moshe's prophecy. Someone who accepts that Torah is from heaven will never reject the unique prophecy of Moshe (and claim that we received the Torah some other way). The descendants of those who were at Mt. Sinai who continue to believe that the Torah was given there, will always treasure the unique role of Moshe in the transmission of the Torah.

    Korach and his men rejected the divine origin of the Torah and therefore their additional rejection of Moshe does not contradict the Rambam's claim. The same can be said for those unbelieving Jews who reject that the Torah is from heaven. Even according to the Rambam, their disbelief does not imply that their ancestors were not at Mt. Sinai. (Note, however, that the phrasing of the Midrash Ha-Gadol on that verse does not allow for this interpretation.)


    Books Received VII

    I don't always have the chance to review each book, so I'll list the books that I receive. Some of them will be quoted or reviewed in future posts. Here are the books I've received recently:


    Lifespans and Longevity

    By: Rabbi Ari Enkin

    We all know that when wishing people long life, we traditionally wish them a life of 120 years. What is the source of this idea?

    Our first encounter with the concept of defining a lifespan to be 120 years is found early on in the Torah, as it is written: “And God says My spirit shall not always contend on account of man since he is but flesh, his days shall be 120 years.”[1] This verse, which appears almost immediately after the creation of man, is an obvious association of 120 years as being the ideal human lifespan. Some interpretations suggest that this may be because 120 years is the amount of time needed for a person to properly prepare to meet the Creator.[2] Indeed, God allowed Noah 120 years to complete the construction of the ark, in order to allow the rest of the world the opportunity to properly repent and perhaps avert the flood.

    Click here to read moreNotwithstanding the above, the prominence and focus of the “120 years” adage likely emerged due to its association with Moshe Rabbeinu who lived to be 120. Before he died, Moshe said, “I am one hundred twenty years old this day, I can no longer go out and come in.”[3] Many commentators explain that “I can no longer go out” refers to a Divine decree that life must end by 120 years of age.[4]

    According to tradition four people lived to be precisely 120: Moshe, Hillel, Rabbi Yochanan Ben Zakkai, and Rabbi Akiva.[5] There were some individual exceptions to this rule, but their explanations are beyond the scope of this discussion. Here are some Talmudic tips for a better chance of living to a ripe old age: never use a synagogue as a shortcut, be the first one to the synagogue every day, don’t call anyone by a nickname, never miss Kiddush on Friday night, and never stare at evil people.[6] Ladies – lighting your Shabbat candles with olive oil will increase your odds for a long life even more.[7]

    Although living to 120 years old is certainly a commendable goal, we do see that it is not an absolute ideal, and that shorter lifespans are also considered dignified accomplishments. Among the exceptional lifespans was Rabbi Yehoshua Ben Karcha, who lived to 140. It is noted that Rabbi Yehoshua Ben Karcha had blessed Rabbi Yehuda Hanassi (author of the Mishna) that he merit to attain “half of my age,”[8] thus affirming seventy years as a legitimate lifespan. Moshe himself seems to certify seventy years as a complete lifespan as well when he says, “The days of our years are seventy years, and with might, eighty years.”[9]

    **********************************

    [1] Bereishit 6:3.
    [2] Sforno, Sanhedrin 108.
    [3] Devarim 31:2.
    [4] Rashi and Sforno, among others.
    [5] Tosafot, Bechorot 58a.
    [6] Megilla 27b, 28a.
    [7] Sefer Chassidim 272.
    [8] Megilla 28a.
    [9] Tehillim 90:10.


    Sunday, June 21, 2009

    When is the Law Not the Law?

    The Gemara (Berakhos 31a) states that when you leave a friend, you should depart with words of halakhah, Jewish law, because that will cause your friend to remember you whenever he thinks of this law. The Gemara then tells the story of how R. Kahana escorted R. Shimi Bar Ashi and then left him with a discussion about the palm trees in Babylonia having been there since the time of Adam.

    The Maharatz Chajes (Glosses, ad loc.) points out that this is not a matter of law! Rather, it is an issue of aggadah, Torah legends.

    Click here to read more
    The Maharatz Chajes (Glosses, ad loc.) points out that this is not a matter of law! Rather, it is an issue of aggadah, Torah legends. The Maharatz Chajes explains that this is just one of many instances where the term "halakhah" refers to Torah in general and not specifically a law.

    For example, the Gemara (Sanhedrin 107a) says that King David forgot a halakhah, and then proceeds to discuss a man's sexual appetite, certainly an aggadic and not halakhic statement. Another example the Maharatz Chajes brings is from Rashi's commentary to the Torah (Gen. 33:4) that it is a halakhah that Esav hates Ya'akov. This, the Maharatz Chajes writes, is another example where an aggadic statement is called a "halakhah."


    An Interview With A Contemporary Philosopher

    Dr. Yoel Finkelman discusses Jewish Thought education with Prof. Shalom Rosenberg, author of In the Footsteps of the Kuzari (two volumes: I, II), at ATID's annual conference of our Fellows and graduates, June 15, 2009: link (MP3, in Hebrew).


    A Plea to Fathers

    I started reading this article (R. Dovid Kaplan, "A Plea to Fathers", Hamodia Magazine, May 20, 2009) and immediately thought, "Oh, no, not again." Another article about how we're all failures as fathers unless we can be perfect and do everything right. But then he ends with suggestions that make it seem that I'm not so bad after all because I already do those things.

    Definitely worth a read: link


    Friday, June 19, 2009

    Audio Roundup XLVI

    by Joel Rich

    TIM audios can be found in the free section of : http://www.torahinmotion.org/store/prod_search.asp
  • TIM - Rabbi Howard Jachter - Cutting Edge Halachic Issues Prime Minister vs. Rosh Yeshiva - Is it Ever Permitted to Disobey Military Orders Due to Halachic Concerns

    Are there cases where a chayal should disobey orders? Hard to quantify - his general disposition is towards obedience to maintain cohesiveness. (Look at Tzibbur as basic building block.)

  • Rabbi Aryeh Lebowitz - Shelach Derasha: The Importance of a Rebbe: link

    If you don’t want to turn into a baal habayit like all those you didn’t think so highly of when you were a young yeshiva boy back in ’65 (in your idealistic youth), you need to have a rebbi throughout your life to help clarify things. (Hmmm – why don’t I ever hear anyone suggesting a parent might be able to help do this as well.)

  • Click here to read more
  • Rabbi Eli Ozarowski - The Yad Binyamin Stimulus Package - Business Ethics & Halacha: Tax, Bribery and Dina D'Malchuta Dina: link

    Beginnings of a good discussion, but, of course, it would take a lot of time to fully analyze. (Me - Isn’t it odd that it took till the time of Shmuel to articulate this principle and the source is never stated? Does the torah assume the basic rights of kings?)

  • Rabbi Hershel Schachter - Sotah Shiur #3: link

    Potpourri (= magical mystery tour)

    1) Gezeirah Shaveh – needs mesorah? Of what – words or concepts? (me – has anyone totaled them up according to any specific tanna).

    2) Tosfot didn’t seem to have most of sifri

    3) For which of the midot shehatora nidreshet can you roll your own (depends on who you believe)

    4) Why is the silent amida silent? (slach lanu)

    5) Why is the Cohain Gadol bsimcha all year round (R’YBS – lifnei hashem)

    6) Rebbi paskined against himself in the mishna (me – so it was a sefer of psak?)

  • Rav Kaplan - Sculptures - Carvings - Pictures: link

    Interesting detailed halachic discussion of the halachic status of the manufacture and/or maintenance of pictures, coins, dolls, statues, etc.

    Would be interesting to discuss the outside sociological events which led many to a more lenient position than might otherwise have been expected.

    Money quote: “Lmaasch a lot of people assered in the old days. Lmaaseh the minhag all the poskim say that today there is no makom to be machmir and a person even cannot take upon himself such a chumrah before he is yarei shumayim bchol kocho, and is mdakdek in all the different chumrah’s” (me – why not?)

  • Rabbi Dovid Gottlieb - Pidyon Haben: link

    Is the requirement primarily on the father or the son? Two possible scriptural sources.

  • Rabbi Zvi Ralbag - Anshei Kenesses Hagadolah: link

    Never mentioned in Nach because the official name was only given later. 120 members because that’s what Persians did. (me – so exactly what was their halachic status? And why don’t we see Sanhedrin mentioned in Nach?).

    They were codifiers and compliers.

  • Rabbi Zvi Sobolofsky - When and Why a bris is delayed for a natural birth: link

    An extensive discussion of mila shelo bzmana. Shabbat, Yom Tov, Yom Tov Sheni, be in hashmashot. Major underlying additional issue is exact definition of halachic times.

  • Rabbi Eli Ozarowski - The Yad Binyamin Stimulus Package - Business Ethics&Halacha-Whistleblowing: link

    Review of possible halachic issues involved in whistleblowing (involving bnei brit and non-bnei brit) including tochacha and mesira.

  • Rabbi M Taragin - Avot - Evil Eyes: link

    Mystical impact of longing for what someone else has or rational result of spiritual impact? (me – whatever gets you through the night?)

  • Rabbi E Bick - Aggadah/Sanhedrin: link

    Argument of Rebbi and Antonius – 1) Sun’s path – (me) – really about Thomas Cahill – “The gift of the Jews; 2) When is the soul joined to the body? – really about the nature of man; 3) When does the yetzer hara arrive? Cliff hanger!

  • TIM - Malka Adato - The Decline of the Generations: The State of the Debate

    Starts with my least favorite R’Yaakov story (airplanes/apes). Presents sources which imho conflate more than this issue. Ties a strict constructionist approach on this issue to the charedi narrative.

  • Rav A Weiss - Shlichus Bemitzvos: link

    Understanding whether shlichut bmitzvot works as a function of the mitzvah’s focus on the action, the result or a combination of both.

  • Rabbi Yitzchok Cohen - Man's Obligation: A study in Chovot Halevavot - Proof of G-d: link

    Mussar on the power of speech in both torah and intrapersonal relationships.

  • Rav A Weiss - Geirus: link

    Understanding the halachic significance of kabalat ol malehut. Can a beit din refuse to be megayer someone for tangential reasons (e.g. don’t like his taste in clothes?)

  • Rabbi_Baruch_Simon - Yesod LiChinuch vi'Kiruv: link

    Be mekarev and raise people up – it’s more effective than knocking them down.

  • Dr. Y Ziegler - Eicha: link

    New series – Eicha isn’t about one event, it’s about suffering in a theological context. A summary of the history leading up to the Churban.

  • Mrs._Shani_Taragin - The Rav on Farmers and Shepherds (my title): link

    R’YBS and message of our forefathers’ transition from farmers to shepards and back. Farmer, if not believer, can view self as master of land (he is all engrossed in it), shepard realizes his tenuous status. Mitzvot tluyot baaretz allows them to become farmers again yet maintain beneficial philosophy of shepard. Judaism wants the kind and gentle as shepard but one who knows when to be tough as farmer in defense of his land.

  • Rabbi Daniel Stein - Hilchos Ishus Review: link

    Technical details of ktubah (spelling, dating, drafting), ring (whose, what, where), Chupah construction, which way to face, who stands where, sheva brachot rules.

  • TIM - Dr. (Rabbi) Eddie Reichman, Dr. Avraham Steinberg - The Ethical Aftermath of 9/11: Risk Taking, Triage and DNA Evidence in Jewish Law

    Putting one in danger to save/help others – required, permitted or forbidden? Is war different and what is war? (hell?)

    Triage – halachically very similar to current ethics: Save those who benefit others (eg officers) first – based on the cohain mashuach. (Me – agree with presenter who said psakim here are based on (my term) lev shel torah more than direct sources – else why not just go with the mishnayot in horiyot?)

    Mayim sheein lahem sof (we worry that someone last seen drowing came up somewhere we can’t see) – Does it apply in an era of instant communications?

  • Rabbi Yonason Sacks - Meleches Yom Tom Part I: link

    Class R’Sacks – hutrah, dchuya et al.

  • Thursday, June 18, 2009

    Women Slaughterers

    The following is a loose translation of notes from lectures by R. Joseph B. Soloveitchik, compiled by R. Elyakim Koenigsberg (whose helpful footnotes are omitted here). It is the first chapter in Shi'urei Ha-Rav on Yoreh De'ah topics (which will be available for sale on the OU website soon, hopefully within a week or two). I post this translation because it is not only worthwhile Torah but also relevant as it sheds light on the issue of whether a woman can become a rabbi. It seems clear to me that if a woman may not be appointed a slaughterer, as the Rema rules, then she may also not be appointed a rabbi.

    I

    The Shulchan Arukh (Yoreh De'ah 1:1) writes: "Anyone can slaughter [animals] ab initio, even women." The Rema adds that we should not allow women to slaughter since the custom is that they do not. This is the view of the Agur brought in the Beis Yosef (ad loc.) that since the custom is that women do not slaughter, therefore they are not allowed to do so because "the custom overrides the law."

    The Beis Yosef already questioned this view: It would be understandable if women had wanted to slaughter but they were never allowed to do it -- then we could bring proof from these actions that the custom is that they may not slaughter. But since this is not the case and all we know is that, in practice, women did not slaughter, what is the proof? We say in general that "not seeing is not a proof" -- the fact that we have not seen women slaughterers does not necessarily mean that they may not. The Shakh (ad loc., no. 1) answers that perhaps the Agur shares the view of the Maharik, that regarding customs we do say "not seeing is a proof." Therefore, the fact that we have not seen women slaughteres is sufficient to prove that the custom is that they may not.

    Based on this position of the Maharik, we can explain other customs brought down by the Rema. 1) The Rema writes in the laws of mourning (Yoreh De'ah 381:1) that even though the rule is that washing your face, hands and legs in warm water and torso in cold water is only prohibited during the first week of mourning, the custom in his time was to refrain for the entire first thirty days of mourning -- "And you should not deviate from the custom because it is ancient and was established by elders." 2) The Rema (Yoreh De'ah 389:3) also wrote that the rule is that you may not wear Shabbos clothes during the first thirty days of mourning even when mourning for a parent, but the custom is to refrain for the entire twelve months of mourning for a parent.

    These two customs are perplexing because how can we establish a custom by refraining from doing something. Don't we say that "not seeing not a proof"? We have to say that the Rema follows the Maharik, that refraining does not show a tradition regarding a law and certainly does not establish the rule when there is no opinion corresponding to that practice. But it does serve to establish and create a custom that we are obligated to follow.

    II

    We can add another reason why we should not allow women to serve as slaughterers. The Rema (Yoreh De'ah 1:1) wrote that we should only rely on the presumption that most people who slaughter are experts post facto, but ab initio we should check someone who comes to slaughter to see if he knows the laws. Because of this, the Rema continues, our practice is not to allow someone to slaughter unless he receives authorization (kabbalah) from a scholar, and the scholar will not give him authorization until he has shown that he knows the laws of slaughtering and how to do it. Since the custom is to receive authorization from a scholar, we do not need to check every person who comes to slaughter because we can assume that most people who come to slaughter have received authorization from a scholar. That is what the Rema wrote.

    It seems that since our custom is to receive authorization from a scholar in order to slaughter, therefore slaughtering is no longer merely a matter of permitted or forbidden foodmatter that anyone can do but has become an appointed communal position. For this reason, we do not allow women to slaughter based on the Rambam (Mishneh Torah, Hilkhos Melakhim 1:5), who wrote that we do not appoint a woman to a communal position. Since a woman may not be appointed to a communal position, and slaughtering has become a communal position, therefore it seems that a woman may similarly not be appointed to be a town slaughterer.

    We can bring proof to this conclusion from citation of the Beis Yosef from the Kol Bo that women may slaughter animals for their own consumption. The Beis Yosef questions this because what difference is there between slaughtering for others and slaughtering for yourself -- a woman has to eat kosher meat like everyone else. The Beis Yosef felt forced to say that the Kol Bo really meant that a woman may slaughter by herself, without anyone standing watch over her. However, based on our idea above, we can explain the Kol Bo simply: Since women may not serve as slaughterers because they may not be appointed to communal positions, it makes sense that they may not slaughter for other people which would be a communal appointment. But they may slaughter for themselves, which is not considered a communal appointment.

    The Shulchan Arukh (Yoreh De'ah 1:11) wrote that if a community issued a decree that only one butcher may slaughter but someone else did, his slaughtered meat is forbidden. The Shakh (no. 34) explains in the name of Rabbenu Yerucham that the reason is because he is considered suspect for this matter. However, according to our idea above, even without this reason we would still forbid his slaughtered meat. Since slaughtering is a communal appointment, anyone who is not appointed by the community is excluded from slaughtering and his slaughtering is forbidden.

    However, there is a problem with this idea because the Tur wrote that freed slaves are valid slaughterers and it is clear in Yevamos (45b) that a convert may not be appointed to a communal position (see this post: link). Since a freed slave is a convert, how can he slaughter if that is considered a communal position? We have to say that really a convert may be appointed to a communal position, but not a position of communal authority over Jews -- and it is for this reason that he may judge a fellow convert (Yevamos 102a). Therefore, since slaughtering is not a position of authority, a convert may be appointed to be a slaughterer. However, a woman is excluded from all appointments, even those with no authority, and therefore she may not be appointed a slaughterer.


    Wednesday, June 17, 2009

    Parashah Roundup: Shelakh 5769

    by Steve Brizel

    The Mission of the Spies
  • Rav Soloveitchik ZTL explains the connection between the transgression of Miriam to the report of the spies: link
  • R Yitzchak Etshalom, based upon an essay of R Yaakov Medan.http://www.vbm- torah.org/parsha.58/37shelah.htm, explains the two missions of the spies, as set forth in this week's Parsha and Parshas Devarim: link
  • R Berel Wein examines where the spies erred in their mission: link
  • The Nesivos Shalom, as explicated by R Yitzchak Adlerstein, underscores the fact that the report of the spies denied the transcendent nature of the Land of Israel: link
  • R Ephraim Buchwald reminds us that the long term consequences of the report of the spies affect our personal and communal lives with respect to many issues facing the Jewish People: link
  • Click here to read more
  • R Aharon Lichtenstein discusses the many common elements of the Sins of the Golden Calf and the Spies: link
  • R Dr. Avraham Twerski, based on the teachings of the Baal Shem Tov, reminds us that the “average Joe” as well as those who are not part of the perceived “elite” in our world, deserve to be respected and honored because of their intrinsic merit and worth, regardless of the spurious values that society places on people: link
  • R Michael Rosensweig investigates the failure of leadership inherent in the message of the spies: link
  • R Jonathan Sacks , based upon the Rambam in Moreh Nevuchim , suggests an alternative interpretation to the report of the spies based upon their not have made a full adjustment from a life as slaves to a generation born in freedom: link
  • R Asher Brander explores the different reactions of Yehoshuah Ben Nun and Calev to the report of the spies: link
  • R Avigdor Nevenzal suggests how one can be worthy of the Land of Israel: link

  • The Spies and the Climbers
  • R Shlomoh Riskin, based upon the Abarbanel, explores the connection between the spies, the climbers and the mitzvos commanded in their wake: link

  • Who May be Counted for a Minyan
  • R Dovid Gottlieb examines whether there is a religious litmus test for a minyan: link (audio)

  • The Mitzvah of Chalah
  • R Herschel Schachter and R Josh Flug discuss various aspects of Hafrashas Chalah: link 1 (audio), link 2 (audio), link 3
  • R Zvi Sobolofsky discusses various halachos related to bread: link (audio)
  • R Eli Baruch Shulman, based upon the Baal HaTanya, explains why the Mitzvah of Chalah serves as a reminder that the purpose of Torah is for this world: link (audio)

  • The Mkoshesh Etzim and the Mitzvah of Tzitzis
  • R Avraham Gordimer explores the connection between the Mkoshesh Etzim and the Mitzvah of Tzitzis: link

  • The Mitzvah of Tzitis
  • Rav Soloveitchik ZTL explains the elements of Techeles and Lavan in Tzitzis: link
  • R Yissocher Frand ,R Amnon Bazak and R Michael Rosensweig explain the connection between the incident of the spies and the Mitzvah of Tzitis: link 1, link 2, link 3
  • R Asher Weiss explores various aspects of the Mitzvah of Tzitis: link
  • R Hershel Schachter discusses the definition of Techeles: link 1 (audio), link 2 (audio)
  • R Dovid Gottlieb and R Joshua Flug discusses the halachic issues involved in machine made Tzitzis and the types of materials that may be used for Tzitzis: link 1 (audio), link 2
  • R Moshe Gordon discusses whether one should wear Tzitis in or out: link (audio)

  • Special Feature I: Modern Orthodoxy , Religious Zionism and Aliyah
    For those interested in the above issues, see the following articles by R Aharon Lichtenstein, R Binyamin Blau, R Dr. Yoel Finkelman: link 1, link 2, link 3
    Special Feature II: Enhancing Our Tefilos
  • R Pesach Krohn and Rebbitzen Peshi Neuberger discuss how we can enhance our Tefilos: link 1 (audio), link 2 (audio), link 3, link 4 (audio), link 5 (audio)

  • Post Blog Discussions

  • For those interested in pursuing further in depth resources with respect to the function of a Beth Din for the purposes of Gerus, as opposed to either Psak Halacha or Psharah and the issues surrounding the halachic feasibility of an Eruv in Manhattan, please see the following articles by R Herschel Schachter: link (audio)

  • Know-It-Alls

    (Posting some Divrei Torah from the past few weeks that I've been writing for a local Parashah sheet)

    The placement of Parashas Sotah in Naso seems, at first glance, to be arbitrary. Therefore, Rashi explains the connections between it and the passages before and after it. In explaining why the sotah passage comes after the passage of terumah, Rashi says that someone who refuses to give a kohen the matnos kehunah will eventually have to go before a kohen for the sotah proceedings. However, it isn’t quite clear why these two laws are connected.

    Click here to read morePerhaps we can suggest that it has to do with the role played by the kohen in ancient Jewish society. It used to be that the kohen’s position in the Jewish community was as the teacher of Torah. He was the rav, the rebbe and the posek. If someone had no kohen to whom to give terumah, it meant that he felt that he could learn Torah on his own and answer his own halakhic questions. This is an attitude of arrogance that is unacceptable.

    The Mishnah in Avos (1:6) tells us to find a rav, a teacher. The Rambam says that if you must, you should use someone less knowledgeable than yourself because everyone needs the help of someone else in learning Torah. Someone with no kohen has the attitude that he knows what is best. He does not feel a need for anyone with whom to discuss his Torah questions.

    The entire concept behind sotah has always puzzled me. If you think your wife is untrustworthy, then talk to her about it and try to resolve the problem. If you cannot reach a solution, then unfortunately the Torah has the institution of gittin. Why would anyone make a kinuy, the first step towards sotah, and run the risk of having to go through the whole sotah procedure with all of its attendant trouble and embarrassment? It seems like a kinuy would only further exacerbate any marital problems that already exist through intimidation and manipulation.

    However, not everyone is rational. Someone who is arrogant and needs to always do things his way will be unable to resolve marital problems through discussion. He will instead decide on his own what is best, leading to potentially disastrous results. It seems that the parashah of sotah is meant for a person like him. Those same traits that cause someone to rely on himself and have no kohen are the characteristics that lead to a woman becoming a sotah. Perhaps that is what Rashi means in explaining the connection of these two passages.


    Transparency

    (Posting some Divrei Torah from the past few weeks that I've been writing for a local Parashah sheet)

    The Torah uses an unusual word to describe what the Jews in the desert had to do when they came forward to be counted in the census: "They gathered together the entire congregation on the first of the second month and they were registered (va-yisyaldu) by family ancestry according to the house of their fathers..." (Bamidbar 1:18). What does it mean va-yisyaldu? Rashi explains that they brought witnesses and their genealogical documents to prove their ancestries.

    Ramban points out that this is difficult. Why would they have to do this?

    Click here to read more
    Ramban points out that this is difficult. Why would they have to do this? These are people who were only a few generations removed from the twelve sons of Ya'akov, all of whom had lived together for two hundred years in a confined area in Egypt. Certainly anyone who tried to falsify his ancestry would be detected by someone. Additionally, they were presenting themselves to Moshe Rabbeinu. Is it possible that they would be able to trick him about their ancestries?

    I think that the explanation of Rashi's approach can be found when we keep in mind an earlier explanation of Rashi. It says that “Avraham gave birth to Yitzchak” (Bereishis 25:19) and Rashi explains that this phrase comes to tell us that the scoffers of the generation, leitzanei ha-dor, were saying that Sarah was impregnated by Avimelech. Therefore, Hashem made Yitzchak look exactly like Avraham – so everyone would know that the gossip was false. But the question remains, why should any of us care what the leitzanei ha-dor say? Perhaps we do not have to worry about the leitzanei ha-dor, because there is no way to satisfy them, but we have to be concerned about those who hear their accusations think. “Vihyisem neki’im” (Bamidbar 32:22) teaches us that, in and above being good, we have to make sure that we appear innocent to everyone who sees. We have to do what we can to prevent the leitzanei ha-dor from having an opening in which to spread lies about us.

    It is true that during Moshe Rabbeinu’s census in the desert, no one would have been able to lie about his ancestry. However, in order to preclude anyone in the future objecting to the ancestry of the Jews who left Egypt, or even their contemporaries in other nations who would want to insult them by denying their heritage, they came forward with solid proof of their ancestry. They intentionally created a process that was transparent and unassailable, at least to those with reasonable standards. The lesson of va-yisyaldu is that it isn’t enough to do the right thing. We have to make proof available demonstrating that it is right.


    Tuesday, June 16, 2009

    Was Nehama Leibowitz A Feminist?

    The recent biography by Yael Unterman, Nehama Leibowitz: Teacher and Bible Scholar is fascinating, exhaustive and thought-provoking. The book is divided into three parts: Nehama's life, her beliefs and her methodology. In each section, Unterman provides extensive background and then takes you through the subject with copious references to published materials and the seemingly endless interviews that she conducted. If anything, you can say that the book was too researched because there are so many people quoted with stories and facts. I particularly liked that aspect -- the many stories and interviews -- because it really brought Nehama to life. On her own, she was very modest and did not give away too much about herself. However, through extensive research, Unterman was able to put together the bits and pieces Nehama had told to students over the years, often accompanied with a story about how the information was revealed.

    The book raises many interesting questions about Nehama (that's what she liked to be called), and I don't think one blog post will suffice. This is the first in a series of planned posts on issues raised in the book.

    Click here to read moreChapter 14 is titled: Feminism and Femininty: "A Woman in the Inner Courtyard?"

    The main question discussed is Nehama's relationship with feminism. On the one hand, she was a female Torah teacher long before they became common, as they now are in some communities. And she was such a unique educator with only one agenda -- to teach Torah -- that she broke through most barriers. In that sense, she was a feminist.

    But her agenda was solely in regard to teaching Torah. She believed that she had something to teach and she was going to teach it. Other than that, though, she was entirely traditional. She was dead set against any type of religious innovation and often debated her students about this, some of whom devoted their lives to feminism -- like Blu Greenberg and Prof. Tamar Ross. Students like Greenberg and Prof. Chana Safrai tried to convince Nehama, but Nehama consistently rebutted their advances. One time, R. Avi Weiss (not a student) visited her and gave her a copy of his book advocating women's prayer groups. Nehama responded with a letter opposing the innovation (anyone have a copy of the letter?).

    Unterman writes (p. 296):
    In keeping only those mitzvot customary for women, Nehama did not feel deprived in any way. She viewed the desire to take on more mitzvot as a mdoern innovation resulting not from authentic religious emotion but from the influence of secular feminism. She was very outspoken on this issue. Had women fulfilled all their present obligations that they needed to go pursue some more? Had they run the gamut of charitable deeds? If God did not want women to lay tefillin then they should not -- what need had they for a black box on their heads? Whoever wanted more devotion every morning should get up early and visit the sick.
    She also repeatedly expressed the idea that raising children is more important than anything else and that she would have given up all of her accomplishments for a child of her own: "Nehama said explicitly she would have given it all up for a child. In response to a disparaging comment regarding women who choose children over career, she retorted, 'Do you think I'd be writing these gilyonot if I had children?!'" (pp. 284-285)

    I think in some respects Nehama was a feminist, but in the sense that nowadays almost everyone is. Some feminist attitudes have become so mainstream that they are almost not noticed. Concepts like "equal pay for equal work" are also feminist ideas, and Nehama embraced them just like almost all of us embrace them. However, the ideas that are currently associated with feminism are those that she rejected.


    The Mesader Kiddushin

    By: Rabbi Ari Enkin

    The individual honored with officiating at a wedding ceremony is referred to as the mesader kiddushin, which literally means "the one who arranges the betrothal". Only an individual who is especially fluent in the laws of solemnizing a marriage should officiate at one, regardless of whether or not the individual has a formal semicha.[1] In most circumstances, the custom today is to defer to the groom to appoint the rabbi who serves as the mesader kiddushin.[2] There are a number of communities in which the mesader kiddushin dons his Shabbat clothes or a tallit when officiating.[3]

    It is interesting to note that there are a number of authorities who are somewhat lenient as to who is deemed competent to perform a wedding.[4] According to these authorities, there is no requirement for the one officiating at a wedding to be a rabbi, or even especially knowledgeable for that matter. In fact, according to this approach, it is permissible for even a layman with minimal background to officiate at a wedding ceremony where needed. This development is due to some halachic authorities distinguishing between the function of issuing rulings related to marriage and that of actually solemnizing one.[5] While it is unanimous that the former requires a recognized scholar, the latter may not be necessarily so. Although solemnizing a wedding is a very sacred duty and should not be taken lightly, ultimately, however, executing the bare essentials of a halachic marriage is relatively simple.[6] Common custom, however, is to ensure that only a bona fide rabbi knowledgeable in this area of halacha officiates at a wedding.[7]

    Click here to read moreAlthough merely ensuring that a groom gives the bride a ring (or other object of value) in front of witnesses along with a simple declaration of intention to marry is all that is truly needed for a marriage to take effect, there are many fine details relevant before and after the wedding that, should the officiating individual overlook them, would render the entire ceremony invalid. Among these details is the obligation to ensure that the groom owns the ring and that the witnesses have met the halachic requirement to serve as such. So too, the rabbi must ensure that the bride and groom are halachically permitted to marry one another, something which is not always as simple as it seems. It would be remiss not to mention that even rabbis with the finest semichas do not have specific expertise in the laws of marriage, other than the minimal training for solemnizing one.[8]

    It is also noted that the honor of officiating at weddings should remain within the domain of the local rabbi, as performing marriages is a major component of his income, which should not be taken away.[9] This happens frequently when the bride and groom come from different communities and the visiting party brings his or her rabbi to officiate, rather than the local one. Due to this concern of unlawfully depriving a rabbi of his intended income, a number of authorities recommend that when one invites a rabbi from an outside the community to perform a wedding, one should nevertheless offer the local rabbi an honorarium as if he himself had performed the wedding.[10] In fact, one should also offer an honorarium to the chazzan and any other officers of the synagogue who were involved in the wedding preparations.[11] In much of Europe decrees had been made that only local rabbis were permitted to officiate at weddings.[12] In any event, a visiting rabbi who is invited to serve as a mesader kiddushin in an area under the jurisdiction of another rabbi should first introduce himself to the local rabbi before he performs the wedding.[13]


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    [1] Kiddushin 6a, E.H. 49:3
    [2] B'tzel Hachachma 2:72
    [3] Minhag Yisrael Torah 49:11
    [4] Beit Shmuel E.H. 49:4, Taz E.H. 49:1
    [5] Rashi;Kiddushin 6a
    [6] Beit Shmuel E.H. 49:4, Taz E.H. 49:1
    [7] Shevut Yaakov 3:121, Knesset Yechezkel E.H. 72
    [8] Maharsha;Kiddushin 13a
    [9] Divrei Malkiel 4:119
    [10] Rema Y.D. 245:22
    [11] Minhag Yisrael Torah 49:11:2
    [12] Minhag Yisrael Torah 49:11
    [13] Aruch Hashulchan E.H. 49:8


    Sunday, June 14, 2009

    Swearing in Court

    There is a strong Jewish custom to never vow, even if it means losing money (Responsa Chasam Sofer, vol. 5 no. 90). This issue arises whenever a Jew is called to testify in court or even to serve on jury duty. In New York (maybe other states) and in Israel you have the opportunity to affirm that you will tell the truth, without actually swearing.

    However, this presumably should not matter. The Shulchan Arukh (Yoreh De'ah 237:1) rules that a vow does not have to include God's name, and later (237:10) rules that a vow does not have to use the word swear (shevu'ah; based on the first Mishnah in Nedarim). If so, is not affirming to tell the truth as much a vow as swearing?

    Click here to read moreI asked this question the first time I had jury duty and was told by my rabbi the following: Since I am actively refusing to swear, it shows that my usage of the word "affirm" is intended to mean that it is not a vow. I have since seen that R. Ovadiah Yosef rules that way in Yabi'a Omer (Yoreh De'ah, vol. 1 no. 17).

    However, R. Yosef adds that your affirmation is preceded by a statement that since you are a religious Jew you do not want to swear. This additional statement makes it clear that your affirmation is not intended to be a vow. When you are called to testify, you go through this. But on jury duty, they have everyone say together "I swear" without giving individuals the opportunity to state their desire to say something else. Last time I was on jury duty, a few months ago, I said, "I don't swear," mainly to see if anyone would notice or care. No one did.

    The procedure of affirming rather than swearing is also what religious soldiers in the Israeli army do during their induction ceremonies. The affirmation rather than swearing to protect faithfully is considered a valid way of avoiding the problem of making a vow (R. Yosef Tzvi Rimon, Tzava Ka-Halakhah, pp. 354-361).

    I should add that regardless of whether this is technically a vow, you still aren't allowed to lie in court and it is considered a sin to do so.


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