Volume 26: Number 13
Thu, 15 Jan 2009
Subjects Discussed In This Issue:
Message: 1
From: Y...@aol.com
Date: Wed, 14 Jan 2009 20:43:19 EST
Subject: Re: [Avodah] 7MBNoach: Stricter or Less-Strict?
In a message dated 1/13/2009 5:25:24 P.M. Eastern Standard Time,
mi...@aishdas.org writes:
Oneshim are stricter for benei Noach, though. So many more violations
are dinei nefashos. Sanhedrin 57a. 57b says there is no requirement of
hasra'ah, and eid echad, even a qarov, is sufficient. In terms of the
content of the issurim themselves...
Much can be written on this topic, but just 2 short points.
1) Sugia Arucha in Sanhedrin 58, and other places, wether "Mee Ika Midi (can
there exist something which is permitted to a Yisroel and Ossur for a B"N),
see also Rambam Hil. Mlochim 9:13 (and see Margoliyas HaYam on the Sugia).
2) B"N is punished on a Kol Shehu, ".Lo nitnu Hashiu'rin eloh lyisroel
bilvad" Ramba"m (ibid9:10)
Kol Tuv,
Yitzchok Zirkind
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Message: 2
From: "kennethgmil...@juno.com" <kennethgmil...@juno.com>
Date: Thu, 15 Jan 2009 03:44:15 GMT
Subject: Re: [Avodah] Birchot Habanim and Negiah
R' Moshe Y. Gluck wrote:
> I've seen - IIRC, twice - a Rov put his hand on the head
> of an (unrelated) Kallah to give her a Berachah. I assume
> that they did not consider it Derech Chibah.
Let me start off by making two educated guesses about this situation:
A) It was probably around the time of the bedeken; in my experience that's when the brachos are given. If so, it was prior to the kiddushin.
B) Any rav who is close enough to the kallah to give her a bracha would
probably have been the Mesader Kiddushin, or would otherwise have been
close enough to know whether or not this was a Chupas Nidah, and I'll
presume that it was not.
If those two guesses are correct, then the kallah would not have been an ervah to the rav.
I'm not saying that this is enough to justify the negiah, and I'm also not
saying that it is *not* enough to justify it. My only point is that neither
consideration applies to a father-in-law giving brachos to his
daughter-in-law on a typical Friday Night, and so RMYG's story is not
relevant to answer it.
Akiva Miller
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Message: 3
From: "Joseph Mosseri" <joseph.moss...@verizon.net>
Date: Wed, 14 Jan 2009 22:17:47 -0500
Subject: [Avodah] Birkat HaHammah
I clearly remember Birkat HaHammah in 1981 and at the time we were taught
that this berakhah is recited once every 28 years when the sun is in the
exact position it was in when it was created at the time of Ma'aseh
Bereshit.
As we know from Bereshit 1:14-19 this happened on the 4th day. According to
tradition Bereshit began on Rosh Hodesh Nisan hence the 4th day (Wednesday)
of Ma'aseh Bereshit when the sun was created had to be on the 4th of Nisan.
This berakhah must be recited on the 4th of Nisan.
What is the source and the reasoning to say that this year we will recite it
on Ereb Pesah the 14th of Nisan?
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Message: 4
From: Zev Sero <z...@sero.name>
Date: Wed, 14 Jan 2009 23:14:56 -0500
Subject: Re: [Avodah] Birkat HaHammah
Joseph Mosseri wrote:
> I clearly remember Birkat HaHammah in 1981 and at the time we were
> taught that this berakhah is recited once every 28 years when the sun is
> in the exact position it was in when it was created at the time of
> Ma'aseh Bereshit.
In theory, yes. Well, it comes back to the same position every year,
of course, but every 28 years it comes back to that position at the
same time of the day and day of the week. At least, it would if years
were exactly 365.25 days long, and that's the assumption we use for this.
> As we know from Bereshit 1:14-19 this happened on the 4th day. According
> to tradition Bereshit began on Rosh Hodesh Nisan
No, it didn't. I don't know where you got that one. According to the
view that the world was created in Nissan, the first day was the 27th of
Adar, and Rosh Chodesh was the fourth day. Molad Nissan in the year 1
was on Wednesday at about 3:35 AM. According to the view that the world
was created in Tishri, the first day was the 25th of Elul, and Adam was
created on the sixth day, 1 Tishri of the year 2. The molad of that
Tishri was on Friday at exactly 8:00 AM.
> hence the 4th day
> (Wednesday) of Ma'aseh Bereshit when the sun was created had to be on
> the 4th of Nisan.
See above. It was the 1st of Nissan.
> This berakhah must be recited on the 4th of Nisan.
No, it is recited whenever the 26th of March falls on a Wednesday, in
the year after a leap year. On the Julian calendar, that is. To convert
from Julian to Gregorian this century, add 13 days, so 26 March = 8 April.
There is no particular date on the Hebrew calendar on which it must fall;
in 1953 it was on the 23rd of Nissan, and in 1925 it was again on Erev
Pesach.
--
Zev Sero A mathemetician is a device for turning coffee
z...@sero.name into theorems. - Paul Erdos
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Message: 5
From: "kennethgmil...@juno.com" <kennethgmil...@juno.com>
Date: Thu, 15 Jan 2009 04:11:04 GMT
Subject: Re: [Avodah] Threats Against A Judge
R' Zev Sero wrote:
> Nor is kibush ha'aretz listed, and yet it's completely
> obvious that it does override pikuach nefesh. The same
> applies to lo taguru; by its nature it's obvious that it
> requires mesirut nefesh. The three listed exceptions are
> those that don't require mesirut nefesh by their very
> natures, and indeed bnai noach are *not* required to be
> moser nefesh for them, but Jews are.
One of "the three listed exceptions" is murder. I have two questions:
1) It seems to me that the prohibiton against murder DOES require mesiras nefesh by its very nature: "Who knows whose blood is redder?"
2) Is it really true that a Ben Noach is not required to be moser nefesh
for murder? Suppose Yasser threatens Adolf that he must murder Mahmoud, or
be killed himself. Are you saying that Adolf is allowed to murder Mahmoud
to protect his own life?
Akiva Miller
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Message: 6
From: Ben Waxman <ben1...@zahav.net.il>
Date: Thu, 15 Jan 2009 07:32:51 +0200
Subject: Re: [Avodah] Threats Against A Judge
I don't have my HM handy, but IIRC there is a way out if the judge is
afraid. The judge does not have to accept a case if one of the sides is
violent and he is fearful for his life. Once he accepts the case however,
then the prohibition of lo taguru applies.
Ben
>> RZSero wrote:
>>> That's an explicit lav of "lo taguru". As the Sifri says, "perhaps you
>>> will say I am afraid of so-and-so lest he kill my son, or burn my grain-
>>> stack, or chop down my trees". There's no question that one may not
>>> give a false psak, and that this overrides pikuach nefesh...
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Message: 7
From: "Shoshana L. Boublil" <toram...@bezeqint.net>
Date: Thu, 15 Jan 2009 08:45:14 +0200
Subject: Re: [Avodah] The importance of a woman's name (Yitzhak
>The larger point here is the
> remarkable malleability that the Bible has demonstrated, often
> functioning as a mirror of the views of its exegetes. RnSB is
> something of a feminist; she looks at the text and derives from it
> feminist, woman-friendly messages. Ralbag is emphatically *not* a
> feminist; he looks at the text and sees, well, something rather
> different ...
>
> Yitzhak
We have a saying here in Israel that sometimes judges mark the target - then
write the judgement.
R' Yitzchak claims that my goal is a woman-friendly message. Of course he
read my mind - not. BTW, this kind of response is totally inappropriate b/c
it dismisses the content without ever having to actually bother to
understand it.
With all due respect to Ralbag, how smart a woman can be is irrelevant to
the message I was trying to teach. Perhaps, instead of assuming that my
goal was a feminist one, it would have been helpful to re-read the post with
the understanding that the goal was a Torah thought, an understanding of
Hashem's subliminal messages, so to speak. Just b/c it's given by a woman
doesn't mean it's feminist.
My post was not an issue of malleability, but of 70 panim LaTorah. One can
focus narrowly on a pasuk or topic, or one can try to see the broad brush
strokes that created the Jewish history.
I took the evidence, who Hashem considers worthy of leadership and sought
the common factor. That is not being "feminist", that is seeking Emet and
understanding of what Hashem wants from us. How to improve our Avodat
Hashem.
Shoshana L. Boublil
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Message: 8
From: Zev Sero <z...@sero.name>
Date: Thu, 15 Jan 2009 00:46:29 -0500
Subject: Re: [Avodah] [Areivim] Is smoking mutar?
Avroham Yakov wrote:
> As to the question of smoking; is there any living authority today that
> says that it is indeed mutar?
IIRC R Bleich wrote an article many years ago arguing that there is no
precedent for the claim that "venishmartem" applies to actions that pose
no immediate danger, but only increase the probability of developing a
disease at some time in the future. All the examples the gemara gives are
ones where there is an unacceptably high risk of immediate death. A shaky
bridge may or may not collapse while you cross it, but if it does it will
kill you. Exposed water may or may not contain venom, but if it does and
you drink it you will die. None of these are like the risk from smoking.
AFAIK he has not renounced that position, and nor has our knowledge of the
metzius changed in that time, so as to invalidate its application to smoking.
--
Zev Sero A mathemetician is a device for turning coffee
z...@sero.name into theorems. - Paul Erdos
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Message: 9
From: Daniel Eidensohn <yadmo...@012.net.il>
Date: Thu, 15 Jan 2009 12:35:24 +0200
Subject: Re: [Avodah] Din Moser
This is a very misleading statement. You are relying on the Tzitz
Eliezar based on the Aruch HaShulchan. Rav Moshe Feinstein and others
strongly reject this as R' Broyde acknowledges in his article. One posek
told me that this view in fact is only a minority view.
R' Yitzhak Grossman wrote:
> On Tue, 13 Jan 2009 19:52:55 -0500 I wrote:
>
>
>> No. Rambam (Hovel 8:10) and SA (HM 388:10) explicitly state that even
>> a moser of "mamon kal" is a rodef; it is a mizvah to kill him; and
>> "kol ha'kodem le'hargo zachah".
>>
>> Incidentally, they also state there that this Halachah applies even
>> today, even though we don't judge dinei ne'fashos, answering a question
>> raised earlier in this thread.
>>
>
> While this is technically correct, I should have noted that as a matter
> of actual Halachah, one who is "moser mammon kal" in contemporary
> times might not have the status of rodef, since the assumption of the
> Poskim that any mesirah has the potential to lead to the (unjust) death
> of the nimsar, which is the basis for the aforementioned Halachah, may
> no longer hold. For an excellent survey of the literature on this and
> related points, see section III of R. Broyde's classic, comprehensive
> article on Mesirah, a version of which is available here:
>
> http://www.jlaw.com/Articles/mesiralaw2.html
>
>
>
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Message: 10
From: Micha Berger <mi...@aishdas.org>
Date: Thu, 15 Jan 2009 06:02:12 -0500
Subject: Re: [Avodah] Threats Against A Judge
On Thu, Jan 15, 2009 at 04:11:04AM +0000, kennethgmil...@juno.com wrote:
: One of "the three listed exceptions" is murder. I have two questions:
To tie this to another thread I just revived....
Perhaps the 3 mitzvos yeihareig ve'al ya'avor are unique in that they
define dying al qiddush Hashem? Dying for shoelace color is situtational,
whatever they banned to get rid of Judaism. But in the definition of
dying AQH, these 3 mitvos are phrased as absolute, not situational.
: 1) It seems to me that the prohibiton against murder DOES require
: mesiras nefesh by its very nature: "Who knows whose blood is redder?"
I fail to undertand what you're saying. How does your question make
shefichas dam more about mesiras nefesh than AZ or gilui arayos?
What the question you quote shows is why one should be moseir
nefesh, why this made it to the list of 3. But how does it define
the very nature of refusing to kill?
IOW, in most situations I can refrain from killing someone without risking
my life. This is in contrast to a milchamah, where it's impossible to
not assume risk.
Tir'u baTov!
-Micha
--
Micha Berger When we are no longer able to change a situation
mi...@aishdas.org -- just think of an incurable disease such as
http://www.aishdas.org inoperable cancer -- we are challenged to change
Fax: (270) 514-1507 ourselves. - Victor Frankl (MSfM)
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Message: 11
From: D&E-H Bannett <db...@zahav.net.il>
Date: Thu, 15 Jan 2009 13:07:35 +0200
Subject: Re: [Avodah] "Ancient" Minhagim
Re: <<OTOH there are other minhaggim which have not aroused
protest. The
Kabblists of Tsefat started the Minhag of Kabbals Shabbos,
but I am unware
of any siginificant protest. I AM awre that some communites
did not
institute Kabbals Shabbos until relatively recently, but I
am not aware of
any serious oppostion to its imposition.>>
You seem to be unaware or have forgotten that, in the first
years, there were places where they did not permit the
saying of Kabbalat Shabbat in the synagogue and those
interested, came early to say it in a side room. Later, in
shuls with a professional chazan, it was permitted in the
shul but, because it is not part of the normative davening,
it was not said by the chazan and not from the amud of the
chazan.
But, to this day, there is still an obvious objection,
although not usually seen as such. In many Ashkenazi shuls,
Kabbalat Shabbat is still said from the bima and the ba'al
tefila moves to the chazan's amud afterwards for ma'ariv.
David
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Message: 12
From: David Cohen <ddco...@gmail.com>
Date: Thu, 15 Jan 2009 17:37:00 +0200
Subject: Re: [Avodah] new customs
R' Eli Turkel:
> ...the custom of some to use only one hand when blessing
> the children only has a mystic support of not combining mercy
> and justice.
Many people have the custom to include Birkas Kohanim in the birkas habanim.
See the lengthy discussion in the Bach at the beginning of Orach Chayim
128. His conclusion is that one of the factors that might determine whether
or not a non-kohein violates an "isur asseih" by giving Birkas Kohanim is
whether or not he does nesi'as kappayim (and any raising up of both hands
technically qualifies as such). Using only one hand would avoid this
potential problem.
I heard this point made in a shiur by a major talmid chakham (a RIETS rosh
yeshiva), whom I will gladly identify off-list to anybody who asks.
-- D.C.
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Message: 13
From: David Cohen <ddco...@gmail.com>
Date: Thu, 15 Jan 2009 15:45:09 +0200
Subject: Re: [Avodah] Birchot Habanim and Negiah
RMYG wrote:
> I've seen - IIRC, twice - a Rov put his hand on the head of an
> unrelated) Kallah to give her a Berachah. I assume that they did
> not consider it Derech Chibah.
Most of the time, a kallah on her wedding day, before the chupah, is
in the relatively rare position (for pre-menopausal women) of being
neither an eishes ish nor a niddah.
I'm not saying that it wouldn't be mutar otherwise, but just pointing
out that one can't necessarily bring a proof from this story.
-- D.C.
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Message: 14
From: Steven J Scher <sjsc...@eiu.edu>
Date: Thu, 15 Jan 2009 13:27:04 -0600 (CST)
Subject: [Avodah] sheimos
ok. so, as I usually do when I get into my office, I picked up a copy of
the student newspaper, and retreated to the rest room.
imagine my surprise when I opened the paper and saw the editorial cartoon
about israel.... no, I wasn't surprised that it was about israel, what i
was surprised about was that it included correctly drawn hebrew
characters.
upon closer look, I realized that among the characters were
yud-key-vav-key...
this raises several halachic dilemmas (dilemmae??):
1) what do I do about the fact that I now have sheimos in a bathroom? I
couldn't exactly get up and walk right out.
2) what is my obligation with this paper and, more importantly, with all
the other copies that I see lying around? Do I have to try and pick up as
many as I can to dispose of properly? Do I have to seek them out, or can
I just get the ones I happen to see in improper places (e.g., the floor,
etc) and dispose of them properly...
and, for a question without torah emphasis: does the chevra think its
worth writing a letter to the editor to the paper to complain about this?
- steve
ps - I did a quick search on the cartoonist. he is israeli born, american
educated, getting a master's in art here at eastern illinois university.
that explains his command of hebrew, but raises other questions about his
position vis-a-vis the war.
***************************************************************************
Steven J. Scher sjsc...@eiu.edu Listen to WEFT 90.1FM
Department of Psychology 217-581-7269 www.weft.org
Eastern Illinois University
Charleston, IL 61920 I would discuss the holy books with the learned
USA men seven hours every day. That would be the
sweetest thing of all...
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Message: 15
From: Yitzhak Grossman <cele...@gmail.com>
Date: Thu, 15 Jan 2009 15:38:15 -0500
Subject: Re: [Avodah] Din Moser
On Thu, 15 Jan 2009 12:35:24 +0200
Daniel Eidensohn <yadmo...@012.net.il> wrote:
> This is a very misleading statement. You are relying on the Tzitz
> Eliezar based on the Aruch HaShulchan. Rav Moshe Feinstein and others
> strongly reject this as R' Broyde acknowledges in his article. One posek
> told me that this view in fact is only a minority view.
It is not at all misleading; on the contrary, your comments
misrepresent both my statement and the Halachic literature on the
subject.
First, a clarification. I should have stated explicitly, although it
was clear from the context, that I was addressing the narrow question
of whether a contemporary moser is a rodef, not whether mesirah is
actually permitted today.
Your comments suggest that Ziz Eliezer is the sole lenient opinion, and
that most others disagree. R. Broyde himself notes that R. Elyashiv is
quoted as taking the same view. This position actually appears first in
Resp. Beis Yitzhak, cited in Pis'hei Hoshen (first footnote to Nezikin
Ch. 4 and in R. Broyde's article) as stating that "in contemporary
times, a moser of property is not under the rubric of rodef".
Rav Blau, one of the greatest contemporary experts on Hoshen Mishpat,
presents the issue as follows (ibid.):
"In the works of the Poskim we find limudei zechus on contemporary
kingdoms and governments, that moser doesn't apply. But it is known
that these Halachos have been distorted by the censors, and sometimes
things have been written (or omitted) out of fear of the censor or the
government, or at least out of eivah, so it is difficult to deduce
anything from these statements.
But it still seems to me that there is a basis ('zad') in Halachah for
this: since the main stringency of moser mammon is that they will come
to kill him, it is possible ('yitachen') that in these countries where
there is a proper ('metukan') government, even though it is certainly
ab initio still prohibited, , but if it is certain that there is no
danger that they will kill him, it is only like a tort against
property, and all the stringencies of a moser against a person would
not apply.
But it is still possible that the punishment of jail is like mesirah
against his a, since there is a danger to life in imprisonment,
and also, even mesirah of property to the government can possibly
result in danger to life as a consequence of their investigations and
cross-examinations ('derishos va'hakiros'), and it is known that one
who falls into their hands, they have no compassion on him until he
confesses"
He subsequently cites the Beis Yitzhak mentioned earlier, and the
stringent opinion of Rav Breish cited by R. Broyde. [R. Broyde also
mentions Rav Blau's analysis.]
As mentioned, Rav Breish is stringent, although Rav Moshe's position is
considerably less clear. In one responsum, cited by R. Broyde, he
states only that mesirah is prohibited "where the punishment is
unfounded in Jewish law", and in all his various responsa prohibiting
mesirah cited by R. Broyde, he is only stating that mesirah is
prohibited, and not that we would treat a contemporary moser as a rodef.
Rav Ezra Bazri, as cited by R, Broyde, does apparently take a very
stringent view, but R, Broyde also cites Rav S. Wosner as adopting a
more lenient view.
Also note that contrary to your comment, I did not 'rely' on anything;
I chose my language very carefully for its tentativeness, writing:
"one who is "moser mammon kal" in contemporary times might not have
the status of rodef *might* not have the status of rodef, since the
assumption of the Poskim that any mesirah has the potential to lead to
the (unjust) death of the nimsar, which is the basis for the
aforementioned Halachah, *may* no longer hold" [Emphasis added here.]
To summarize, Rav Waldenberg is far from being a da'as yachid. Rav
Yitzhak Shmelkes, Rav Elyashiv, Rav Wosner and Rav Blau all at least
consider the possibility that the laws of moser, and in particular the
assumption that he is a rodef, do not remain unchanged today. Tho only
ones who clearly maintain that he is still a moser are Rav Breish and
Rav Bazri (Rav Moshe, although he rules that mesirah is prohibited,
does not state explicitly that a moser remains a rodef, as above).
Your citation of some anonymous posek claiming that it is minority view
is not terribly persuasive without the information of who the posek is,
which authorities he believes are stringent, and exactly what he was
asked (permissibility or status as rodef) and how he responded.
R. Broyde's article is available here:
http://www.jlaw.com/Articles/mesiralaw2.html
Yitzhak
--
Bein Din Ledin - http://bdl.freehostia.com
A discussion of Hoshen Mishpat, Even Ha'Ezer and other matters
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Message: 16
From: Zev Sero <z...@sero.name>
Date: Thu, 15 Jan 2009 11:23:42 -0500
Subject: Re: [Avodah] Threats Against A Judge
kennethgmil...@juno.com wrote:
> R' Zev Sero wrote:
>> Nor is kibush ha'aretz listed, and yet it's completely
>> obvious that it does override pikuach nefesh. The same
>> applies to lo taguru; by its nature it's obvious that it
>> requires mesirut nefesh. The three listed exceptions are
>> those that don't require mesirut nefesh by their very
>> natures, and indeed bnai noach are *not* required to be
>> moser nefesh for them, but Jews are.
>
> One of "the three listed exceptions" is murder. I have two questions:
>
> 1) It seems to me that the prohibiton against murder DOES require mesiras
> nefesh by its very nature: "Who knows whose blood is redder?"
Not by its nature. It is perfectly logical to put self-preservation above
the duty not to kill others. My blood may not be redder than yours on an
absolute scale, but it's redder to ME. My first duty is to myself and my
own, and therefore if preserving my life, or those of my children, means
taking yours, then that is what I will do.
So why is the halacha otherwise? Here's my speculation: We have a mitzvah
of kiddush Hashem, that we must give up our lives for Hashem, i.e.
mitzvot are more important than self-preservation. But we have a
contradictory pasuk "vachai bahem". So some mitzvot require mesirut
nefesh and some don't. Bish'at hashmad any avera is a chilul Hashem, and
so mesirut nefesh applies even to shoelaces. At other times, AZ is
obviously always a chilul Hashem by definition, but for other mitzvot we
can apply "vachai bahem". In other words, "vachai bahem" is a *heter*
from the requirement for kidush Hashem. But once we have to resort to
this heter, how can it apply to murder? Surely Hashem is just as concerned
about your life as He is about mine! Why would He let me off the general
requirement of kiddush Hashem just to save my life, if by doing so yours
will be lost? What will He have gained by that? And once we say murder
is always a chilul Hashem, we bring in giluy arayot because the Torah
compares them.
War, on the other hand, by its very nature requires soldiers lives to
be risked and lost. And yet there is a requirement to fight milchemet
mitzvah. If pikuach nefesh overrode that requirement, then how could
it be a requirement at all? How can a war *ever* be fought, if each
individual is entitled to put his life ahead of the mitzvah?
Nor is this the only example. Imagine if someone were to argue that the
requirement to execute someone who has been convicted of a capital
crime is overridden by pikuach nefesh! After all, one may be mechalel
shabbat in order to save a Jewish life, even that of a rasha, kal
vachomer that one may ignore the mitzvat asei of executing the convict!
> 2) Is it really true that a Ben Noach is not required to be moser
> nefesh for murder? Suppose Yasser threatens Adolf that he must murder
> Mahmoud, or be killed himself. Are you saying that Adolf is allowed to
> murder Mahmoud to protect his own life?
It certainly seems so. He is not required to be moser nefesh even for AZ,
kal vachomer for murder and giluy arayot. See Rambam Hil' Melachim 10:3
http://mechon-mamre.org/i/e510.htm
--
Zev Sero A mathemetician is a device for turning coffee
z...@sero.name into theorems. - Paul Erdos
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Message: 17
From: Zev Sero <z...@sero.name>
Date: Thu, 15 Jan 2009 11:28:26 -0500
Subject: Re: [Avodah] Threats Against A Judge
Ben Waxman wrote:
> RZSero wrote:
>> That's an explicit lav of "lo taguru". As the Sifri says, "perhaps
>> you will say I am afraid of so-and-so lest he kill my son, or burn my
>> grain-stack, or chop down my trees". There's no question that one may
>> not give a false psak, and that this overrides pikuach nefesh...
> I don't have my HM handy, but IIRC there is a way out if the judge is
> afraid. The judge does not have to accept a case if one of the sides is
> violent and he is fearful for his life. Once he accepts the case
> however, then the prohibition of lo taguru applies.
Whether and in what circumstances he can recuse himself from the case
is the subject of the article I linked to. It is not clear that he
can refuse a case, especially if he is a BD kavua, whose job it is to
take the public's cases. It's discussed by the poskim, which is why
I linked the article. But the question here was not about recusal but
about giving a false psak, and certainly lo taguru applies here, and
by definition overrides pikuach nefesh.
--
Zev Sero A mathemetician is a device for turning coffee
z...@sero.name into theorems. - Paul Erdos
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Message: 18
From: Micha Berger <mi...@aishdas.org>
Date: Thu, 15 Jan 2009 18:37:18 -0500
Subject: Re: [Avodah] sheimos
On Thu, Jan 15, 2009 at 01:27:04PM -0600, Steven J Scher wrote:
: 1) what do I do about the fact that I now have sheimos in a bathroom? I
: couldn't exactly get up and walk right out.
...
: ps - I did a quick search on the cartoonist. he is israeli born, american
: educated, getting a master's in art here at eastern illinois university.
I think that a sheim found in an Eastern Illinois U student newspaper
no holier than seifer Torah shekasvo min. I doubt a non-min would have
put a sheim H' in a cartoon.
BTW, this question comes up a lot in Columbia. Their logo is a man in a
throne, with the sheim Havayah in a ribbon overhead, denoting who they
are trying to represent. (The vision of the zeqeinim at Har Sinai?)
Tir'u baTov!
-Micha
--
Micha Berger When we are no longer able to change a situation
mi...@aishdas.org -- just think of an incurable disease such as
http://www.aishdas.org inoperable cancer -- we are challenged to change
Fax: (270) 514-1507 ourselves. - Victor Frankl (MSfM)
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Message: 19
From: Gals...@aol.com
Date: Thu, 15 Jan 2009 18:43:40 EST
Subject: [Avodah] Birkat Hachamah
We will say "Birkat Hachamah" , IY"H, on April 8th.
This is done every 28 years, first counting from Adar 22.
My question is, why Adar 22? If Adam was born (to Rav Yehudah) on Friday,
Nisan 1, then the Me'orot were created on Wednsday, Adar 29th. Then why do we
count from Adar 22?
galsaba
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