Volume 26: Number 154
Mon, 03 Aug 2009
Subjects Discussed In This Issue:
Message: 1
From: Zev Sero <z...@sero.name>
Date: Mon, 03 Aug 2009 09:18:58 -0400
Subject: Re: [Avodah] [Areivim] The Shevach Scandal and the Arrested
Mike Miller wrote:
> maybe the moser can fight back
> m'din rodef if he holds that his mesirah does not make him chayav
> misah.
Who says a moser (or a rodef) has no right to defend himself?
--
Zev Sero The trouble with socialism is that you
z...@sero.name eventually run out of other people?s money
- Margaret Thatcher
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Message: 2
From: Zev Sero <z...@sero.name>
Date: Mon, 03 Aug 2009 10:22:30 -0400
Subject: [Avodah] SZ and Tisha B'av (was The Three Weeks and Private
Doron Beckerman wrote:
> Does anyone have any sources regarding an increase in the severity
> levels of the Aveilus surrounding Tisha B'Av being due to the Shabbetai
> Tzvi followers (across many communities) eating and partying on Tisha
> B'av and therefore high levels of Chumra were implemented? If so - only
> regarding Tisha B'Av or the whole period?
I don't have a source that this is the reason for an increase in the
observance of this aveilus, but I can add some sources for the fact
that it was widely believed among O Jews that SZ Jews made a big deal
of davka violating TB. (Whether this belief was actually true, I have
no idea.)
1. R Yonoson Eibshutz was an expert menaker, and would personally
treiber the meat for all his talmidim. One of R Yaakov Emden's
accusations against R Yonoson was that he would deliberately leave in
some of the gid hanosheh, in order to be machshil people in eating it,
because each of the 365 mitzvot lo taaseh corresponds to a day in the
calendar and gid hanosheh corresponds to Tisha B'av; since, according
to the SZ people, TB had been abolished, so had been the issur of GhN,
and it was a "mitzvah" to eat it.
2. The infamous slander that was told to the GRA against the chasidim,
which caused him to conclude that they were an anti-halachic kat that
must be put in cherem, was that the Baal Hatanya was seen partying
with his followers on TB, with a girl on his lap. (TB that year was
on Shabbos, and the girl was two years old.)
--
Zev Sero The trouble with socialism is that you
z...@sero.name eventually run out of other people?s money
- Margaret Thatcher
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Message: 3
From: Daniel Eidensohn <yadmo...@012.net.il>
Date: Mon, 03 Aug 2009 18:36:49 +0300
Subject: Re: [Avodah] some halachot of moser
Zev Sero wrote:
> Eli Turkel wrote:
>> R Broyde has an article on the
>> subject in Journal of Contemporary Society 43
>>
>> In it his brings that the Tzitz Eliezer allows reporting crimes to
>> western society governments based on the Arukh HaShulchan that todays
>> governments do not kill criminals as bandits used to in the old days.
>
> 1. This makes no sense, since its premise - that the law of moser has
> something to do with the government killing the victim - is patently
> false. Hamoser *mamon* chavero is no less a mosser.
*Rosh says that being moser money will lead to killing
*
*Rosh**^[1] * <#_ftn1>*(17:1):? *Our Sages compared an informant who
causes a bandit to take money from another Jew to a rodef who pursues to
kill ?. So to in the case of money of a fellow Jew, once it falls into
the hands of a bandit there is no mercy. Today they take some of it and
tomorrow they take the rest and in the end the Jew himself is taken by
the bandits and he is killed because they think he admit he has more
money. Because it leads to killing, the informing of bandits about a
Jew?s money is like a pursuer to kill someone (rodef) and the victims
can be saved by killing the informant? And surely in the present case
where according to witnesses he has been warned already and he refuses
to desist. Thus it is considered an on going crime and everyone has the
right to punish him without the need of receiving witnesses in his
presence. Even when it is not an on going crimes, when someone is judged
before non-Jews they do not require the acceptance of witnesses in his
presence. That is because someone who is an established informant, the
non-Jews show favoritism to him for their own benefit. Therefore if
there were a requirement to accept witnesses in his presence and do a
thorough examination of them ? he would never be convicted since the
non-Jews would protect him. Even when he is not in danger he informs on
individuals and the public so surely in the case where he is accused and
thus his life is in danger ? he will make false accusations and will
endanger the entire Jewish community. Therefore the standard practice in
all Jewish communities is when a person has informed three times ?
either regarding giving over the Jew himself or his property to a bandit
? they search a means of having him punished. This is an emergency
condition for the community to prevent him informing on others and to
eliminate informers. Therefore in our present case where witnesses have
established that he has repeatedly informed and that he is prepared to
do it again ? it is good to have him judged and punished. And thus
should be done to all enemies of G-d?
>
> 2. The Aruch Hashulchan absolutely cannot be relied on in this area;
> his exaggerated flattery of contemporary government is transparently
> designed to please the censor, and is so over the top precisely so
> that the reader should understand that he doesn't mean it. E.g. see
> the title of the siman on hilchot gerut. It's of a piece with the
> siddurim that proclaimed "avinu malkenu en lanu melech *bashamayim*
> ela ata"; everybody understood that the extra word was not to be said.
It is hard to accept that the Aruch HaShulchan would lie c.v. about the
correct halacha See Yam Shel Shlomo Bk 38a
>
> The Ramo permits the *victim* of a violent crime to masser his
> assailant. I'm not sure that other people are included in this heter.
>
Rema (388:7) is dealing with a case that someone is regularly beating
others - there is no mention how serious the beatings are
*Rema**^[1] * <#_ftn1>*(C.M. 388:7):?* Some say that if a man has been
hit by another - it is possible to file a complaint with the secular
government - even though this causes the assailant great damage.
There is also a Shach (388:45) to this effect as well as a Chasam Sofer
(Gittin 7a).
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Message: 4
From: Marty Bluke <marty.bl...@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, 3 Aug 2009 18:46:37 +0300
Subject: Re: [Avodah] we live in good times
R' Stuart Feldhamer asked:
<I believe it's an explicit pasuk in Nach that the walls of Y"M were
not destroyed on 17 Tamuz for the first destruction. Do you have any
sources for
the shiur?
There seems to be a machlokes the Bavli and the Yerushalmi regarding
this. The pasuk in Yirmiya says explicitly that the wall was breached
on the 9th of Tamuz and this is the way the Bavli assumes. However the
Yerushalmi makes a startling statement that what is written in the
Navi is wrong and the wall was really breached on the 17th. Tosafos in
Rosh Hashana states that the Navi knew the correct date but since the
people were mistaken as to the date the Navi recorded the incorrect
date.
The Minchas Chinuch is bothered by a number of questions.
1. How can there be a machlokes R' Akiva and R' Shimon about what day
in Teves was observed (the tenth or the 5th)? Why didn't they just see
what people did?
2. According to the Bavli the walls of Yerushalayim in the first Beis
Hamikdash were breached on the 9th of Tamuz. If so, why do we fast on
the 17th? After all, the pasuk in Navi is clearly talking about what
happened during the first Beis Hamikdash and therefore the chiyuv mi
divrei sofrim should be on the 9th.
He answers that the Navi never set a specific day for the fast only a
month. That is why the pasuk only mentions months. After the churban
bayis sheini, chazal decided to set specific days for the fasts.
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Message: 5
From: "Prof. Levine" <llev...@stevens.edu>
Date: Mon, 03 Aug 2009 09:22:38 -0400
Subject: [Avodah] Pas Yisroel, Pas Palter and Pas Akum
For an article about this topic please see
http://www.jerusalemkoshernews.com/
2009/07/kosher-kuestion-pas-yisrael-%E2%80%93-jewish-bread-005/#more-840
Yitzchok Levine
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Message: 6
From: Zev Sero <z...@sero.name>
Date: Mon, 03 Aug 2009 09:10:19 -0400
Subject: Re: [Avodah] Kohen Gadol
Cantor Wolberg wrote:
> I've always been puzzled that a Kohen Gadol could not even become tamei
> through the death of the seven krovim.
> Yet, if the KG came upon a meis, he was required to contaminate himself
> because of meis mitzvah.
What's not to understand? When the KG's relative dies, there are many
others available who will take care of what needs to be done. Even if
he has no siblings with an equal duty, "vechol beit yisrael" will surely
share in his grief and not allow his parents to remain unburied. So he
can't make himself tamei. But if he finds himself in a situation where
if he doesn't do it nobody will (whether it happens to be his relative
or not), how can he walk past and leave a Jew lying there?
--
Zev Sero The trouble with socialism is that you
z...@sero.name eventually run out of other people?s money
- Margaret Thatcher
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Message: 7
From: Zev Sero <z...@sero.name>
Date: Mon, 03 Aug 2009 09:24:17 -0400
Subject: Re: [Avodah] Kohen Gadol
Cantor Wolberg wrote:
> R' Micha wrote:
>> It seems to me self evident, a huge statement about
>> the relative importance of chessed.
> And not to allow him for his own immediate family *IS* chessed?
Chesed shel emes is for the meis, not for the burier!
> Also, if he comes upon a meis, he could demonstrate his chessed by
> summoning another person.
If he can then by definition it's not a meis mitzvah.
--
Zev Sero The trouble with socialism is that you
z...@sero.name eventually run out of other people?s money
- Margaret Thatcher
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Message: 8
From: Daniel Eidensohn <yadmo...@012.net.il>
Date: Mon, 03 Aug 2009 19:01:53 +0300
Subject: Re: [Avodah] some halachot of moser
Zev Sero wrote:
>
> The Ramo permits the *victim* of a violent crime to masser his
> assailant. I'm not sure that other people are included in this heter.
>
>
This is the basis of the Rema
*Maharach Ohr Zarua^ **(#142): ? *Therefore it appears that any person
who regularly hits others ? his legal status is like that of a person
who regularly informs on others. However if he does not hit others
regularly but just did it this time and regrets it and it is clear that
he will not continue doing this bad behavior ? then it is definitely
prohibited to kill him or to cause him to lose his money. Because
HaMaimoni writes that even in the case of a moser the ruling is that if
the deed of informing is done [and it is not expected that he will do it
again] then it is prohibited to kill him. Therefore it would appear that
while the victim of the beating is still angry at his assailant and he
hasn?t calmed down by complaining to the secular authorities and he can
not restrain himself from taking revenge ? either the victim himself or
his relatives who are close to him - as a result I am afraid that the
perpetrator already has become wicked and that it is a minor thing in
his eyes to beat him again and this will lead to murder. It is therefore
not only the victim who is allowed to file a complaint with the secular
authorities, but it is in fact a mitzva for everyone to report to the
judge that Reuven hit Shimon. Therefore those who are filled with rage
report the crime to the secular authorities so the situation will not
escalate. And if this reporting to the secular authorities leads to the
judge taking advantage of the perpetrator and taking away all his money
? than the information is exempt. Because if he isn?t exempt then no
person will attempt to save his fellow man from the assaulter. This is
like the case of a person trying to save someone who is being pursued
and the rescuer damages the possessions of an innocent bystander. There
is no question that if the rescuer is able to save the pursued by
damaging one of the pursuers limbs - then he must do the minimal needed
to save the victim. This is why Rav Huna amputated an arm. However
perhaps instead of amputation it is much better to tell the secular
judge to cause him to lose a significant amount of money ? rather than
have him amputate a limb. If the assailant is someone who regularly
hits others and has done it repeatedly and openly ? and from his actions
it is clear that he will beat up anyone who disagrees with him ? then it
is a clear mitzva for every Jew to report him to the secular authorities
and request that he be stopped. However if as a result of informing the
secular authorities they mistreat him and take away all his money ? the
informant is not liable. Whoever is involved in improper behavior or
with non-Jewish women or with anything which might bring harm to the
community ? if the community warns him to stop and he doesn?t listen ?
it is permitted to inform on him to the secular government ? that he is
doing disgusting things. However if he only does it once and stops ?
then it is definitely prohibited to inform on him to the secular
government. But if not informing the secular government results in
accusations against the community or even an individual because the
secular government knows that a crimes was definitely done by a Jew but
they don?t know which one and they mistakenly accuse a Jew of the crime
? it is permitted for the accused to deny it and tell the secular
government who the real criminal was. This right to inform on the
criminal is even if the one who committed the crime did not intent to
cause harm but rather a mitzva. For example the incident with Rabbeinu
Yitzchok who circumcised converts and as a result the whole community
was in danger. This is described in the sefer Ohr Zarua and I have
already written about it.
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Message: 9
From: Zev Sero <z...@sero.name>
Date: Mon, 03 Aug 2009 12:38:11 -0400
Subject: Re: [Avodah] some halachot of moser
Daniel Eidensohn wrote:
> Zev Sero wrote:
>> 1. This makes no sense, since its premise - that the law of moser has
>> something to do with the government killing the victim - is patently
>> false. Hamoser *mamon* chavero is no less a mosser.
> in the case of money of a fellow Jew, once it falls into
> the hands of a bandit there is no mercy. Today they take some of it and
> tomorrow they take the rest and in the end the Jew himself is taken by
> the bandits and he is killed because they think he admit he has more
> money. Because it leads to killing, the informing of bandits about a
> Jew?s money is like a pursuer to kill someone (rodef)
This is very remote. The Rosh is clearly looking for a justification
for what seems at first glance a strange law. But if such a remote
possibility of the moser's actions ultimately leading to his victim's
death is enough to compare the moser to a rodef (though we wouldn't
do so in other cases with similar risks), then there is certainly no
justification for *not* treating in the same way one who causes another
Jew to go to prison. Prisons today may be less dangerous than they
were in Roman times, but they are still dangerous places, and the life
expectancy of someone who goes to prison today is diminished at least
as much as that of the Rosh's victim of a financial mesirah.
>> 2. The Aruch Hashulchan absolutely cannot be relied on in this area;
>> his exaggerated flattery of contemporary government is transparently
>> designed to please the censor, and is so over the top precisely so
>> that the reader should understand that he doesn't mean it. E.g. see
>> the title of the siman on hilchot gerut.
> It is hard to accept that the Aruch HaShulchan would lie c.v. about the
> correct halacha See Yam Shel Shlomo Bk 38a
See what he says about gerut. It's not really a lie, if the reader is
expected to see through it.
>> The Ramo permits the *victim* of a violent crime to masser his
>> assailant. I'm not sure that other people are included in this heter.
> Rema (388:7) is dealing with a case that someone is regularly beating
> others - there is no mention how serious the beatings are
>
> *Rema**^[1] * <#_ftn1>*(C.M. 388:7):?* Some say that if a man has been
> hit by another - it is possible to file a complaint with the secular
> government - even though this causes the assailant great damage.
>
> There is also a Shach (388:45) to this effect as well as a Chasam Sofer
> (Gittin 7a).
Where does he say "regularly"? And who suggested that the beating
must be serious? But what source is there to extend this heter to
people other than the victim?
--
Zev Sero The trouble with socialism is that you
z...@sero.name eventually run out of other people?s money
- Margaret Thatcher
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Message: 10
From: Arie Folger <afol...@aishdas.org>
Date: Mon, 3 Aug 2009 18:29:04 +0200
Subject: Re: [Avodah] midrash elei ezekarah
RMB wrote:
> But to me that kind of dating seems compelling, since it's only from
> the perspective of centuries later that one would think to telescope
> churban bayis with the Hadrianic persecutions as a single narrative. It
> just wouldn't seem like one long story from a closer perspective.
1) Mediaeval generally means between the fall of Rome in 476 (or even
earlier, from the split between the Eatern and Western Roman empire)
and the discovery of the New World in 1492. Jewishly, this is a very
long period. When we use the adjective Mediaeval, we often think
Rishonim, but this period includes not only the Geonim and Rishonim,
but also the Savoraim and even some of the Amoraim. Hence, it doesn't
mean the Midrash is particularly late.
2) there are other texts, which sensibly identify all 10 as living at
the time of teh Hadrianic persecutions, or that do not make any claims
that the ten were contemporaries. It is only Eile Ezkera that posits
the link with Mekhirat Yossef and a discussion on the subject with the
Roman emperor or one of his officials, that would require them to be
contemporaries. According to other readings, they may have lived in
different times, but we weave their stories in one literary unit.
Accordingly, the other formulations ('Assara Harogei Malkhut beMidrash
uveFiyut lists 28 different piyutim, many of them following different
shitot!), the story need not be a high Mediaeval creation.
Also, as the author of 'Assara Harogei Malkhut beMidrash uveFiyut
argues, there were a lot more than 10 Harogei Malkhut, so in fact,
they are all true (except for Eile Ezkera. In the Yeckishe tradition,
many communities indeed skip the first stanza on Yom Kippur, which is
the stanza making the historically most difficult claim. However, I do
not know whether the reason for skipping that passage is the
chronological issue, or a reticence to publicly mention such esoteric
matters like the lasting debt of the sale of Yossef, or again because
there was a variant tradition that considers the Mekhirat Yossef part
to be a later addition - your learned comments will be most
appreciated here).
Kol tuv,
--
Arie Folger,
Latest blog posts on http://ariefolger.wordpress.com/
* How did Psalm 30 Land in the Morning Service
* Testing the Efficacy of Prayer
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Message: 11
From: rabbirichwol...@gmail.com
Date: Mon, 3 Aug 2009 16:10:11 +0000
Subject: Re: [Avodah] SZ and Tisha B'av (was The Three Weeks and
Doron:
> Does anyone have any sources regarding an increase in the severity levels
> of the Aveilus surrounding Tisha B'Av being due to the Shabbetai Tzvi
> followers
I never heard of the SZ element in 9 Av so
Here is a guess from a history student.
The advent of SZ was oft associated with the catastrophic events of
Tach v'Tat
Maybe the added aveilus was due to Tach v'Tat but ATTRIBUTED to SZ
Just a guess
KT
RRW
Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile
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Message: 12
From: "Chanoch (Ken) Bloom" <kbl...@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, 3 Aug 2009 11:36:21 -0500
Subject: Re: [Avodah] some halachot of moser
On Sat, Aug 01, 2009 at 09:40:08PM +0300, Eli Turkel wrote:
> R Broyde has an article on the
> subject in Journal of Contemporary Society 43
>
> In it his brings that the Tzitz Eliezer allows reporting crimes to
> western society governments based on the Arukh HaShulchan
> that todays governments do not
> kill criminals as bandits used to in the old days.
> Tzitz Eliezer explicitly says that one should inform on child
> molesters to the government
>
> R. Elyashiv concurs in a case of a robbery in the office of religious
> affairs. Informing
> the police will lead to an investigation which most likely will find one of the
> religious employees guilty. R Elyashiv based on a Panim Meorot says to report
> the incident to the police
>
> R Batzri disagrees stating there is no such thing as a just secular government.
> R. Wosner differentiates bewteen a crime under Jewish law and a crime only under
> secular law. When the incident is covered under dina demalchuta then one
> can inform the police.
>
> R. Moshe Feinstein seems to allow informing the police only for violent crimes.
>
> In summary it is a machloket haposkim and so the one who informed has
> a legal basis.
> Even in theory one would have no right to kill such a person.
In my comments on Areivim, I was assuming that among the opinions who
I can easly find (the above poskim plus RHS and RYBS and the Pitchei
Choshen) R' Basri's opinion would be the most relevant to the Brooklyn
Syrian community. (Though RMF may also be relevant to them, I doubt
RYBS would be.)
Note that after the moser has already reported his intended target(s)
to the government, R' Basri rules that the moser's fate must be
decided by the beit din, so our discussion of how to handle a moser is
largely academic, assuming someone caught on what he was trying to do
before he did it.
--Ken
--
Chanoch (Ken) Bloom. PhD candidate. Linguistic Cognition Laboratory.
Department of Computer Science. Illinois Institute of Technology.
http://www.iit.edu/~kbloom1/
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Message: 13
From: rabbirichwol...@gmail.com
Date: Mon, 3 Aug 2009 16:22:25 +0000
Subject: Re: [Avodah] Kohen Gadol
Zev Sero:
> What's not to understand? When the KG's relative dies, there are many
> thers available who will take care of what needs to be done. Even if
> e has no siblings with an equal duty, "vechol beit yisrael" will surely
> hare in his grief and not allow his parents to remain unburied. So he
> an't make himself tamei. But if he finds himself in a situation where
> f he doesn't do it nobody will (whether it happens to be his relative
> r not), how can he walk past and leave a Jew lying there?
I concur with Zev and just want to add or expound :-) a bit
That AIUI meis mitzvah is k'vod hameis and k'vod habriyos so it overrides
the prohibition of KG or Nazir being Tamei
As Zev has noted, the death of a relative would probably entail a chevra
kadisha taking care of the needs of Burial
NB: At the death of Nadav and Avihu -
The kohanim were interdicted from mourning
BUT
Acheichem beis Yisroel Yivku es hasreifa.
Theoretically or practically - when a KG or Nazir cannot be metapeil
with a dead relative the house of Israel steps into the breach
While the case of meis mitzva is davka when there IS no chevra to
intercede.
I think Zev covered the basics, I simply wanted to clarify it a bit more.
KT
RRW
Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile
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