Wednesday, June 30, 2021

Telzer Torah for 20 Tammuz. Yeiush: Kelishus in Ba'alus

Top left, my great grandfather HY"D. Middle left, my great grandmother HY"D.
Together with my grandparents and great aunt ZT"L,
my mother, bottom left and my Uncle Immanuel, on my great-grandmother's lap ZT"L,
and YBLCT"A, my Uncle Dovid and Aunt Ruth, bottom middle and left,
in front of the family home in Telshe.

Today is 20 Tammuz, Yom Churban Telshe, and hence the yahrzeit of my great grandfather, Reb Meir Shmaryahu Schochet HY"D. May this sample of "Telzer Torah" be an illui neshomo for him, for my great grandmother Rachel HY"D who was murdered with the other women of Telshe on 7 Elul, for all the Kedoshim HY"D ZY"A, for my grandparents zt"l and my mother, Shulamis bas HaRav Dov Yehuda Schochet a"h.

One of my jobs entails going from top level yeshiva to top level yeshiva faherring groups of talmidim,, talking to them in learning. It is a supremely "fun" job, and I am grateful to have it, BH.

Last week I was at one of these top-level yeshivos, and we were talking about this Rashi:

רש"י על בבא קמא דף סו/א 

יאוש - שנתייאשו הבעלים אמור רבנן דנקני ודיו אם משלם דמיו

I asked the bochurim to define yei'ush (despair, despondency,see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yeiush).

One of them said, in the name of, I believe, Reb Boruch Ber, that yei'ush effects a "kelishus" (best translated, perhaps as a "weakness") in ba'alus (ownership).

This is the type of nomenclature that I pounce on gleefully. I asked: What does kelishus mean? Is ba'alus like an onion that has peels and yei'ush peels off a layer? Is ba'alus measured by weight, and full ba'alus is 10 lbs. of ba'alus and yei'ush means you only have 5 lbs. of ba'alus?

They didn't have great answers, so we moved on to other topics. Truth is, I hadn't a precise formulation on the spot myself, and was pressed for time.

A couple of days later, I sent the following message to one of the staff members at the yeshiva, and asked him to share it with the talmidim with whom I had spoken:

If you are able to get a message to the bachurim with whom I spoke, please them that a true Telzer would define the "kelishus" in ba'alus that is effected by yei'ush as a change in the gemirus da'as (the definitiveness of thought and attitude) of the ba'alim (the owner) vis-à-vis his dominion over the object. Just as a kinyan (sale or transfer) is really an expression of da'as makneh (the thought and attitude of the person selling or transferring the item), ba'alus is a relationship defined by the da'as of ownership which, when legitimate, is accepted by society as real and absolute, even though it is completely "virtual." There is a correlation between the da'as of the ba'alim and the da'as of society. When his conviction of ownership is diminished, the "off-limits" da'as of society vis-à-vis that ownership is also diminished, thus allowing for someone else to make a kinyan (acquisition). 

ישמעו חכמים ויוסיפו לקח!

I would like to add here, that this understanding can lead to a ready explanation of the dichotomy between the manner in which yei'ush manifests in aveidah (in the finding of lost objects) and its manifestation in geneivah and gezeilah (the ownership over stolen and robbed items).

תן לחכם ויחכם עוד!



Reuven Bulka, Beloved Ottawa Rabbi Behind A Canadian Week Dedicated To Kindness, Dies At 77 - VINnews




OTTAWA (JTA) – Reuven Bulka, the Ottawa rabbi dubbed “Canada’s rabbi” for urging his fellow Canadians to embrace kindness, has died at 77. Click to get Text Message Updates right to your phone Join our WhatsApp group Bulka died Sunday in New York, the Ottawa Citizen reported, where he had moved to be close to […]

BDE

When I was much younger, Rabbi Bulka's works on the correlation of Viktor Frankl's philosophy/psychology and Torah theology were very meaningful to me. I think we even corresponded. 

TNZBH

Edit:

My good friend Reb Micha Berger suggested I include this video in the post:

Monday, June 28, 2021

80 years l'churban Telshe


https://online.anyflip.com/tjbgm/seit/mobile/index.html

They contacted me.

Accordingly, my grandfather is one of the few non-Bloch-family Telzers featured, and identified in a picture (pp. 60-61, see also pp. 22-23), in the history section.

I only skimmed the hundred pages, but I don't think they mentioned the secret society... 😉

In memory of my grandfather:
HaRav HaGaon Rabbi Dov Yehuda Schochet zt"l
A talmid muvhak of HaGaon HaRav Rabbi Yosef Leib Bloch zt"l
(who participated in writing the shiur da'as: "Emor Me'at ve'Aseh Harbeh.")
niftar 6 Tishrei 5735, and his holy parents:
Reb Meir Shemaryahu B"R Shimon Ya'akov Schochet z"l Hy"d
from the martyrs of the city of Telshe, killed 20 Tammuz 5701, and:
Rachel B"R Yosef Calev (nee Ziv) a"h Hy"d
from the martyrs of the city of Telshe, killed 7 Elul 5701.

Sunday, June 13, 2021

Exploring Hilchot Eruvin - Jewish Action

Exploring Hilchot Eruvin - Jewish Action


REVIEWS
Exploring Hilchot Eruvin
RABBI DR. YAAKOV JAFFE
   



Typically, Jews study halachah for two reasons. Sometimes, they study it because they are interested in its practical application to their lives—witness the explosion of halachic literature on topics of Jewish law, from business to kashrut, from blessings and prayer to Shabbat and yom tov. At other times, Jews might study halachah for a more theoretical reason. Jewish laws—especially Biblical ones—capture an aspect of God’s plan and purpose for humanity (Rambam, Temurah 4:10). Hence, the study of even non-practical halachah serves an intellectual and spiritual purpose: it helps us understand our aspirations for humanity and the values we live by.

The laws of eruv construction fall into neither of these two categories. They comprise one of only a mere half-dozen sections of the Rambam’s Mishneh Torah that famously do not connect to any Biblical imperative (Keilim and three sections in the book of Kinyan are the others), and one finds it challenging to see in the rabbinic laws of eruv any part of God’s master plan for the universe. Moreover, since most eruvin are organized, supervised and checked by a very small subset of the population, the laws of eruv construction are hardly practical for the vast majority of the Jewish population. As a result, with the small exception of the three months every seven years when Eruvin is studied as part of the Daf Yomi, this aspect of Judaism largely resides out of sight and out of mind for most Jews, as it has been, sadly, for centuries (Shiyurei Knesset HaGedolah, Yoreh De’ah 245).

Rabbi Chaim Jachter and Rabbi Yosef Gavriel Bechhofer have each recently authored new or updated halachah handbooks on eruvin. Walking the Line: Hilchot Eruvin from the Sources to the Streets and The Contemporary Eruv: Eruvin in Modern Metropolitan Areas, respectively, provide a unique third reason to be motivated to learn this understudied area of Jewish law. Reading these books, one realizes that the study of eruv is at its core the study of community, and that the development of Jewish societies and Jewish living is best captured through the history of eruvin. Even if the reader is not interested in the practicalities of the two vertical posts and horizontal wire that become a theoretical door or wall for a community, he or she may be interested in the stories of Jewish communities that recur throughout both Rabbi Jachter’s, and to a lesser extent, Rabbi Bechhofer’s, books.

How is community life different in Israel, the Jewish State, as opposed to the Diaspora? The eruv gives a clue when we notice that eruv wires and posts are straighter in Israel because the Jewish, even if secular, government wishes to support Jewish living (Jachter, 202-205).

What are the implications of young Jews leaving their home communities for campus life? The eruv gives a clue when we consider the necessities of adopting possible leniencies on campus: the Yeshiva University eruv and its sagging wires (129-136), Yale University and the stringency of the Tevu’ot Shor (146-155), and Princeton University and the question of the horizontal wire that crosses the vertical posts instead of resting above them (141-145).

Jews today send their children to summer camps, and so eruvin must be built—for example, at Camp Morasha (with horizontal posts almost reaching the ground [107-108]).

More broadly, the story of eruvin is the story of Jewish communities on different continents (167-179); in environments ranging from rural (navigating the question of cornfields [156-160]) to super-urban (cities with more than a million residents [10-21]); weathering storms (233-239), price wars (resulting in fewer lechis [doorposts] needed [213-215]), and community strife (206-212); and, on the positive side, exhibiting community volunteerism (217-222).

The topic of eruv also captures the range of opinions between American Ashkenazim, Sephardim (with a different standard for a reshut harabim [public domain] 180-195), and Chabad rabbis (insisting on smaller tzurot ha’petach [doorframes] 196-201).

In a scholarly essay appended to the fourth revised and expanded version of The Contemporary Eruv (Bechhofer, 220-249), the author is explicit about this point: an eruv is a marker of a community more than it is an artifact of Jewish ritual or Jewish law. He stresses that the infrastructure of an eruv does not serve a political purpose or even a religious purpose. Instead, it marks secular public space. Thus, the study of the construction of an eruv is less a religious study and more a remark on the contours of a religious community’s physical space instead.

The presentation styles of the two works are slightly different and may appeal to different audiences. Though each work stands alone and is simultaneously erudite enough for a scholar yet accessible to the layman, they provide for different learning experiences. Rabbi Jachter’s work reads seamlessly, with few distracting footnotes and with illustrations on the page of the text when needed. Rabbi Bechhofer’s work may be preferred by a more scholarly audience, with long discursive footnotes, occasional lengthy quotations of the original Hebrew sources, and an appendix of more than 100 color photographs capturing the real-life nature of eruv infrastructure. In addition, the two rabbis use slightly different methodologies to reach their final halachic rulings. Both works cite all the relevant Acharonim; however, Rabbi Jachter concludes with the ruling of his rebbeim (Rabbi Hershel Schachter and Rabbi Mordechai Willig) on nearly every other page, while Rabbi Bechhofer quotes posekim of the previous generation and rules based on their consensus.

The two works are actually in dialogue with each other on many important, substantive issues. Rabbi Jachter devotes a major section to Rabbi Bechhofer’s objection to the “side top wire” (Jachter, 110-116), and another major section to Rabbi Bechhofer’s insistence that there be a vertical post on every utility pole (83-94) to which Rabbi Bechhofer responds in his fourth edition (Bechhofer, 177-180). Even when they disagree, however, the esteem the two rabbis have for each other is clearly demonstrated throughout each work. Rabbi Bechhofer reproduces Rabbi Jachter’s eruv guidelines and calls them “significant and essential” (194-219), and Rabbi Jachter quotes Rabbi Bechhofer’s earlier work with respect. Ultimately, the two works have the same goal in mind—the best possible Torah observance by the Orthodox Jewish community.

Both works are recommended to those looking to learn the basics of the laws of eruv construction in the Jewish community or those seeking to understand what it means to live in a Jewish community anywhere in the world in our current day and age.

Rabbi Dr. Yaakov Jaffe is the dean of Judaic studies at the Maimonides School and rabbi of the Maimonides Kehillah in Brookline, Massachusetts.