BIO (2024)

BIO: Pesach Steinberg is a community Rabbi in Melbourne Australia and is married with five daughters and two sons-in-law. He is involved in the kashrut industry, is a prison chaplain, author & publisher, sits on industry boards for ethics in human research, has worked in Synagogue administration and has been the Rabbi of a Synagogue. He graduated from Mount Scopus College and Monash University and received semicha from HaRav Zalman Nechemiah Goldberg zt’l. Pesach is also the Australian Ambassador for Sar-El Israel, which places volunteers on IDF bases throughout Israel. (as at 1/1/24)

Sunday, December 29, 2019

Chanukah dvar Torah

MANSOUR

_Hanukah and the Enhancement of Misvot_

The Bet Yosef (commentary to the Tur by Maran, Rav Yosef Karo) poses the famous question of why we celebrate for eight days the great miracle of the oil which sustained the lamps of the Menorah for eight nights. After all, the Gemara states clearly that the lone jug of pure oil which was found in the Bet Ha'mikdash after the Greeks were driven from the site contained enough oil for one night. As such, the miracle began not the first night, but the second night, when the candles miraculously burned. It thus turns out that a seven-day miracle was performed for the Jews of the time, not an eight-day miracle – and yet we celebrate for eight days.

Hundreds of answers have been given to this answer, one of which was offered in the book called Shabbat Shel Mi. The Gemara says that when the Kohanim searched for oil, they found only one jug which bore "the seal of the Kohen Gadol," proving that it had not been tampered with by the Greeks. What was this seal? Why would the Kohen Gadol place his personal seal on the jug of oil used for the Menorah?

The Shabbat Shel Mi offers a brilliant answer to this question. In the times of the Bet Ha'mikdash, the Kohen Gadol was required to bring a special grain offering – called the "Minhat Habitin" – each day, which consisted of flour and oil. Halacha requires the Kohen Gadol to use his own personal flour and oil for fulfilling this obligation. Quite possibly, then, the jug of oil found in the Bet Ha'mikdash after the victory over the Greeks was oil which the Kohen Gadol had reserved for his "Minhat Habitin." This was not oil which was designated for the kindling of the Menorah, but rather the Kohen Gadol's personal oil which he had set aside for his daily offering. Since the jug still bore the Kohen Gadol's seal, the Kohanim knew that it had not been defiled by the Greeks, and could thus be used for the kindling of the Menorah. (This was not considered "stealing" the Kohen Gadol's personal oil, because the Kohen Gadol had presumably despaired from ever retrieving this jug after the Greeks plundered the Bet Ha'mikdash. Moreover, the Kohanim who kindled the Menorah had every reason to assume that the owner of this oil would happily grant his permission for the oil to be used for the Menorah.)

On this basis, the Shabbat Shel Mi explains why we celebrate Hanukah for eight days. Halacha requires the Kohen Gadol to use 3 "Log" of oil for his daily offering, whereas each of the seven lamps of the Menorah was to be filled with .5 "Log," for a total of 3.5 "Log." It thus turns out that there was not enough pure oil even for one complete night. Although there was enough oil to sustain the candles of the Menorah for most of one night, it was not enough to last throughout the night, and so the miracle transpired for eight nights, and not just for seven nights.

We might, however, question this explanation, in light of an important distinction drawn by Halacha between the oil used for the Kohen Gadol's daily offering and the oil used for the Menorah. The Torah introduces a special requirement that the oil used for the kindling of the Menorah must be "Katit" – virgin oil, the first drops squeezed from the olive. This requirement for "top grade" oil is unique to the kindling of the Menorah, and does not apply to the oil used for the sacrifices. We must therefore ask, how did the Kohanim use the personal oil of the Kohen Gadol, which he had set aside for his daily Minha offering, for the Misva of lighting of the Menorah, for which a higher standard of oil is required?

Apparently, according to this explanation, the seal of the Kohen Gadol included a note stating that this jug contained the highest quality oil. Although Halacha does not require the highest quality oil for the Kohen Gadol's offering, this Kohen Gadol nevertheless strove for the highest standards in Misva performance, and so he ensured to use for his daily offering the same pristine oil that Halacha requires for the kindling of the Menorah. And for this reason, the oil discovered after the Greeks were driven from the Bet Ha'mikdash was used for the Menorah.

This helps answer another famous question asked about the Hanukah celebration – why the Sages established different levels of observance. The Gemara teaches that the basic requirement of Hanukah candle lighting is just one candle for each household, each night of Hanukah. There is then the higher level – "Mehadrin" – which is fulfilled by lighting one candle each night for each household member. The highest level – "Mehadrin Min Ha'mehadrin" – is to light an additional candle each successive night of Hanukah. Of course, we have accepted the custom to adhere to the highest standard, the standard of "Mehadrin Min Ha'mehadrin." Many have asked why the Sages instituted the Misva in this fashion. Why did they establish additional levels of performance, beyond the strict requirement?

The answer might lie in the explanation developed above for the miracle of the oil. The entire miracle happened because of a Kohen Gadol who was not content with meeting his basic halachic requirements, and instead strove for higher and higher standards. It is only because of his commitment to "Mehadrin Min Ha'mehadrin," the highest levels of Misva observance, that there was oil with which to kindle the Menorah. We therefore commemorate this miracle by observing the standard of "Mehadrin Min Ha'mehadrin," lighting candles in the best possible way.

May we always strive for higher standards in our performance of Misvot, and constantly look for ways to enhance our service of Hashem, each and every day.

Thursday, October 3, 2019

Rosh Hashana speech 5780

Askara
Shabbat dinner
Shiurim
Lunches & fruit-veg
Ladies challah, cooking
Men's Haven: 
Make sure in newsletter
Next year: barmi-batmi, cheder, ladies program
Need your support
Acknowledge committee's & benji

Talk to young people
Rav Brodt was not a tzaddik
Ramban - Adam was perfect pre-sin
    No free choice, one derech
    Rashi sin vs his mistake
         (btw, RH history)
    Ramchal - no sins if we knew God
Social media
    Bad posts & job
Cancel culture
    Sarah Silverman
    Shane Gillis
    Justin Trudeau
    Ostracized - excommunicated
    We Jews don't believe in this
Shofar blowing (shai tachlifa)
    Vibrations, shakes
    Wake up call
    Everyday?
    Wake up call to a new year
    Kol nidrei for future
How?
Sefer Devarim
    Torah
    Tochecha, Nitzavim, Vayelech
    Nitzavim ends with Free choice but it is clearly the pre-sin choice, he wants adam&chava back
How to accomplish
    Aseret Yemei Teshuva
    Something for secular world
Change & Habituate: process
Ramchal & Ramban 
    For a while go from automatic to manual
    1 shabbat, light candles, mezuzah, say a bracha, buy a wash cup from golds, 
Book by Rabbi Yoel - my new guide
God wants you back
Haftarah - redemption (1st passuk)
May God bless us to bring us to redemption









Friday, April 5, 2019

KITZUR RAMBAN - TAZRIA

Tazria

12:2 When a woman conceives and gives birth to a male

If we can recognise its human form such as when it is an articulated mass of embryonic skin the mother is definitely impure, and if we cannot recognise its form she is impure out of doubt.

In the opinion of the Sages, the embryo is formed from the blood of the female and the white substance (semen) of the man, both of which are referred to as seed, and similarly they said there are three partners involved in the creation of a person. The father seeds the white substance from which the body's sinews, bones and whites of the eyes are formed. The mother seeds the red substance blood from which the skin, flesh, hair and black of the eye are formed. And this is the opinion of doctors regarding conception as well.

But in the opinion of the Greek philosophers the entire body of an embryo is formed from the blood of the woman. There is nothing in the embryo contributed by the man but the force that is known in the Greek language as hule, which enables matter to take on form. for there is no difference between a hen's egg that is produced after having been fertilized by a male and an egg that is born from a hen that rolls in the dirt. Yet the former produces a chick, while the latter is not seeded and does not sprout because the elemental heat that serves as it hule has been withheld from it.

Her affliction {dota} separation

The best explanation for all instances of the word madveh (related to dota)  is that it is something like affliction and anguish, As in the verses "my heart is anguished {davai} within me" (Jeremiah 8:18) and "for this our heart was anguished {daveh}" (Lamentations 5:17), which are to be understood "like each man knowing the affliction {negah} of his heart" (Kings I 8:38). Now the flow of menstrual blood is certainly an affliction for a woman even though it is natural for her.

12:4  For thirty-three days she shall remain {teshev} in blood of purity

And it is plausible to say that the expression teshev here is like the related word in the verse "Live{teshvi} with me many days" meaning 'be my wife', for a woman who lies with her husband is called 'living{yoshevet} with him". And since the Torah said regarding the first seven days after childbirth she shall be contaminated for a seven day period, meaning that she is contaminated regarding cohabiting with her husband and regarding touching sacred foods all seven days, it now states that after those seven days she may live (cohabit) with her husband for thirty-three days in blood of purity but still she may not touch anything sacred and she may not enter the sanctuary even if she does not see any blood during those days. And she may "live" with her husband during those days even if she does see blood.

The best explanation in my eyes is that a woman in the days she sees blood is called a niddah (banished) because all people banish her and keep her at a distance and men and women distance themselves from her and she sits in isolation not speaking with people at all, for even her speech was considered by them contaminated and even the dirt on which she treads was considered by them contaminated like the dust of decayed bones of corpse. It is further cautioned through a negative commandment that she should not touch anything sacred and not come to the Sanctuary.

It is the norm that a woman after childbirth discharges blood continuously from the uterus and it is commanded that she wait another thirty-three days 'sitting' {teshev} in her house to clean her body. For during these days she will discharge the remaining blood and the moist and fetid fluid that comes from the remaining blood. Then she will be cleansed "from birth and from the womb and from conception and she may come to the House of God".

And our Sages ob'm received a tradition that she is pure regarding her husband during these thirty-three days because the Torah says regarding the first seven days after childbirth that they are as during the days of her separation-affliction, but regarding the thirty-three days it says only that she is contaminated regarding sacred foods in the sanctuary but not regarding unconsecrated foods and not regarding her husband.

According to the opinion of Rabbi Yishmael, the reason for the doubling of the days of purity and impurity for a female over a male child is that a male embryo is completed in forty-one days after conception while a female is completed in eighty-one days. However according to the sages who said both male and female embryos are completed in 41 days the reason is because the nature of a female is cold and moist and the fluid in the womb of the mother is very abundant and cold and that is why she gave birth to a girl, and therefore the mother requires a greater cleansing on account of the abundance of cold fluids and fetid blood. It is known that it takes a longer time to become cleansed from cold illnesses than from warm ones.

12:7 He shall offer it before Hashem and atone for her and she becomes purified from the source of her blood.

After she has waited the requisite days for cleansing or the number of days of the formation of an embryo for a male or female she brings a ransom for her soul so that her womb (fount) should cease and she become purified, for God heals all flesh and acts wondrously.

Our Sages said when a woman crouches over to give birth she bursts out and swears "I will never have relations with my husband again!" which is why she brings a sin offering. The intention is that since she takes this oath under duress of intense pain and the oath is not capable of being upheld on account of her being under obligation to her husband the Torah wished to atone for her. And the thoughts of God are deep and his mercy is great, for he wishes to make his creatures righteous. In fact no atonement is necessary for violation of a non-binding oath, but in this case God made an exception for He wished to restore the woman to full righteousness.

13:1 Hashem spoke to Moses and to Aaron

In regard to tzaraas, since 'according to the word of the Kohen shall be every grievance and every plague' (Deuteronomy 21:5) the speech of God here was also directed to Aaron. It does not say here to 'Speak to Bnei Israel' because when the Kohanim see those individuals who are contaminated, they will adjure them to enter quarantine for purification.

In regard to the metzora, which is an illness visibly apparent, there is no need to caution Israel nor the Kohen concerning purification to bring the purification offerings or perform all other purification procedures as they would gladly do so of their own accord. But in regard to a person with a discharge {zav}, since such a discharge is by its nature a hidden matter and no one else is aware of it, the Torah adjures the Israelites that everyone should inform the Kohen of his illness.

13:3 And the affliction's appearance is deeper than the skin of the flesh… the Kohen shall... declare him contaminated.

There is a type of white that gives off a brightness and shine into the eyes like the appearance of the sun, and the eye does not fully receive that whiteness and therefore will appear to him as deep relative to the surrounding area like the appearance of sunlight which is deeper than neighbouring shade. It is because the darkness can be seen by the eye whilst the white disrupts the ability to see and seems further removed from it, appearing deep.

So for the white of a baheret, which is bright and strong likes snow, the sight is weakened from it just as it is weakened in a place where there is sunshine. But if there is a dark hair then the faculty of sight will register the darkness and from the dark hair it will spread out throughout the entire area of the affliction.

A s'eis is also white but the whiteness does not shine brightly and it does not weaken the sight, so it can be seen as a person comes close to it and it appears as if it is close to him and elevated similar to the view of the stars which appear raised from the dark sky.

In regard to a burn the Torah teaches that both depth and lowness are signs of contamination for tzaraas of a burn, and cannot be declared pure except when they have no lowness at all and the tzaraas is dim.

Now the Torah desires the purity of Israel in the hygiene of their bodies so it kept this disease at a distance from the outset. For the appearances are not yet full tzaraas, but they lead to it. As doctors say in their books 'for light coloured spots we should be concerned about leprosy because of them'. And therefore the Torah says concerning these spots a tzaraas 'affliction', are not tzaraas itself. But when the signs of contamination are complete after the quarantine "it is tzaraas". The intent is to say that he should declare it contaminated from now because it is an affliction that will definitely lead to tzaraas, and it is therefore appropriate for the afflicted person to be segregated from the people.

An affliction in which the hair does not change to white is merely an unsightly blemish on the skin but not a sore containing fluid that can cause sickness at all.

13:5 And behold the affliction remained in his eyes...

The Torah alludes that the Kohen should judge the spread of the affliction according to what is apparent to his eyes, meaning he does not need to objectively measure the affliction, but is simply based on his perception.

13:6 And behold if the affliction has dimmed and the affliction has not spread on the skin, then the Kohen shall declare him pure…

The meaning of dimmed in the verse is that the affliction has dimmed into one of the other affliction colours, for example from the white of snow to the white of the membrane of an egg, which is still the colour of inflection. But if it has dimmed into a white less than the colour of the afflictions then the tzaraas has already been healed, so there is no affliction and even a spread such as this would not contaminate him at all.

13:10-11 And behold there is a white se'is on the skin and it has changed hair to white and there is healthy, live flesh within the se'is... The Kohen shall declare him contaminated.

Our verse mentions white hair in order to set a minimum size for the healthy flesh, that it must be large enough to contain two white hairs.

13:12-13 If the tzaraas will erupt on the skin, and the tzaraas will cover the entire skin of the affliction from his head to his feet... then he shall declare the affliction to be pure.

It is saying that the original area of the affliction has turned all white and also the entire rest of the body, implying if the entire body has turned white but the original occurrence of the affliction has transformed into a bohak or it healed entirely, the metzora is considered contaminated. It will only be pure if it also continues to cover the area where it first appeared.

13:29-30 A man or a woman in whom there will be an affliction, on the scalp or in the beard... Its appearance is deeper than the skin, and within it is weak, golden hair; the Kohen shall declare him contaminated; it is a nesek.

The scalp or the beard, as long as there is hair within them, do not cause contamination through any of the appearances of afflictions at all. But when a region on the scalp becomes bear and the hair within it falls out from its roots to the point that the region becomes smooth and clear of any hair, and in that region of hair loss grows new hair that is golden and thin, that is a nesek contaminated affliction.

It is called a nesek because the hair has become detached {nitak} from there. It is not just a name but rather what the name implies, that it entails the loss of hair in an area at least the size of a bean. And after the loss of the original natural hair from that region, if this weak, damaged, golden hair grows there it is a sign of contamination, but not when the golden hair developed before the hair loss.

Nesek would be the malady sa'afa in Arabic, also known as "fox disease" (alopecia) and "the snake path" which have remedies. 'Baring' of the scalp is permanent balding and it has no remedy or cure at all.

13:47 If there shall be a tzaraas affliction in a garment, etc

Tzaraas is not found in nature at all, nor does it generally occur in the world. And the same is true for tzaraas afflictions of houses. But when Israel is completely faithful to God, God's spirit will rest upon them constantly and maintain their bodies and their garments and their houses with a good appearance. When an incident of sin or iniquity occurs with one of them, there will appear a discoloration on his flesh or his garment or his home, indicating that the spirit of God has departed from him. This is a strike by God against that house, a supernatural act.

Tzaraas of houses is applicable only in the land of Israel, the 'heritage of God' (Samuel I 26:19). It is not a land related obligation but rather it can only occur in the Chosen Land, in whose midst dwells the Glorious Name (God). A house becomes subject to contamination only after the conquest of the land and it's apportionment among the tribes and when each and every individual knows his portion and his possession. It is only at that point that the Israelites have peace of mind to truly serve and know God and only then his Divine Presence would reside among them. So too concerning the afflictions of garments.

Furthermore, tzaraas afflictions are applicable only to white garments and not coloured garments, as perhaps a defect in the dye brought about the discoloration in a natural manner which is not the finger of God.

13:51 The affliction is a malevolent {mam'eret} tzaraas

Mameret is related to the word m'eyra (curse). Meaning that it is a "curse of God" (Deuteronomy 21:23) in the garment or in the house. Benefit from the garment afflicted is forbidden which is derived from the extraneous language in the verse.

Afflicted stones that were pulverized and made into plaster teach that they have departed from their state of contamination but it is also taught that they have not. The ones who teach the contamination has departed says that they are now permitted for use. But the ones who say they have not departed, they are still forbidden to use as it has a curse on it and you cannot derive any benefit from it. Rabbi Yochanan says anything forbidden for benefit that is required to be burnt, it's ashes are permitted, except for the ashes of idols. Rabbi Chiya objected saying the ashes of the afflicted house did not come about through idolatry and yet the ashes are forbidden? Rabbi Yochanan states that this case is different as here the word "demolition" is also written concerning it (14:45).

Saturday, March 23, 2019

Purim & Tzav

An interesting parallel between Purim and parashah Tzav...

In the same way that we give Mishloach Manot to everybody so that we cover up the embarrassment of the individual to whom we give Matanot L'evyonim, so too in the mishkan and Beit Hamikdash, the place for the korban chatat (son offering) was in the same place as the korban ola (elevation offering). In this way we don't single out the individual with embarassment for his sins and he can repent in public in anonymity.




Tuesday, March 5, 2019

Shekalim

There are 3 aspects of shekalim, each related to historical events in respect of mentions of the shekel in tanach and talmud

1. Torah (Vayakhel-Pekudei): COUNTING and BUILDING and ARMY. (Approx 2200BCE) Moshe after matan torah makes the mishkan - the purpose is to count the people with half-shekels and then take the silver obtained and melt it down into the adanim sockets for the mishkan. This is like the sephardim who contribute parts of the shul and put their name to it.

2. Tanach (Kings 2, ch11-12): RENOVATION. (Approx 1800BCE) King Yehoash as directed by Kohen Gadol Yehoyadah wants to collect afresh the chezi-shekel from the people after the 7 year rule of his grandmother Athalia (daughter of Ahab and Jezebel) who ascended the throne after the death of her son Ahaziah. She desecrated the first Temple (Solomon's) with idolatry, e.g. statues of ba'al and associated sacrifices. This was about 150 years after Solomon built the temple and the temple had also fallen into a state of disrepair. With new funds Yehoash wanted to re-dedicate, renovate and reconsecrate the temple. Yehoash ascended the throne at the age of 7 after being secreted away after birth by Yehoyada because Athalia killed off all of her family in order to assume the throne. At 7 years old he gave the Kohanim the responsibility to go and get the shekalim funds for upkeep of the temple and the kohanim were expected to maintain the building either by their own hand or by calling in their own carpenters. However, after 27 years of Yehoash's reign it was apparent that the temple was again falling into disrepair with a suspicion that the funds collected were being pocketed and misused. So Yehoash instituted a system of depositing the shekels in a 'tzedaka box' in the couryard of the temple. An accounting and security system was put in place and funds were distributed to responsible craftsmen who could maintain the temple with the appropriate integrity.

3. Talmud (Shekalim): SACRIFICES and FESTIVALS (Mo'ed). The first mishna of Shekalim (Approx 100CE) recounts how the 1st of Adar (Adar Sheni) was the time when the Beth Din organised officials to go out to Jerusalem, the country and other countries to collect the Shekels for each individual. It was now a shekel, because talmudic period shekels were worth about a biblical half shekel. They had 3 weeks to call in the 'debts' of the shekel and then the money was counted on the first of Nisan. There was also a secondary collection which was for giving as your heart wanted to in order to make the second temple more beautiful. The shekel now was used for the daily communal sacrifices in which everybody participated and had a share in. For outlying areas, if the shekalim could not be brought by the first of Nisan then they were brought before Shavuot or Sukkot. Participation in the daily sacrifice is akin to buying membership to a shul today.