מכבדה יותר מגופו’ – ביאור פירוש רש”י’

יבמות ס”ב ב’:

ת”ר האוהב את אשתו כגופו והמכבדה יותר מגופו והמדריך בניו ובנותיו בדרך ישרה והמשיאן סמוך לפירקן עליו הכתוב אומר וידעת כי שלום אהלך.

רש”י:

יותר מגופו, דזילותא דאיתתא קשה מדגברא.

זילותא מליצה, ולא אמר לכבדה בדברים רק בגוף. ויש לבאר פרש”י שאשה שלא לבושה יפה נופלת מאיש שלא לבוש יפה בשווה (חניוק\ית).

וז”ל מהרש”א, ומכבדה יותר מגופו. דהיינו להלבישה בגדים מכובדים יותר ממנו כדאמרינן קרי למאני מכבדותיה וק”ל, עכ”ל. ונראה דמכבדותא כנגד ב”ק צ”א ב’: “ודלמא בגדים שאני דפסידא דלא הדר הוא כי הא דרבי יוחנן קרי למאני מכבדותא ורב חסדא כד הוה מסגי ביני היזמי והגא מדלי להו למאניה אמר זה מעלה ארוכה וזה אינו מעלה ארוכה.”

Rabbi Malinowitz zatzal: Attribute Problems to ‘MEDINAS Yisroel’, Not ‘ERETZ Yisroel’!

Aliyah — Making It Work

I interrupt my regular programming to reproduce an e-mail exchange I had with Mishpacha magazine, part of which was printed last week in the January 19/14 Shvat issue. I reproduce it here in its entirety, for I feel its points are vital. (Special thanks to Mishpacha, for their kind permission.)

What, in your opinion, is the difference between an aliyah “success” and “failure”?

I will give answers to both meanings of your question.

1) What will determine success or failure, i.e., if the person or family stays or leaves? (THE difference is of course what Hashem has decreed for you.) In terms of a person’s hishtadlus, there seem to be two primary factors: parnassah, and the successful chinuch (and integration) of our children.

2) Assuming the person stays here, how do we determine if he’s succeeded or not? The degree to which he has become part of Israeli society while maintaining his own uniqueness; plus — and this cannot be stressed enough — whether or not he has also made an aliyah in ruchniyus, which should be the raison d’être of anyone’s aliyah.

Do you think a community such as RBS is a good model for aliyah? Or is a more integrated community preferred?

People have different opinions. Mine is that it is ideal for adults to have a place where they feel comfortable, thus enabling their aliyah, and encouraging others to do the same. But it must be done in a way that the “next generation,” their children, will feel “Israeli” (and hopefully the parents succeed at their children’s still maintaining the positive qualities of their country of origin).

Have you succeeded in building a “kehillah,” American-style? Is that something you feel is missing in Israel?

I would like to think so; but you must ask the kehillah people!

[By the way, whenever we talk about something missing here, we must careful to specify that we are talking about something missing from Medinas Yisroel, not from Eretz Yisroel (two completely different entities). Tovah ha’Aretz me’od me’od.]

What seems to me to be missing are precisely that: kehillos, where one grows as an individual, yet is also part of a larger, supportive group.

Americans also feel that a certain spirit of tolerance and broadmindedness is missing. Of course, Americans are missing plenty, too; one hopes that filling those gaps is the reason they made aliyah.

Does it make you sad when you hear that a family has decided to move back?

Of course. Living in Eretz Yisroel should be every Jew’s dream and one of his or her life’s goals.

Can you give some examples of families that could have done something different to make it here?

PLAN, PLAN, before you come. It is amazing to me that people come here and only then start looking into chinuch options for their kids, determining any special needs their kids may have, and seeing how or even if they can be met. You should start making aliyah months and months — probably a year — before you come.

And the same for parnassah options. And the same for aliyah in ruchniyus options.

What are the biggest issues facing immigrant families (we all know about parnassah, education etc. but what’s really behind it — e.g. is there a fear of integration, of lowering standards, etc.)?

Being clueless. Making unwarranted assumptions. There are so many options here, boruch Hashem, but one has to look for them (they’re in Hebrew!) and find out where and how to find them. Talk to people who are here. Israelis, Americans, English, everybody! Before you come. Do diligent research. This takes work, energy, time, ko’ach — but if you don’t do this, you’re lacking in your hishtadlus.

Most olim want to be in Israel but have no desire to be Israeli. They (we) are quite comfortable with our own identity. Do you see that as a good thing? How does it affect the kids?

I think I have already answered that. I have no problem with the oleh, because it enables and encourages aliyah, and in the best-case scenario he or she is, in any event, a foreigner in a foreign culture. But if the oleh davka avoids all things Israeli to whatever degree he or she can, that person is doing a grave disservice to the next generation, who will have an identity crises of who he is, where he belongs, etc. Not a good thing.

What are the big issues that congregants come to you with?

The overwhelming majority come with personal, social work-type issues, that have nothing to do with being an oleh per se. They run the gamut: shalom bayis, chinuch banim, self-esteem, sheilas…

Obviously, it is through the prism of being an oleh. But it annoys me to no end when aliyah is blamed for problems these people would obviously (to me) be facing anywhere they lived! If it weren’t aliyah, it would be other issues, unique to chutz la’AretzTovah ha’Aretz me’od me’od!

After that, it is the unique issues they face in chinuch habanim.

Now for a personal question: Are American rabbanim who come here held up to their former stature, or does the Israeli Torah community not give them their due kavod? How is your kavod level?

My kavod level is, and has always been, way beyond what I deserve!

Anyone wishing to serve Hashem, and His People, in any capacity, needs a heavy dose of Sha’ar Yichud Hama’aseh in the sefer Chovos Halevavos, where he teaches us how to do things lishmah, and let the kavod and thank-you chips fall where they may.

Now for the biggie: Is living in Israel even optional? Can a Torah family or individual just decide “if it’s for him,” or is there a religious/spiritual imperative for everyone to try to get here?

There is a religious imperative for everyone to see if it seems feasible, and then to ask their own spiritual mentor and be guided by that person. Sometimes it will be a psak, sometimes an eitzah.

I do know some success stories, though, where they did NOT listen to their rav or mentor’s advice, and came. But in general, of course, one should be guided by their spiritual guide.

It must be stated, though, that in every case I have heard of in which the gedolim here in Eretz Yisroel have been consulted by a potential oleh, the answer was invariably: Come, come, it will im yirtzeh Hashem all work out!

Thank you for allowing me to clarify things in my own mind!

From BTYA, here.

All Attending Funerals for Torah Scholars: The Question Is Better Than the Answers

Leaving Learning For Levayos

by Rabbi Yehuda Spitz

In Parshas Vayechi we are told of the colossal levayah (funeral) for YaakovAvinu, from Egypt all the way up to his final resting place, Ma’aras HaMachpella in Chevron. Indeed, the respect and honor accorded to Yaakov Avinu on his passing was universal, and we find that even the Canaanite Kings, no friends of Bnei Yisrael, nonetheless joined in the massive levayah[1].

Although we cannot fathom such a gathering for a funeral, nevertheless, the recent spate of Levayos for Gedolim that engendered public turnout in the hundreds of thousands of mourners has left even the most jaded of secular pundits speechless. The passing of such Gaonim as Rav Yosef Shalom Elyashiv zt”l, Rav Nosson Tzvi Finkel zt”l, Rav Chaim Pinchas Scheinberg zt”lmv”r Rav Yaakov Blau zt”l, the Vizhnitzer Rebbe zt”l, and Rav Ovadia Yosef zt”l, over the last several years, has exemplified how much of a priority it is for us to pay our respect and show our esteem and reverence for these luminaries, as testament to their vast accomplishments as Gedolei HaDor.

Their vastly different backgrounds and constituents notwithstanding, each of these giants’ Levayos had attendance well into the tens and hundred thousands, consisting of the full spectrum of religious Jewry.

Indeed, the rewards for attending a levayah, and not just for Gedolim, are many. In fact, this Gemillas Chessed Shel Emes is referred to as a mitzvah that is ‘keren kayemes l’olam haba’ah’, an eternal one with rewards both in This World and the World to Come, with no diminished returns[2].

Deceased’s Needs Fulfilled?

Yet, we find that according to the Gemara and codified as halacha, although ‘Talmud Torah Kenneged Kulam’, Torah study is the greatest of all Mitzvos[3], nevertheless, one is obligated to leave his Torah study in order to properly escort one who has passed on[4].

Although the Gemara qualifies this rule, and asserts that it is relevant only to one who does not have ‘kol tzorcho’, his required needs, nowadays this is fulfilled with a ‘Chevra Kadisha’, a Burial Society, and one should not abandon his Torah study to attend a random levayah when basic requirements are being met[5].

However, continues the Gemara, different people have different needs regarding their levayos. A basic minyan is deemed sufficient only for one who is not learned[6]. Yet, for one who is learned, his basic needs for a levayah is an astounding 600,000 attendees, the same number as those present at Kabbolas HaTorah! This is due to the dictum of ‘Netilasah K’Nisinasah’; the same number present at Kabbolas HaTorah should be present when the Torah departs, meaning when one who is filled with Torah passes away.

Lest one think that this halacha is referring to a Gadol HaDor or at the very least, a famous Rosh Yeshiva, the Rema explains that in his time, anyone with at least a rudimentary Jewish education (in Chumash and Mishna) is included in this category! Although the Aruch Hashulchan felt that this was possibly only true in the Rema’s time, conversely, the Minchas Elazar of Munkacs remarked that in his day (around 85 years ago) this was certainly true; as ‘who doesn’t sit in shul over Shabbos and recite shnayim mikra v’echad targum?!”[7]

The Gemara concludes that for one who teaches Torah to others, also not referring exclusively to a Gadol Hador or Rosh Yeshiva, but even a RebbiRavPosekMaggid Shiur, or Rosh Chaburah, there is no limit, and everyone is obligated to attend his levayah[8]!

Limud or Levayah?

If so, why do we find such numbers of mourners only at Gedolim’s levayos? In large cities wouldn’t everyone be required to stop their talmud Torah many times a day, simply to escort their fellow man, whom they may not have ever met, to his eternal rest?

Although there are several approaches and rationales given to answer this question, it is important to note that many Gedolim grappled with this issue, implying that the question is still better than the answer[9].

Continue reading…

From Ohr.edu, here.