Yitzhak Zev Kolakowski Part 2 – Gedolim Videos

300+ videos of Gedolei Yisrael are availabe here. Enjoy and tell people about this particular link. Thanks of course to Yitzhak Zev Kolakowski for putting these videos online.

“Time” related halachot

Currently I am learning Mishnayot. Bli neder, I hope to finish Seder Moed within the next couple of months. I am currently learning Brachot and I have become quite interested in "time" related halachot, example zman tefilla, international date line, etc. Below are some sources that I have allocated that need to be analysed by anyone interested in the topic:

– My diagrams regarding the Machlokes Gra / Rabbeinu Tam
(
http://www.badongo.com/file.php?file=brachot%20notes%20on%20gra%20-%20R%22T__2005-12-22_brachot%20notes.pdf)

– RECITING SHEMA: HOW EARLY? HOW LATE? (http://www.torah.org/advanced/weekly-halacha/5759/vayigash.html)

– On Twilight by Rabbi Gil Student (http://www.aishdas.org/toratemet/en_pamphlet4.html)

– The proper time to Light Chanukah candles by Rabbi Howard Jachter (http://koltorah.org/ravj/channukahlights.htm)

– The International Date Line by Rabbi Howard Jachter (http://koltorah.org/ravj/The%20International%20Date%20Line%20and%20Halacha.htm)

– Twilight, Sunset and Night By Rabbi David Bassous (http://home.earthlink.net/~etzahaim/halakha/twilight.htm)

– When Does One Pray When There Is No Day A Guide to Shabbos Observance and Prayer Times in Alaska and Other Arctic Regions Rabbi Dovid Heber (http://www.star-k.org/kashrus/kk-trav-northpole.htm)

– Gemera Shabbat 34b-35a (http://www.e-daf.com/index.asp?ID=191&size=1)
– Gemera Pesachim 94a (http://www.e-daf.com/index.asp?ID=829&size=1)

Also See Mishna Berura Siman 261 and the Biur Halacha there for great eleboration on the different caclulation for working out the time of day and night

If anyone has some extra notes or anything of interest to add to these sources please leave a comment or email me (If any of the links don’t work please email me as well). Thanks and enjoy.

The Relationship between R’Kook and the Chofetz Chaim: Part 2

Below are two extracts taken from the “The Chafetz Chaim” (Rabbi Moses M. Yosher, Artscroll History Series, that should highlight the relationship that existed between R’Kook and the Chofetz Chaim.

[Pg 161 – Pg 162]

Many a prominent personage in religious Jewry could give credit for his successful career and honour achievement to the influence of the Chafetz Chaim. Suffice it to mention that such a renowned figure of distinction as the first chief rabbi of the Land of Israel, Rav Avraham Yitzchak Hakohen Kook, would relate with particular pleasure, how he agreed, under the influence of Chafetz Chaim himself, to give up his plan to go into a career in commerce and instead to prepare to become a rabbi.

It is interesting to note that Rav Kook, then a young man, as first argued with the Chafetz Chaim that peraparation for the rabbinate would prevent him from fulfilling a previous commitment. He had promised the Chafetz Chaim, at his request that a Kohen he would choose an area of study in the laws of Temple sacrifice and learn it thoroughly enough to be able to clarify these unused laws, perhaps for a time of future observance. How could he keep his promise and still study for the rabbinate? The Chafetz Chaim responded by saying that he would release him, so long as he undertook to become a rabbi.[1]

[1] The Chafetz Chaim spent a great amount of time in Torah study with the young Rav Kook at that time. Ever since then, the pious sage greatly esteemed and honoured him

[Pg 440 – 442]
An Excellent evaluation of the Chafetz Chaim as a man of halacha was given by Rav Avraham Yitzchak HaKohen Kook (in HaHeid, Jerusalem, Tishrei 1934). He wrote:

His first creation, from which his own name was established for all time, was the sacred book Chofetz Chaim. In it he gives the laws of the prohibitions on evil tongue and slander, with all their details, in a precise, organized manner, with a marvelous and valuable introduction. It is all clear-cut, definitive halacha, set on a firm basis of sources from Babylonian and Jerusalem Talmuds, Tosefta, Sifra, Sifre and the definitive law of the Rishonim. With all this we have his straightforward elucidation which show how he derived all his conclusions from a halachic foundation. The subject of Evil Tongue brings pain to ones moral sensibility, but he did not assuage the pain by just preaching. Rather, he set everything on a foundation of sound halacha. Only in a few instance does some expression of moral outrage escape from his heart, directed at the deformity of speech which we call Evil Tongue, common in the world, to our great sorrow.

Much later, after this sacred volume spread in halachic circles, he thought it proper to publish a book of ethics full of pure mussar, true Torah and fear of Heaven, a book that is based essentially on the moral aspect of clean speech. The book, Shmiras Halashon, is a book in which every expression reminds us of the early masters of mussar, those men of great soul, the geonim and tzaddikim for all generations.

It was the holiness of kindness, of chessed, so firmly rooted in his heart, that impelled him to write his excellent book Ahavas Chesed. It is virtually in the same format as his Chafetz Chaim, a compendium of laws, clear and pertinent, on all aspects of kindness, chesd. This, too, is a halachic work, addressing its subject in the precise mode Jewish Law.

His heart, was full of concern for the welfare of Judaism in distance places where the Jewish community was not yet as well established. With special insight, he understood the trials that immigrants to new lands had to face in assuring the preservation of their full religious life. For that reason, he published his book Nidchei Yisrael. The book is filled with specific halachas that address the condition facing emerging communities in distant land. He sought to strengthen and encourage them, and to give them the heart to overcome all obstacles and to defend with all their might the completeness of their Judaism.

His vision penetrated to what was happening to Jewish youth, expecially to young men who were conscripted into armies where they were compelled to live lives removed from all Judaism. They needed special guidance on how to maintain their Judaism even in situations of military stress and of alien yokes that would bear down on them with force. For these Jewish soldiers, he wrote Machaneh Yisrael.

All the time, he was sensitive to the need for a full Jewish life, a life of Torah and Mitzvos, This is the Jewish life that is fixed and lasting, the Jewish life that is defined in all its details in the code of law, the Shulchan Aruch, Orach Chaim. He found that although it had been explained and elucidated and commented upon by the great scholars of each generation, who unremittingly negated themselves in the task, there were still unfulfilled needs. With the immensity of halachic detail, there were many Jews who required clarification and determination of practical halacha. For this reason, he wrote Mishnah Berurah, and the accompanying Biur Halacha, both explaining, even to the reader of mild erudition, how to live by the Shulchan Aruch, Orach Chaim. This book, Mishna Berurah, particularly gained its place among the Jews as a definitive work whose decisions were followed everywhere, a timeless heritage for them.

When the messianic Redemption comes, speedily in our day, and the Bais HaMikdash is built anew, the entiree body of Torah law concerning holy offerings will have to be clearly and lucidly available especially for the Kohanim [who will have to minister and attend to the offerings at the Sanctuary]. That tzaddik, however saw that this field of study was utterly neglected, and so het set his mighty hand to task and wrote a major work, Likkutei Halachos, on the entire Talmudic order Kodashim… in the format of the compendium of Rav Yitzchak Alfasi on the Babylonian Talmud.

Update on R’Kook letter

It seems that the letter from the son in law of the Chofetz Chaim to R’ Kook has received a lot of interest. For that I am glad, because I feel that there are many myths circulating the Orthodox world on a variety of issues that need to dispelled. If by publishing this letter on my blog I have brought light onto this delicate subject, I feel I have fulfilled my duty.

I received an interesting email the other day from a gentleman requesting a copy of the original Hebrew letter. Lo and behold, it turns out that he is a great grandson of R’ Aharon Hakohen (the son in law of the CC, who authored this letter). I asked him to share some insights or some stories he had heard regarding his great grandfather. This is what he responded:

I guess the most interesting thing I heard was that when the arabs
controlled Har Hazeisim, they desecrated most of the kvaros; one of the few
they were too scared to touch was that of R. Aharon Hakohen.

B"H, his seforim have been reprinted and are being studied again, especially
"Avodas Hakorbanos", which has been divided into "limud yomi". Kohanim
worldwide are encouraged to study it in preparation of the avoda returning,
BMH"B, Amen.

Is not the works of providence amazing? Here we are in the year 2005, and a great grandson of the author of a letter published in 1928 finds it online on this very blog, that is 77 years later. To the best of my knowledge he had not been aware of this letter until now. Absolutely mind blowing stuff, at least to me anyway.

Letter from the Son in Law of the Chofetz Chaim to Rav Kook (1928)

In a recent post of mine to Areivim I presented alleged evidence of the Chofetz Chaim making disparaging statements regarding R’ Kook. I was personally upset over this evidence, hence the reason for sending it into Areivim to see what other people thought of it. A poster on Areivim (David Hojda) was kind of enough to respond to my post and sent me a letter from Rav Aharon HaKohen (son in law of the Chofetz Chaim) to R’ Kook. It was in hebrew (please email me if you want to receive a copy of the original hebrew). A good friend of this blog Chardal (http://www.chardal.blogspot.com) was kind enough to translate this letter for me. Below is the contents of this letter which I think is a very strong piece of evidence regarding the relationship between R’Kook and the Chofetz Chaim, and hopefully will have the potential to dispel many myths. It is interesting to note this letter was written in  1928, which is eight years after the publication of Orot (1920) which was one of R’ Kooks most controversial works and also after he become Chief Rabbi of the Medina in 1921 (another controversial period in the life of R’Kook). For further details see [http://www.geocities.com/m_yericho/ravkook/timeline.htm] for a timeline of the life of R’ Kook. Many thanks once again to Chardal for translating the letter and to David Hojda for originally sending it to me.

Rav Aharon HaKohen
Author of the book ‘Avodat HaKorbanot’
Son in law of the Gaon Israel Meir HaKohen Shlit”a author of the book Chafetz Chaim and Mishna Brura
Tel Aviv, Eretz Yisrael

With Hashem’s help, 5688 (1928)

Even though my heart was always greatly pained when people who claim to be observant of Torah and mitzvoth dare to disparage the brilliant and righteous, pious and modest, leader of the land of Israel, our teacher Avraham Yitzchak HaKohen Kook Shlit”a – I refrained from public protest regarding the honor of the Torah. [This is because] I know that my master and teacher, the Chafetz Chaim Shlit”a – who honors and is very fond of the honorable Gaon Avraham Yitzchak HaKohen Shlit”a and whose heart was greatly sickened when he heard of the persecutions against [the Rav] – did not come out with public rebuke regarding this, saying that silence regarding such matters and the reduction of their publicity is [the proper way] to repair them – [that is] to lessen and reduce their value. (nevertheless, no one dares utter words of disparagement against our teacher Rav Avaraham Yitzchak HaKohen Shlit”a in front of our master[, the Chafetz Chaim,] and he would turn his eyes with contempt from any posters [disparaging Rav Kook -ed]).

However, when I recently saw that a periodical that has appeared – which arrogantly dares to call itself “meeting place of the sages” – wrote horrible, cursed, and blasphemous words against our teacher Rav Avaraham Yitzchak HaKohen Shlit”a – [words which] are forbidden to even put in print – I find it a holy obligation in my soul not to be silent (as is explicit in the Rambam הלכות ת"ת פ"ו הל’ יא-יב). [This is because] someone who disparages a Torah scholar has no portion in the world to come, and is in the category of one who “despises the Word of Hashem” (כי דבר ה’ בזה), and we are obligated to banish him. [And this is especially true regarding] this brilliant and pious [rav] – that it is forbidden to remain silent [on this matter] and we must go out and rebuke this humiliation of the Torah, and join ourselves to the protest and great anger of the rabbis and sages of the Holy Land and the exile regarding these words of villainy. [Thus] we should not see [that which is] Holy destroyed, G-d Forbid.

And may Hashem, may His Name be Blessed, remove the disgrace from the children of Israel and raise the honor of our Holy Torah. These are the words [of one] who writes with a wounded and agitated heart regarding the honor of our holy Torah which is [being] given over to disgrace.

Aharon HaKohen
Son in law of the brilliant Rav, the righteous Chafetz Chaim, Shlit”a

Marc B. Shapiro Series: Principle 2

[This post has taken me longer than expected, however here is what I have done so far, its about 70% done]

Principle II. The Unity of G-d


Meaning to say to accept that this is the quintessential idea of Oneness. It is not like the oneness of a pair (i.e. pair of shoes – one group) or and not one like a species. And not like man that has many individuals nor like a body that divides into many different parts until no end (everything keeps on being divisible). Rather God is one and there is no other oneness like His. This is the second principle and is taught in what it says "Hear Israel, Hashem your God, Hashem is one."

Sources against the Kabbalists with regard to the sefirot

MS: opponents of the kabbalah viewed the mystical doctrine of the sefirot, the ten aspects, or powers, of the Godhead, in the same way as the Trinity, namely as a violation of God’s absolute unity and thus idolatrous.

R. Isaac ben Sheshet (1326 – 1407, the Rivash, Sh”T harivash no. 157)

quotes a philosopher who argued that, whereas the Christians believe in ‘three’, the kabbalists believe in ‘ten’

R. Abraham Abulafia

Agreed with the philosophers and saw the standard understanding of the Sefirot as even worse than the concept of the Trinity

Kabbalistsic works (going against a simplistic unity of the unity of God)

R. Moses Cordovero

At the start of the emanation, the Ein Sof, King of all kings, the Holy One, blessed be He, emanated ten Sefirot, which are from His essence, are one with Him and He and they are all one complete unity

R’ Jacob the Nazirite

the first three and the last three benedictions of the Amidah prayer are directed to the Sefirah Binah. The middle blessings are directed to Tiferet during the day and to Binah at night

Definite Heresy

Shabatean kabbalist Abraham Miguel Cardozo (1626 – 1706)

the hidden God, called the ‘First Cause’, it is the Demiurge, the ‘God of Israel’, who created the world and exercises providence. In other words, it wsa the Demiurge, not the First Cause, who appeared to the patriarchs, sent the plagues, and took the Israelites out of Egypt.

Supporters of Abraham Miguel Cardozo’s position

R’ Isaac Lopes of Aleppo

advocated this position quoting from Cardozo’s unpublished Boker avraham

R. Joseph Hayim ben Elijah Alhakam of Baghdad

rejected Lopes’s Cardozian position, nevertheless had a very high opinion of him

R Jacob Kassin (1900 – 1994, Late Chief Rabbi of Brooklyn’s Syrian Community)

Cited Lopes numerous times

Kabbalists who advocated similar idea to Cardoza

MS: Like Cardoza, they believed that that Ilat Ha’ilot has no involvement with human affairs, being completely impersonal and transcendent. Therefore no prayers are directed toward it. Instead one prays to the ‘God’ who is immanent, who created the word and exercises providence in it, that is, the God of Scripture, who is identified with either the Sefira (Keter) or the second Sefira (Hokhmah)

Ma’alekhet ha’elohut

Anonymously authored. Gershom Sholem believed written around 14th Century

R Isaac ibn Latif (thirteenth century)

The First Created Being, may he be blessed, knows everything by virtue of his essence, for he is everywhere and everything is in Him, as it written, the whole earth is full of his glory(Isa 10:3) and all beings exist through him by way of emanation and evolvement, and nothing exists outside of Him

Views at odds with Maimonidean Concepts

R Jacob the Nazirite (twelfth century)

the first three and the last three benedictions of the Amidah prayer are directed to the Sefirah Binah.

The middle blessings are directed to Tiferet during the day and to Binah at night

R. Abraham ben David of Posquieres (Rabad 1125 – 1198)

the first three and the last three blessings are directed to the Supreme Deity (Ilat Ha’ilot), but the middle blessings, which are more personal, are directed to the divine entity which is the manifestation of Ilat Ha’ilot, the Creator (Yestor Bereshit)

Quotes 4: Poetry from John Merick

John Merick, otherwise known as the Elephant Man, suffered from hideous disfigurements. However, beneath his exterior features was said to be  a noble, gentle man who accepted his fate as coming from G-d. Below is some poetry attributed to him. Let us learn from this man how powerful faith in G-d is and how the soul is the measure of a man.

    "’Tis true my form is something odd,
    but blaming me is blaming god.
    Could I create myself anew,
    I would not fail in pleasing you.

    Was I so tall, could reach the pole,
    or grasp the ocean with a span;
    I would be measured by the soul.
    The mind’s the standard of the man."

    – a poem often quoted by Joseph Carey Merrick

[http://www.phreeque.com/joseph_merrick.html]
[http://www.victorianweb.org/books/suicide/06b.html]

Thoughts on College

[This is a post that I recently sent to the Areivim mailing list]

There has been a few exchanges online regarding the social and spiritual implications of attending a secular college / university. Since I am a fair bit younger than most of the members online (21) and am currently enrolled in university in Sydney, Australia, I feel my comments will be of some interest to the members online.

First some background, I go to the University of Technology Sydney (www.uts.edu.au). It is a full fledged university but with an emphasison the sciences, information technology, business and law. I have just finished my second year of Bsc  in Information Technology (basicallycomputer science) and have one more year to go. I attend about 12 – 15 hours of lectures, tutorials, etc a week. I live at home as do 99% of Jewish students here in Sydney, there is no living on campus. In fact it takes me about half and hour to get to University and half an hour back (by car, train takes less time)

Social implications: integrating with the gentile populace – time spent together

The first and most obvious issue to be raised is interacting and integrating with the gentile populace. At least at my university an emphasis is placed on group work. It is my understanding that this is the general trend of education today, to try and recreate the business work environment to the greatest degree possible. The purpose of this is that students are trained to relate and respond with skills they can actually use in the work force as apposed to remembering thousands of facts parrot style. So it is a given that at least at one course a semester many hours will have to be spent working together to get your assigned project done. In other classes, one just attends lectures with a couple of 100+ random people whose name you don’t even know, you watch a power point presentation, listen to the lecturer and then
go on your merry way home.

Group work, social acceptance, religious holidays, social influences

Social acceptance at a university where there is a very small Jewish population (other University’s like UNSW have a much larger jewish population) depends on the individual circumstances of the people involved. In my particular circumstances the following were my findings:

Because I am enrolled in computers at an international university there are a couple of guarantees, 1) 90% of your class mates are male 2)  because it is an international university there are many (many) foreign students, many for whom english is a second language.

The implications are as follows:

a) A person has to develop patience and exert themselves to be able to communicate with people who speak a different language to you and come from a different social and cultural background. I found this developed valuable social skills that were until now not exercised.

b) Being the only Orthodox Jew in a sea of gentiles (for lack of a better metaphor) requires diligence to make sure that your religious commitment are not effected by a culture and outlook that does not agree with yours. In theory this could include integration in the gentile activities, ie going to bars and clubs, inappropriate mixing of the sexes, foul language. In my circumstances the degree of the influence of these activities were of a minimal, because to put it bluntly the computer faculty inst exactly known for the wild boys on campus with a gigolo lifestyle. Most of the guys in their free time would rather create scripts on Linux or play on line computer games than go to the clubs for a night on the town. Also the fact that the majority of these students are males who couldn’t speak english properly, didn’t exactly serve as an enticement for me to join theiractivities. In other faculties / University’s this will definitely vary.

c)  Because I am in the computer faculty, there inst exactly going to be "heresy" discussed or taught. It is usually the art faculty that is full of the left wingers, the communists, the gothics and the freaks. In Australia one does not have to do a BA before his degree so the majority of Jewish Australians avoid that scene entirely. The computer faculty ins’t interested in campus life, student elections, politics or anything to do with a social conscience. There are very few Jews that I am aware of that are part of University social groups or sororities or frat houses. That aspect of University life doesn’t really exist in Sydney. My personal opinion is that in Australia the issue of heresy is a non issue. Australia is a very secular, non religious country, with many foreigners, so in reality no one really cares what you think or do. There not going to be droves of people marching under the banner of any "ism".

d) Anti Antisemitism for me has not been an issue. Although I personally wear a hat at University, since I just personally don’t want to draw attention to myself, on occasion when I have worn a kippah (for presentations or meetings) I have never found that to be a problem. As I said previously, Australia is a pretty pluralistic country and for a country that has one of the biggest Gay and Lesbian Pride Parades in the world, the average Australian isn’t really too fussed about religious minoritys or people who are different. I have found that the majority of gentiles are quite respectful of your relgious practices and if you are upfront and explain "I cant come onSaturday because of a religious celebration", etc they are usually very understanding.

e) In my personal opinion the only way that University can effect you negatively is by coming lethargic in mitzvot (ie not learning as much as you can, not going to minyanim, etc). However this is not a problem with University per say, but rather with any lifestyle outside the confines of Yeshiva. If a person is going to be involved in an inappropriate relationship with members of the opposite sex, Jew or Gentile, this can occur anywhere not exclusively in the confines of the University, ie it just as likely to happen if not more so in the workforce.

I will post more on these issues at a later stage, I look forward to comments.

New Series

I have started work on new series, which is a sub series of the Faith articles that I have done previously. For a long time I have been wanting to learn in depth Marc Shapiro’s brilliant work. "The Limits of Orthodox Theology: Maimonides Thirteen Principles Reappraised". However I encountered a couple of problems. First of all there is a tremendous amount of sources that he cites. The mixture of narrative and the immense amount of sources were difficult for me to process, as it was a constant effort to determine when there was a direct quotation or an interpretation of the evidence. Therefore I am beginning the process of bli neder making summary notes of his book. This will include a listing of primary sources, selected quotes, comments, interpretations. It will also include later on a summary of the arguments and logic behind the presentation. I hope you enjoy this work. It is not meant as a substitute for the book, and I definitely recommend all to buy it, but I hope it will serve as a work of reference. When I am finished I hope to make it into a pdf document. Look forward to comments

Marc B. Shapiro Series: Principle 1

Principle I. To know the existence of the Creator

To believe in the existence of the Creator, and this creator is perfect in all manner of existence. He is the cause of all existence. He causes them to exist and they exist only because of Him. And if you could contemplate a case such that He were not to exist then all things would cease to exist and there would remain nothing. And if you were to contemplate a case such that all things would cease to exist aside from the creator, His existence would not cease. And He would lose nothing and oneness and kingship is His alone. Hashem of strength is His name because He is sufficient with His own existence and suffices just Him alone and needs no other. And the existences of the angels, and the celestial bodies, and all that is in them and that which is below them all need Him for their existence. And this is the first pillar and is attested to by the verse "I am Hashem your God.

Maimonidies, Guide to the Perplexed i. 75

We do not call a human being weak because he cannot move one thousand hundred-weights, and we do not attribute to the God, may he be exalted, incapacity because He is unable to corpify his essence or create someone like Him or to create a square whose diagonal is equal to its Side

Maimonidies, Guide to the Perplexed, iii. 15

The impossible has a stable nature, one whose stability is constant and is not made by a maker; it is impossible to change it in any way. Hence the power over the maker of the impossible is not attributed to the deity. This is a point about which none of the men of speculation differs in any way … Likewise, that God should bring into existence someone like himself, or should annihilate Himself, or should become a body, or should change – all of these things belong to the class of the impossible; and the power to do any of these things cannot be attributed to God


Dispute on this principle

    R’ Moses Taku

    They are issuing a decree to the Creator as to how He must be. By doing so they are degrading themselves

    R Nachman of Breslov (as reported by disciple)

"He mentions that it says in their [the philosophers] books "It is possible that a triangle can be a rectangle?" Our master said "I believe that God can make a rectangular triangle. For the ways of God are hidden from us; he is omnipotent, and no deed is bey him"

Notes of Marc Shapiro

Summary of principle


The first principle declares that God exists, that he is perfect in every way, and that he is the cause of the existence of all things. The principle also includes the belief that God is eternal, for he ‘an existent Being which is perfect in all aspects of existence’ and perfect existence precludes dissolution

Clarification of who agrees with Maimonides

Before Maimonidies, the above view was affirmed by Saadiah Gaon and R’ Ezra ben Solomon (Spanish mystic, died 1238)

Clarification on the nature of the dispute

The dispute between Maimonides and those who limit God is only over what constitutes the impossible, with Maimonides having a more restricted understanding of this than some other  thinkers"

Clarification on the nature of the principle

1) Maimonides’ other point in this principle is that God is the casue of the existence of all things
2) This is not an assertion of creation ex nihlio

3) Establishes Gods ontological priority to the Universe. In other words the universe is dependent upon God for its existence

4) Possibility that the universe has coexisted eternally with God