Sunday, April 5, 2020

How Purim Fueled the Spread of the Coronavirus in Jewish Communities and The Origins Of Magen David Adom By Saul Jay Singer, and Israeli sovereignty and Gantz’s bad faith by Caroline Glick, and Coronavirus Q&A with Rav Hershel Schachter By Rabbi Pini Dunner and Why do we sell our Chametz on Passover

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Why do we want to sell our Chametz on Pesach?

 To be a good Kosher Jew, takes some knowledge. There are several prohibitions surrounding chametz ("leaven") on Pesach. In addition to the prohibitions of eating and benefiting from chametz during Pesach, there are two Biblical prohibitions which one violates merely by possessing chametz over Passover: bal yira'eh and bal yimatzei—chametz shall not be seen nor found in one's possession during Pesach (based on Shemot 12:19 and 13:7).

There is also a positive commandment to dispose of one's chametz on Passover eve (based on Shemot 12:15). Finally, post-Pesach there is a rabbinic prohibition against benefiting from chametz that was owned by a Jew during Pesach.

In order to comply with these injunctions, two methods of disposing of chametz are traditionally employed. The method used throughout much of history (when most people did not have pantries laden with food) was simply to destroy all of one's chametz, preferably by burning. Out of the concern that one may not be aware of all extant chametz, The Rabbis (Chazel) instituted a search (bedikah) before destroying (biur) any found remnants of chametz.

A second method used is bitul, a technical nullification of the chametz by which one declares his chametz to be ownerless and like the dust of the earth. In theory, either of these methods—biur or bitul—would suffice to avoid the Biblical prohibitions; in practice, both are used (Magen Avraham 431:2). Whatever method(s) is used, it must be carried out before the fifth halachic hour on Passover eve (Pesachim 21a; Shulchan Aruch, OC 434:2).

It would seem that an equally valid solution is to give or sell the chametz to a non-Jew. That is exactly what Rabbi Yochanan of Chakukaah advised to do with someone else's chametz for which he was responsible (Pesachim 13a). That Talmudic story involves a standard, irrevocable sale in which a non-Jew pays full market value for the chametz, takes it home and uses it.

A typical mechirat chametz today differs in that the non-Jewish buyer gives only a small down payment, leaves the chametz in the Jewish individual's house and after Pesach ownership is transferred back to the original owner.

 The earliest source for such a transaction is the Tosefta (Pesachim 2:6), which records that a Jew on a boat may sell or give his chametz to a non-Jewish shipmate and buy it back after Pesach. This is codified by Rambam (Hilchot Chametz U'Matzah 4:6) and the Shulchan Aruch (OC 448:3).

What must be sold? Clearly, there is no need to sell kitniyot (legumes), whose consumption is only forbidden by Ashkenaz custom. Only Chametz itself, plus maybe the utensils that cooked the Chametz.

The utensils themselves present more of a challenge. The question of what to do with chametzdik, non-kasherable dishes is discussed in the Gemara (Pesachim 30a). Rav rules that all chametzdik utensils must be destroyed and may not be used after Pesach.

 Shmuel disagrees and maintains that they may be used after Passover. The Halakhah follows Shmuel (thank G-d for that), and the Shulchan Aruch states (OC 451:1) that there is no need to sell or otherwise dispose of one's chametzdik utensils. They simply need to be scrubbed clean of any visible chametz and locked away.

After Pesach, they may be used. The common practice is thus not to sell dishes. Such dishes, however, may not be used for food preparation on Pesach—not even for cold food (Rema, OC 451:1). They may be used for non-food purposes (Rema, OC 450:7) and sold to a non-Jew on Pesach (Shoneh Halachot 450:12). The discussion above pertains to chametzdik dishes; vessels that do not contain any absorbed chametz but are merely being used to store chametz are often sold in the contract used for mechirat chametz, similar to the way warehouses that store chametz are sold.

The sale of chametz must be fully binding under Jewish law, and some authorities require that it meet local legal standards as well. It is a complex and technical transaction involving intricacies of Jewish commercial law in which an error can lead to the violation of two Biblical prohibitions. Thus, the custom has developed to have a communal sale administered by a competent and experienced rabbi. The way it is performed today, the rabbi serves as an agent to sell the chametz, but at no point does the rabbi own any of the chametz that he is selling on behalf of others..

How Purim Fueled the Spread of the Coronavirus in Jewish Communities

'I would have canceled': 3 weeks after Purim celebrations, coronavirus is hitting Jewish communities hard By Ben Sales

NEW YORK (JTA) — The day before the Hasidic folk band Zusha performed before a crowd of 300 in the Brooklyn neighborhood of Crown Heights on the evening of March 9, the band's manager thought about canceling the event.

The concert was to celebrate the Jewish holiday of Purim, a one-day festival marked by dressing in costume, communal dancing and feasting — often in crowded and raucous settings. But the incipient spread of the novel coronavirus in New York was giving the manager, Paltiel Ratzenberg, second thoughts.

No government body had advised against large gatherings — that would come nearly a week later — but the virus already was making its presence felt among New York Jews. An outbreak that began in late February in New Rochelle, a suburb just north of New York City, led to some synagogues canceling services and others announcing that they had nixed their Purim parties.

So Ratzenberg called the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to ask for guidance. He also called a local rabbi.

Ratzenberg told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency that both gave him the go-ahead. The band also wanted to play. So the show went on — with plenty of hand sanitizer available.

"At that time, the night of Purim, there was no reason to cancel that event," he said. "[We] said we're following all the guidelines and we're going to be taking the necessary precautions like everybody else told us to."

Three weeks later, heavily Orthodox neighborhoods in and around New York City are experiencing especially high rates of coronavirus infection.

In the Brooklyn neighborhoods of Borough Park, Crown Heights and Williamsburg, between 62% and 67% of coronavirus tests have come back positive, compared to the citywide rate of 53%. Over one weekend recently, 100 people tested positive for the virus at one Borough Park urgent care center. Orthodox newspapers are filled with death notices, including for some leading rabbis of the Chabad Hasidic movement. Deaths from the virus have overwhelmed one Brooklyn Orthodox funeral home, according to the Forward.

"I would have canceled," Ratzenberg said this week, looking back. If Purim was a week later, he added, "we wouldn't have done it."

But Purim came when it did — after COVID-19 arrived in the United States but before the school closures, crowd restrictions and stay-at-home orders now trying to blunt its spread. That made the parties in Jewish communities perfect vectors for infection — like Mardi Gras in New Orleans, the weeklong celebration that is seen as driving the city's high coronavirus toll.

"Purim came at a really bad time in the outbreak," Eili Klein, a professor of emergency medicine at Johns Hopkins Medical School in Baltimore, told JTA. "The virus was just starting to spread in the community, and congregations of people in close proximity might have allowed the small number of infected people to spread it more widely than they might have otherwise."

Since Purim, it has become increasingly clear that those who have been exposed to the coronavirus but are showing no symptoms can indeed spread the disease without "having even realized they were sick," Klein told JTA.

Ten days after the holiday, Eli Schwebel was in NYU Langone Hospital thinking he was about to die from COVID-19. The Jewish musician had been at the Zusha concert — as well as other parties the same night.

"I must have been with, I don't know, 1,000 different people that night," Schwebel, a Jewish musician who lives in Brooklyn, told JTA. "I'm sure it came from one of those places."

Eli Schwebel, a Jewish musician from Brooklyn, was hospitalized with the coronavirus after attending multiple Purim parties. (Courtesy of Schwebel)

Authorities worldwide already were aware of the dangers of mass gathering as Purim approached. Israel had banned assemblies of 5,000, a restriction that feels quaint four weeks later when meetings of more than two people are barred in that country. But that order spurred the country's metropolises to cancel their city festivals. Purim celebrations in Milan, an Italian city especially hard hit by the coronavirus, also were canceled.

Many American synagogues scrapped programs or livestreamed Megillah readings. Richard Roberts, a philanthropist and former pharmaceutical executive, canceled his annual 2,000-person Purim party in Lakewood, New Jersey, a heavily Orthodox city.

But other Purim festivities in Lakewood went on as planned. Now the township of 100,000-plus has a much higher incidence of positive tests per capita than the surrounding towns. More than four residents per 1,000 in Lakewood have tested positive for COVID-19 — double the average in Ocean County. (The county does not receive reports of negative tests and thus cannot provide a percentage of positive tests.)

Avi Schnall, the New Jersey director of Agudath Israel of America, a haredi Orthodox organization, lives in Lakewood and celebrated Purim at his synagogue and his rabbi's house. Had state officials advised against doing so, Schnall said, he would have listened.

For the Passover holiday, which starts on Wednesday night, he will be celebrating at home with just his immediate family for the first time ever.

"Purim time was really before this really got out of hand or before people knew how serious it was," Schnall said. "It definitely, definitely, definitely added to the high number" of coronavirus cases.

In the category of "gatherings that, in retrospect, probably shouldn't have happened," Purim parties are far from alone.

Mardi Gras is among the biggest examples, but a March 5 birthday party in a wealthy Connecticut suburb led to about half the guests being infected, as did a Feb. 29 funeral in Albany, Georgia, according to The New York Times. After a March 10 choir practice in Washington state, 45 of the 60 people on hand got the coronavirus, according to The Los Angeles Times. Two have died.

"When you see community spread, which is what has been reported in New Orleans, in Albany, Georgia, and in many other places … this is primarily driven by people who are already infected but not many are symptomatic," said Adebola Adedimeji, a professor of epidemiology and population health at Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York City. "People come together, they interact very closely, someone already has the virus and infects others. It is quite probable."

Purim was an especially significant spreading event in Jewish communities, but Klein says it's hardly the only reason that Orthodox Jewish communities are bearing an early brunt of the pandemic.

"The Orthodox community is generally a more social community than most," Klein told JTA. "Between communal lunches on Saturdays, regular religious services, mourning rituals … some international travel, and large families, there was potential for this to spread faster in this community regardless of Purim."

Schwebel, who first showed symptoms of the virus after Purim, said he "went through hell" in the hospital, thinking he was going to die. He has recovered enough to be sent home, but is still shaken by the experience. He wishes that leading rabbis in Brooklyn would have instructed their followers to avoid Purim parties.

But now, Schwebel says, his community is taking it seriously. Unlike Purim, he'll spurn the traditional large Passover seder gatherings of friends and family. Schwebel hopes to join his sister for the festive meal. Or perhaps he will join a handful of others who have survived the coronavirus.

If not, he will celebrate alone in his apartment.

"I think people are screaming if anybody goes out in the frum community," he said, using a Yiddish word connoting religiosity. "The rabbis are getting serious about it. They're not messing around."

Ben Harris contributed reporting to this article.

Ideas, that help explain how the world works

Fredkin's Paradox: Confronted with two equally good options, you struggle to decide, even though your decision doesn't matter because both options are equally good. The more equal the options, the harder the decision.

Israeli sovereignty and Gantz's bad faith by Caroline Glick

Blue and White leader Benny Gantz opposes applying Israeli law to the Israeli communities in Judea and Samaria, despite giving U.S. President Trump his word he would support the move. Israeli politicians don't get very far by lying to U.S. presidents.

 The coalition talks between Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Blue and White Party leader Benny Gantz are being held behind closed doors. A lot of contradictory information is being leaked about the issues on the table and about the form of the deal for a unity government being hammered out.

But all the leaks are consistent about one aspect of the discussions: Gantz and his colleagues oppose applying Israeli law to the Israeli communities in Judea and Samaria. This state of affairs is both surprising and disturbing.

It is surprising that Gantz opposes applying Israeli law to the areas, which are home to half a million Israelis, because just two months ago Gantz pledged to support the move.

On Jan. 27, the day before U.S. President Donald Trump published the details of his peace plan, he presented them to Gantz at the White House. The plan, which includes U.S. recognition of Israeli sovereignty over the Jordan Valley and the Israeli cities, towns and villages in Judea and Samaria, assumes that Israel will apply its legal code, and through it, its sovereignty to the areas immediately after a new governing coalition is sworn in.

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According to a senior official who participated in Gantz's meeting with Trump, "Gantz committed in the Oval Office that if he became prime minister, he would form a government of people that would support the deal."

For President Trump and his team, the implications of Gantz's statement are straightforward. Since both Netanyahu and Gantz (the two candidates for prime minister) support implementing the deal, the administration expects Israel to apply its laws to the areas immediately after the next government is sworn in.

Accordingly, in February, President Trump appointed a three-member mapping team, led by U.S. Ambassador David Friedman, to work with their Israeli counterparts to finalize the map of Israeli sovereignty in Judea and Samaria that the United States will recognize. The mapping committee convened multiple times in the lead-up to the March elections.

In the face of the rash of reports asserting that Gantz opposes applying Israeli law in these areas, on Sunday a U.S. administration official told The Jerusalem Post that Gantz "came to Washington and said he's in favor of it, and we have not heard anything different from him," adding that "unless he tells us [otherwise], we are proceeding as though we have a partner on the other side."

In other words, the Trump administration expects Gantz to keep his commitment to the president of the United States.

The Americans aren't making threats. They expect Gantz to treat them fairly and honestly. Gantz needs to consider the implications of the contradiction between what he told President Trump and what he is doing now.

Politicians survive by lying to their voters. But it is very hard for Israeli leaders who lie to U.S. presidents to succeed in office.

Reportedly, Netanyahu has proposed a procedural means to square the circle. His offer involves providing all coalition members with the freedom to vote as they please on a law to apply Israeli law to the Jordan Valley and the Israeli communities in Judea and Samaria.

Netanyahu expects that the two right-leaning lawmakers in Blue and White, Zvi Hauser and Yoaz Hendel, along with Orly Levy-Abekasis (an independent lawmaker who split from the Labor-Meretz bloc and leans right on diplomatic issues), will vote with Netanyahu's 58-member right-wing bloc in favor of the move. Their three votes will ensure passage of the measure with a 61-vote majority even without Gantz's support.

Although the proposal would technically solve the problem, Netanyahu should not rush to solve Gantz's problem for him. Gantz's opposition to the move isn't a technical difficulty. It's a character problem.

Gantz gave his word to the president of the United State. There were no misunderstandings that day in the Oval Office.

How can Israel expect to preserve its standing in Washington when the politician who is supposed to become prime minister in a year and a half is rushing to present himself as a bold-faced liar who went to the president's house and flat-out lied to him about his intentions? President Trump is no mere foreign leader. He is the president of the most powerful country on earth and Israel's closest ally. Moreover, he is the best friend Israel has ever had in the White House.

Gantz isn't the only one who will be harmed by his behavior. Netanyahu risks harming his own standing in Washington and worldwide just by trying to cover for Gantz.

It isn't too late to correct this mistake. Gantz can still change his position and keep his word to President Trump. For his own good, and for the good of the country, he should reverse course quickly, before the coalition agreement is finalized.

Caroline Glick is an award-winning columnist and author of "The Israeli Solution: A One-State Plan for Peace in the Middle East."

Coronavirus Q&A with Rav Hershel Schachter By Rabbi Pini Dunner

With regard to Mechiras Chametz (the sale of chametz) and appointing a Rav through a Shtar Harsha'a (authorization document), if they are unable to be face-to-face. Can this be done via email, or on a phone call, if there is a Kinyan (act of acquisition) involved?

The Rambam in Hilchos Mechira says that there are some things that do not require a kinyan (the act of acquisition), and he gives the example of appointing a shaliach. Both the Chazon Ish and the Steipler did not insist on a kinyan when they did Mechiras Chametz, because the Rambam does not require a kinyan when appointing a shaliach, and the rabbi is a shaliach when he sells your chametz. Rav Soloveitchik thought that the Rambam initially says that it does not make sense to have a kinyan – but afterward, he explains it. In fact, Rav Soloveitchik gave a whole beautiful shiur on the nature of Kinyan Chalipin (acquisition of exchange), of "Sudar," and he explained why it does make sense to have a kinyan when appointing a shaliach.

As Rav Soloveitchik says, every rabbi knows that on Erev Pesach, just before he is about to go and sell the chametz to the nochri (gentile), some guy will call him up at the very last minute and say "Rabbi I forgot to come to ask you to sell the chametz – can I appoint you as my shaliach over the phone?" In such a case, Rav Soloveitchik said we should at least try to fulfill the minhag even on a phone call. The question is, how can you do that?

According to Rav Soloveitchik there are two ways to do it. One way is this: the person who called on the phone – and by the way, you can appoint a shaliach b'al peh (via oral instruction), you do not have to do it bi'ksav (in writing). More correct is to have a written record, so you can give it over to the Nochri, and say to him, "all these people signed this document and they want me to sell their chametz to you on their behalf." But if the rabbi just writes down a list of the people it is also fine. If the person sends an email, that would be better – he sends an email to the rabbi that says: "Rabbi, I appoint you as my shaliach" – strictly speaking that would certainly be good.

Rav Soloveitchik thought we should also try to fulfill the custom of making a kinyan, even under these circumstances. The Chazon Ish didn't bother with the kinyan at all, and nor did the Steipler, but the Rav insisted that we do it even under these circumstances. The Rav was a big stickler on minhagim; any minhag (custom) that's mentioned in Shulchan Aruch, as far as he was concerned, you need to observe it, even if nobody observes those customs these days.

He said there are two ways to do it. One way is to ask the Jewish person who's calling on the phone "is there another Jewish person there with you?" If there is, have the other person give his handkerchief to the one who wants to appoint you as his shaliach, and mi'din eved k'na'ani (the laws of a non-Jewish servant) it works. The din is that if you want to free an eved k'na'ani, you can do it either al yedei shtar (via a contract) or al yedei kesef (via monetary means).

The Tannaim (Talmudic sages) raise an issue: how is it possible for the eved k'na'ani to have money? We have a principle: Kol mah shekana eved kana rabbo, which means that 'anything that the servant acquires belongs to his master.' The servant does not own any money – it is not his to own! The gemara explains, therefore, that it is kesef al yedei acheirim (money given via a third party). If someone else gives the money on behalf of the eved k'na'ani – that works.

Tosafos points out that in fact we do this all the time. For example, when we write a kesuba before a marriage, the bride acquires the shibudim (obligations) from the groom. Surely the bride should have to give her handkerchief to the groom – keilav shel koneh – objects owned by the acquirer (see: Bava Metzia 47a) – in order for it to be binding?

But we've all been to a chosson's tisch – the bride doesn't come into the room! Instead, the mesader kiddushin (the person who performs the marriage) or the eidim (witnesses) give a handkerchief to the groom, and by their giving him their handkerchief he accepts upon himself the responsibility to give the bride the amount of tosefes kesuba (extra contractual obligations contained in the marriage contract) that is added on.

The ikkar kesuba (principal contractual obligations contained in the marriage contract) are binding in any event, but the tosefes kesuba are not, there's no rabbinic requirement on that. Tosafos says that this way of doing it is the common practice – just like kesef al yedei acheirim – and it is completely acceptable, which means that kinyan chalipin al yedei acheirim is an acceptable form of kinyan.

What do we do if there is no Jewish person to make the kinyan chalipin on behalf of the rabbi? The Rav said the Rambam says that the whole reason that one does chalipin when you appoint a shaliach is a minhag. When a husband appoints a shaliach to give a Gett (divorce document) to his wife, the one who is appointed as a shaliach gives a sudar to the husband in order to acquire the right to give the Gett to the wife. But it's a minhag, not a din. It is done to demonstrate that be'lev shalem gamarti ve'amarti davar zeh ('I agreed to this and said this with a full heart'), in other words, that he really means it.

The Rambam asks: what if the person appoints a shaliach to give a Gett to his wife, or the man appoints the rabbi as a shaliach to sell the chametz, and he says "I'm doing it with complete awareness of the seriousness of this issue, and I really mean it" – then it is not an asmachta (a conditional commitment), because the person really means it – and in that situation you have also satisfied the minhag.

The whole minhag to make a kinyan chalipin is to demonstrate that you really mean it seriously. So if you use a text like this for an email that people can sign up to for the purpose of selling chametz, then they don't have to come in person, they can just add a line that says they are doing this with the full understanding of the seriousness of what it means to appoint a shaliach, and that they really mean it, that it's not a joke, and it's not an asmachta. In that way, you have even satisfied the minhag.

By email, as long as there is such a text, would that be sufficient without any kind of kinyan?

Yes. It's good even without the special wording, but if you want to satisfy the minhag, so you add it on, and repeat in the email, "I really mean it!" – and in that way, you'll even satisfy the minhag.

In terms of the selling chametz to a non-Jew, is there any way of doing it without the non-Jew being present? Is that crucial to the transaction, namely without it the transaction won't be valid?

I think it is crucial. You've got to do the chalipin, you have to make the kinyan. You have to give them the contract to rent the karka (land/ground), and via the karka all of the acquisitions. This kinyan has to be made in person in order for it to be valid.

What about making a siyyum (completing a Talmudic tractate) online? You have said that it's not a problem if there's no choice, and people can be mitztareif (join together) over the phone or via a video conference?

I think that is the practice – normally, people travel on Erev Pesach in the morning to go to their parents or in-laws for Pesach, so those who are firstborn usually listen online to somebody making a siyyum live, and in that way are considered to have participated in the siyyum.

Is it possible for people to do a cursory kashering of part of their stove in order to cook for Pesach and freeze food in advance, in case they do not have a chance to kasher their whole kitchen and cook for Pesach if, G-d forbid, they get sick? They will only kasher part of the stove, cover part of the kitchen, to cook this food in advance.

Yes. Whatever they will kasher, they will certainly be careful. We are talking about religious people who are careful.

There seems to be a run in some stores on Kosher LePesach items, and some of the shelves are becoming empty, and a lot of Pesach hotel programs are being canceled, so there may not be enough Kosher LePesach food items available for people when it comes closer to Pesach. Can we rely on batel beshishim (1 part in 60 nullified) of chametz for food cooked before Pesach, which is a devar heter (permitted) before yom tov, but is a leniency we might not rely on in any other year?

We pasken in Shulchan Aruch that if chametz became batel (nullified) before Pesach, we don't say chozer ve'nei'or (it reawakens). You can also call up the OU, the kashrus organizations, and find out: is it really so that you have shishim (60) against the chametz? Sometimes the product is a nosein ta'am (adds flavor), sometimes you don't have shishim… you have to call up the kashrus organization to find out details.

Is there a preference this year for using machine matzas as opposed to handmade matzas for fear of the virus – people who hand baked them may not have washed their hands properly?

I don't know. I think we would have heard. Actually, I think they probably finished baking all the shmura matza some time ago – so there is nothing to worry about

Someone heard that Rav Soloveitchik preferred machine matza over handmade – is that the case?

Yes. And many of the tzaddikim in Yerushalayim also prefer machine-baked matza over hand-baked matza, because it is made much faster. It takes less than half the time from beginning to end to make the whole thing, so it's a better way to avoid chimutz (becoming chametz). The reason why others insist on the hand-baked matza is because there is a question whether or not machine matza can really be called "lishma"?

You set up a whole machinery system and you push the button and you say "I'm making all the matzas lishma," which means that when you harness this force of electricity and it does the lisha (kneading), it does the afiyya (baking), it does everything – "isho mishum chitzo" (it is analogous to shooting an arrow). Whenever you harness a natural force to bring about a certain result, it all relates back to you.

But the question is whether "isho mishum chitzo" is only a din in nezikin (damages)? Or is it also a din in kol haTorah kula (the entire body of Jewish law)? That question is the subject of a big machlokes (debate) among the Rishonim (medieval-era halachic authorities).

The Vilna Gaon writes that according to the Rambam it is only a din in nezikin. The Brisker Rov quotes a Shittas haGeonim (an opinion of the Geonic period) which says the same thing. The Avnei Nezer quotes a Machlokes Rishonim whether harnessing the fire in the oven, putting the raw dough into the oven to bake — that relates back to me even though I am not the heat source that bakes the dough into matzah, but despite that it is called afiyya lishma (purposeful baking) – even though I don't do it, and really the fire does it. Harnessing the fire, the natural force, relates back to me, and it is considered as if I did the baking.

But the she'elah (halachic question) regarding machine baked matzah is that you push a button and it does the lisha also – and the lisha also has to be done lishma. That's a good question. Tosafos assumes that "isho mishum chitzo" is actually a din in kol haTorah kula, in other words, it's not only a din in nezikin. But other Rishonim and some Geonim are not so convinced that it applies in other areas of halacha.

Rav Moshe Soloveitchik lived in Warsaw for a while before coming to America, and in Warsaw they were all extremely fussy to have only hand-baked shmura. All the leading Polish rabbis were opposed to having machine shmura. A local newspaper in Warsaw interviewed Rav Moshe Soloveitchik – he wasn't very savvy regarding politics, and they quoted him as saying – imagine, he lives in Warsaw, a chassidishe city – "you don't gain anything at all by having hand-baked shmura, it's a minhag shtus (pointless custom) to insist on it, there's no kiyyum, no hiddur (enhancement), nothing."

Everyone attacked him. Somebody wrote a whole essay on this episode a year or two ago, maybe in the journal Hakira. This was part of the trouble he suffered from when he was in Warsaw. They interviewed him in the newspaper, and he said it isn't even a middas chassidus (an act of piety) to have hand-baked shmura.

But, truthfully, it is not so simple. Although it is certainly true that the Rav thought that machine-baked shmura is better.

There have been many questions concerning virtual minyanim. If there is a minyan in a certain place and somebody can listen into the minyan via phone or video – they certainly can't count as one of the 10 for the minyan – but can they answer kaddish and kedusha? Would they be able to say kaddish? And if there's no way to assemble a minyan anywhere, is there an advantage for a community to daven together, biyechidus (each separately and on their own), but linked with each other over the Internet?

Can someone say kaddish without a minyan? I don't think so. Let's say a woman wants to say kaddish because one of her parents has died. So fine, we assume a woman can say kaddish. But she has to be in the same room with 10 men. If the woman is in a particular Ezras Nashim (women's section in a shul) and the mechitza is attached to the floor creating a comprehensive barrier, then the Ezras Nashim constitutes a separate room.

The fact that there are 10 men on the other side of the mechitza doesn't help – in such a case the rabbi or the board of the shul has to decide whether they should allow the woman to come into the men's section to be able to say kaddish. You can't say kaddish without 10 men present in that same room.

What about answering kaddish or borchu over the internet?

Tosafos points out that to be mitztareif to (i.e. join in with) the minyan you need all 10 people to be in the same room. The simple understanding is that you can join up when you have 5 people in one room and 5 people in another room at a beis aveil (mourner's house), and they can see each other – but in separate rooms when you can't see each other, just hear each other, it only works with respect to Birkas Hamazon with a mezuman of 10.

But when it is a davar shebik'dusha (a sacred prayer that requires a full minyan), like kaddish, kedusha, or borchu, you have to have all the 10 people in the same room, or at least they need to see each other from one room to another.

But to answer, "amein yehei shmeih rabba," the gemara says afilu mechitza shel barzel eina mafsekes bein Yisrael l'Avihem Shebashamayim ("even an iron wall cannot separate the Jewish people from G-d"), and Tosafos says that's that this means if there's a minyan in a shul and I'm in the street, I can answer amein yehei shmeih rabba, kaddish, kedusha, and borchu.

The question we are addressing here, though, is that I'm not even hearing it directly, I'm hearing it many blocks away, in a different location in the same city, or maybe not in the same city. There are those who cite the halacha of amein yesoma (an orphan amen), which means you're not allowed to answer amein too late after the completion of the bracha. In electronic communication there's a delay of a few seconds between the time the person says the bracha and the time I say amein.

Personally, I'm not so convinced that this is what is meant by an amein yesoma. If I answer amein right after I hear the bracha — I didn't hear the bracha 2 seconds ago, I heard it just now – let's say there's a 2 second delay, I answered amein right after I heard the bracha, I don't think that can be considered an amein yesoma.

The gemara tells us, in Alexandria, Egypt, there were so many people in the shul there that it wasn't always possible to hear the brachos directly from the chazzan and answer amein to what was heard, but nonetheless they used to wave a flag so that they knew when the chazzan finished his bracha – they knew what bracha he was saying, so they were able to answer amein.

The simple fact is that you can answer amein like this, and not just amein to a bracha, but amein yehei shmeih rabba, in other words you can also answer amein to a davar shebik'dusha. If I know what he's saying, and I know that it's time to answer, just like the question we are dealing with: someone is saying kaddish miles away, and I say amein yehei shmeih rabba, I know that he's saying it right now, so then it is obvious that you can answer amein.

With regard to tefillah betzibbur – if you have 10 people davening in the shul and I'm davening in the street, Rav Soloveitchik said, and the Aruch Hashulchan also said this, it is considered tefillah betzibbur. In Yeshiva University, we used to daven Mincha in Furst Hall on the 3rd floor, the Beis Midrash was not big enough, so instead of everybody pushing in, a lot of boys used to daven in the hallway. They asked Rav Soloveitchik whether they could daven outside the Beis Midrash if they could hear the chazzan, and he thought it was ok, just like the Aruch Hashulchan.

In our situation right now it could be also tefillah betzibbur even though I'm many miles away. After all, I know that they're davening over there. Maybe it's tefillah betzibbur like Rav Soloveitchik and the Aruch Hashulchan said, or maybe – at the very least – I'm davening besha'ah shehatzibbur mispallellin (at the time that the congregation is praying, which also has value in halacha..

But if there is no minyan anywhere, but there are ten people in separate locations and each one knows that the other 9 are davening right now, probably there is some advantage. It's not the same as when the gemara says he's davening besha'ah shehatzibbur mispallelin, because here you don't even have a tzibbur mispallelin, but probably there is at least some advantage – and it's certainly better than davening on your own at whatever time you'd decide to daven.

There is a question from a rabbi from Florida… they have a daily mincha-maariv where mincha is davened before plag hamincha (one and a quarter hours before sunset) and maariv just the other side of plag, as a convenience for people who have to go to sleep early, or eat meals, etc. If a person is davening biyechidus (on his own), can they rely upon that approach, or is it better to daven maariv later on in the evening?

The Rishonim say that there's an issue of tartei d'sasrei (an inherent contradiction) – all year long we daven mincha right before shekia (sunset), and we're not careful to finish before plag. It's a contradiction of one time of year to the other. You should certainly avoid that.

For the purpose of kabbolas tosefes Shabbos (bringing Shabbat in early to add time to Shabbat), we're meikil (lenient) – even though all year long we daven right before shekia, to bring in Shabbos early we're meikil on the tartei d'sasrei from one day to the other. But we try not to be meikil on a tartei d'sasrei on the same day. We should try not to daven mincha after the plag and maariv before the shekia – although many kehillos are meikil on that also; for the sake of tosefes Shabbos they'll daven mincha late after the plag and maariv before the shekia. For the purpose of tosefes Shabbos or the purpose of tefillah betzibbur many are meikil.

The Mishna Berura quotes lehalacha from the sefer Olas Tamid that if the only minyan in town davens tartei d'sasrei on the same day, mincha after the plag and maariv before the shekia, it's better to daven with a minyan even though you have a tartei d'sasrei on the same day. The first Tosafos in Brachos discusses this machlokes, namely: is there an issue if you have a tartei d'sasrei on the same day. Apparently Rabbeinu Tam was not worried about it, although all the other Rishonim were not happy about it.

There are those who are meikil in a she'as had'chak (extenuating circumstances). If you have a she'as had'chak, you can certainly be meikil on tartei d'sasrei one day to the other – for instance, in Breuer's (Kehal Adath Jeshurun in Washington Heights, NY), all summer long they have a lot of people daven at the early minyan which davens mincha before plag, and maariv right after the plag. But during the rest of the year they daven mincha after plag. From one day to the next they are meikil. We try to avoid it, and many Rishonim say that only for the sake of kabbalas tosefes Shabbos is there room to be meikil, but there are others who are meikil as they do it in Breuer's.

Rav Moshe Feinstein has a teshuva in Igros Moshe where he talks about this topic, and he discusses the Mishna Berura's question about the only minyan in town davening tartei d'sasrei. Rav Moshe doesn't refer to the psak of Olas Tamid in the Mishna Berura, but he discusses the same she'elah and he actually thinks that the Mishna Berura is not correct. According to Rav Moshe the advantage of davening tefillah betzibbur is because it means one truly davens properly – in other words, by davening together with a minyan you enhance your Tefillah, making it much better. But if it's going to be tartei d'sasrei Rav Moshe thinks it's better to daven on your own. I personally always follow what Rav Moshe said – it's better not to daven tartei d'sasrei even if you'll miss tefillah betzibbur.

Many have a minhag not to sell chametz gamur (proper chametz, like bread or pasta). But this year because of fears of supply shortages after Pesach, is that something they can be meikil on?

Yes.

Does it require hataras nedarim (nullifying a vow)?

No. There's a Dagul Me'revava on Yoreh De'ah at the beginning of the 3rd cheilek in Hilchos Nedarim and Sh'vuos. There's a whole siman (maybe 214) on whether a minhag tov (good practice) is binding mita'am neder (because it has turned into a halachic vow). The Ran in Nedarim cites this concept from the Baalei Tosafos on Nedarim Daf 81b, and the Shulchan Arukh assumes that this is the way it should be.

Whenever you want to give up a minhag that you've been observing for years you have to do hataras nedarim. But the Dagul Me'revava explains that this is only if you want to give it up mikan ul'haba (from now and forever). If you just happened to have a one-off event, she'as had'chak, he says it's self-understood that when you have a minhag tov, once in a long while you get stuck, you won't be able to do it, that does not require a hataras nedarim.

Let us say someone's family doesn't eat gebrokts on Pesach, and he's in Eretz Yisrael for the year learning in yeshiva, and the only place he has to stay over Pesach is at a relative who is eating gebrokts. Does he need a hataras nedarim? The pashtus is you can't make hataras nedarim – you're not even the ba'al haneder! It's a minhag hakehilla (community vow), and you belong to that kehilla that is careful about gebrokts. If they just got stuck one year, for that you don't really need hataras nedarim, and it wouldn't really help anyway. So according to Dagul Me'revava if once in a while you get stuck in a she'as had'chak you don't need hataras nedarim, since it is understood from the start that if it is not feasible, the minhag is not binding.

If we're afraid that a person who lives alone might become depressed, especially if God forbid depression could lead to suicidal ideation, can they leave on a TV or radio over Shabbos to have other voices in the house and to pass the time? Someone elderly or alone with no human interaction for 25 hours?

That's a problem, we must not allow someone with such problems to let these problems get worse. One should definitely tell them to leave something on. Although, if a person listens to the news and it makes them depressed, maybe they shouldn't listen to the news.

Can a rabbi refuse to officiate at a wedding that doesn't conform to the guidelines and the standards which were set in terms of numbers of people attending?

I think the rabbi should refuse. It's not right. It is putting people at risk. The rabbi should say he's not going to officiate unless they have a minyan metzumtzam (a very small number of people). The pasuk:  Shomer psoyim haShem (G-d protects the simple) does not apply in this situation, as people are fully aware of what is going on and are nervous about it. The rabbi should refuse to officiate.

A bris does not require a minyan, so should it be only the family who are present at a bris?

Yes, that's a very good idea. The minhag is to have a minyan, but in the current situation one should only do a minyan metzumtzam, and if you can convince them not to have a minyan [at all], it's even better.

How does one deal with krias sheim (giving a name) for a new baby daughter?

You just give the baby a name. When it is a boy the practice is to give the name at the bris, based on a Matei Moshe they quote, because when G-d told Avraham Avinu to have his bris —  at that point He changed his name. But when it comes to a girl there's no such drasha and therefore no such minhag. You don't have to wait.

Even in the case of a boy, if let's say they postpone the bris for an extended period of time, you don't have to wait another week, or another month to give the name.

I remember hearing a story from my father, who told me that in Einstein Hospital there was once a couple that had a baby and they had to postpone the bris, and they didn't give the baby a name. The nurse asked for the name of the baby and the couple said they didn't give him a name yet. As a result of this, the nurses thought the parents had given up hope, and that the parents believed that the child was not going to live. Consequently, they were careless in treating the baby, thinking that the parents had already given up hope! But that wasn't the reason why – the parents were chassidish, and didn't want to say the name out loud before the bris.

Under those circumstances, I think it's not right. You should say the name before. I think Rav Moshe has a teshuva like that, in other words if one has to postpone the bris for a while, you give the name before the bris. And when it comes to girls there's no such minhag anyway, you don't wait – any delay is a minhag, until you get an aliya and give the name. But you can give a name without the aliya.

Does someone bentch gomel (say the 'gomel' blessing) after leaving quarantine, and how much time does he have to make the bracha afterward, if the shuls are closed for a while?

If he was quarantined because he was sick, the halacha is that choleh shenisrapei (a sick person who recovers) has to say birchas hagomel. If it was just that he was in quarantine because we're afraid maybe he has the disease but in the end it turned out he did not have it, then he was not really in sakana (physical danger), and he does not need to say birchas hagomel.

How much time does he have? The Shulchan Aruch says he shouldn't wait too long. Perhaps in that situation you don't really need 10 people altogether. Maybe 10 people on a conference call is enough.

On a conference call he is praising G-d and 10 people can hear him. I should look that up in Shulchan Aruch. I am not sure that they have to be in the same room. It's not a davar shebik'dusha.

If we're still in quarantine on Pesach and on the first day of yomtov we have to switch from mashiv haruach to not saying it, generally the gabbai makes some kind of announcement. But in quarantine we will be biye'chidus – do we just stop saying mashiv haruach?

I guess so. We have no choice. The Shulchan Aruch says there's a difference between mashiv haruach and vesein tal umattarVesein' tal umattar is a bakasha (request) tefillah – 'Hashem, please give us rain' – so when you need the rain you just say it. Mashiv haruach is describing Hakodosh Boruch Hu's essence. So to change it to that, you need the koach hatzibbur (strength of the congregation), and therefore the gabbai has to announce it in shul, and whoever is not going to daven in shul, before they daven in shul they shouldn't say it. But in she'as had'chak when nobody is davening in shul, so you have no choice.

Can you review the dinim of making up parshiyot that were missed?

In Hilchos Krias Hatorah, in Shulchan Aruch Orach Chaim starting in 135, in the second se'if, the Rema quotes the story from the Ohr Zarua that there was once a minyan on a Shabbos morning and there was some problem during the davening, and they never got to lein the whole day. The Ohr Zarua says that the next Shabbos they needed to lein both sedras mechubarin (joined together), like we lein Vayakhel-Pekudei together, with revi'i (the fourth aliya) connecting the first sedra and the second sedra, because we don't want to be mechabeid (give superior 'honor' to) one sedra by giving it more aliyas (call-ups) than the other one. Instead you give 3-and-a-half in the first and 3-and-a-half in the second, and revi'i connects between them.

The Magen Avraham says, and Mishna Berura quotes it, that if the following week is already a double parsha like Vayakhel-Pekudei, you're not obligated to say 3 sedras in one go, as it is a tircha detzibbura (a burden on the community) – therefore we never lein 3 sedras together in one shot.

The Mishna Berura quotes other Acharonim (later halachic authorities) disagreeing with that Magen Avraham; they say that the more correct way to do it is to lein a whole bunch of sedras together. In the biography of the Chazon Ish there is a story that he was put in prison by the British authorities in Palestine before 1948, as he had participated in a demonstration against Chillul Shabbos (Shabbat desecration) by Jewish shops in Bnei Brak. He was in prison for a few weeks, and he missed krias haTorah. Everybody else heard krias haTorah, but he missed it for a few weeks.

In order to make up the missing sedras he would have to have 3 or 4 sedras read for him. He asked 9 people whether they would agree to listen to a very long – extremely long! –  krias haTorah, four times as long as normal, and the 9 people agreed. The Chazon Ish explained that the whole reason you don't do more than 2 sedras in one reading is tircha detzibbura, but he had a tzibbur that liked him, and they agreed to go along with him. So it wasn't tircha detzibbura, and he could do it.

But some Acharonim say that if the whole tzibbur missed krias haTorah then it is worthwhile to lein even 4 sedras. Rabbi Ephraim Zalman Margolies in Sefer Sha'arei Efraim writes that the story cited in the name of the Ohr Zarua was talking about a minyan that gathered together on Shabbos morning, they davened shacharis, and then they weren't able to do Krias haTorah. But what if there was a snowstorm and nobody went to shul on Shabbos, like in our current situation with the coronavirus, where nobody is going to shul? There was no tefillah betzibbur on Shabbos?

The Sha'arei Efraim is clearly working on the assumption that krias haTorah is a chovas hatzibbur (a congregational obligation) not a chovas hayachid (an individual obligation). Rav Soloveitchik used to say that his grandfathers, Rabbi Chaim Soloveitchik of Brisk, and Rav Eliyahu Halevi Feinstein of Pruzhany, had a halachic disagreement about this exact point.

Sha'arei Efraim assumes that if the people were together on Shabbos morning and they were nischayvu (obligated) in kriah and didn't lein, then you have to do a tashlumin (make-up reading) next week and maybe even 4 weeks later. But if they were never together, he thinks that me'ikkar hadin (according to the essence of the law) there is no obligation to make up what you missed. I think many would agree with that. Or even, let's say, if you hold like the Magen Avraham, that this coming week is going to be Vayakhel-Pekudei, so you don't lein 3 sedras: Ki Sisa, Vayakhel [and] Pekudei – it is tircha detzibbura.

But let's say this situation of not going to shul does not change until Shemini? Of course, we hope everything will be back to normal by Parshas Shemini. But if it doesn't get back to normal, even if you agree with the Magen Avraham, you don't do all of them: Ki Sisa, Vayakhel, Pekudei, Vayikra, Tzav – you don't do excessive tashlumin, you just do the sedra of that week and of the week before, let's say Tzav and Shemini. You can do 2 sedras.

Although, Me'ikkar hadin the Sha'arei Efraim is of the opinion that if the tzibbur never gathered together in the first place, they were never nischayvu to lein all those sedras, so you don't really need to read/hear the parshios that you missed anyway.

You had mentioned that a community can read extra krias even if they're not chayav in them?

Yes. On Shabbos and yomtov, me'ikkar hadin you're allowed to make hosafos (extra readings or call-ups). We have a minhag not to make hosafos on yomtov, but on Simchas Torah we do allow it. And every yomtov we actually do make a hosafa, because we do a maftirMe'ikkar hadin maftir is oleh l'minyan hakeruim (counts towards the number of those called up). And we always have maftir in addition to the 5 aliyosMidina deGemara (according to the law established by the gemara) it never says you have to lein a piece from Parshas Pinchas, namely from Parshas haMusafim. I think that the Beis Yosef says that it was the Geonim who introduced that.

When you make hosafos not only are you allowed to add on extra aliyos, you can even lein from a totally different parsha. On Simchas Torah we take out a different Sefer Torah and lein Bereishis. I don't think it is based on the gemara; it's a minhag that developed later. In our situation, let's say that some people will have missed Parshas Zachor, and some missed Parshas Para, and there will be people who will miss Parshas Hachodesh. When everything is clear and everyone is healthy, you can lein krias haTorah and then make a hosafa to lein those parshiyos you missed, although it probably doesn't make sense to read Hachodesh when it's no longer the month of Nissan.

If it is still before Pesach it will make sense to lein Parshas Para, which is "uneshalma parim sefaseinu" – since we don't have the ability to be makriv (sacrifice) the temidim and musafim (regular sacrifices offered up in the Beit Hamikdash), instead of actually offering them up we talk about them, and the gemara says at the end of Megillah – "maaleh aleihen k'illu hikrivam", Hakodosh Boruch Hu will consider it as if he offered up the korban.

When the time comes, we will all have to become tahor (ritually pure)  to bring Korban Pesach, and the way to become tahor is by bringing a Para Aduma (red heifer), and Para Aduma is also "Chatas karyei Rachmana" (it is called a 'sin-offering' by the Torah) – which means that in a certain sense it is like a korban, which means that we also apply the rule to Para Aduma – therefore, if we are all able to get together in shul before Pesach, maybe it makes sense to make a hosafa and lein Parshas Para.

But after Pesach I don't think it makes sense to lein Parshas Para. That's the usual explanation, others have a different explanation as to why Parshas Para is De'oraisa (mandated by the Torah). But with regard to Parshas Zachor, it would make sense to make a hosafa whenever everything clears up and we can go back to shul. If a lot of people missed Parshas Zachor, so they should lein it at a later date.

If there's a bar mitzva boy who prepared his whole leining, but missed reading it in shul, could the tzibbur (congregation) say we'll hear that parsha in addition to whatever the parsha is the week that the shul is able to reconvene?

Yes, if the shul is in agreement, that is totally okay. If you're going to lein two consecutive parshiyos, then it is generally accepted to lein them together, connected with revi'i. But if the bar mitzva boy missed Ki Sisa and now he has to lein it the week of Parshas Tzav, for example, then it's probably better to lein Parshas Tzav normally, and after you give the seven aliyos of parshas Tzav, have the bar mitzva boy roll back the Sefer Torah and lein Ki Sisa after the krias haTorah as a hosafa.

There is an emotional concern about kaddish and yahrzeit. What should rabbis recommend to their balebatim who are longing to do something to recognize a yahrzeit?

What can you do? Learn mishnayos. A friend of mine just lost his mother, and he says kaddish for his mother, and I told him I think he should not go to minyanim. His mother was a tzadeikes (righteous woman), she doesn't need his kaddish anyway, so he shouldn't feel so bad that he's missing the kaddish. His wife has a weak immune system and if he were to get the coronavirus, maybe he'll survive, but his wife may G-d  forbid get sick, so she's asking him not to go to a minyan. I told him she's right, he shouldn't go even though he's going to miss kaddish.

What haftara should we say when shul returns? Should it be for the week's parsha, and not impacted by any hosafos?

When you lein two sedras together, there are two minhagim in Shulchan Aruch as to whether you say the haftara of the first sedra or the second sedra. When you lein from two Sifrei Torah, the minhag is that the haftara should always be connected to the second Sefer Torah. In this case, I'm not sure. If they're going to lein Parshas Zachor after Pesach, I think they should say the haftara of Parshas Zachor. The haftara should always be connected to the last thing that was read.

If the bar mitzva boy were to read a parsha from 3 weeks earlier as a hosafa in a different Sefer Torah, you would then read the haftara of that hosafa?

Probably, I think you would, yes.

If a shul misses a number of parshiyos, does it have any impact on Simchas Torah?

Even if they missed a number of parshiyos, they still celebrate Simchas Torah as usual.

For a siyyum, does it make a difference if the baal hasiyyum is not with a minyan, but by himself making a siyyum in his own house, and everyone is listening from their own houses, does that impact the ability to be mitztareif?

I don't think there's a din that you need a minyan for a siyyum, or for seudas mitzva. Whoever participates in the siyyum, it's considered a seudas mitzva for them, even if they are on their own. This is a little bit of participation. Almost as much participation as the bechorim (first-borns) have when they come to shul! In reality they have no connection with the whole masechta (tractate) that was finished, they just hear the person finishing it say the last few lines of the gemara, and they celebrate along with him. In that case they celebrate in the same room – here they're celebrating at a different location. It's the same seudas mitzva that would've been if they would have been in the shul.

What about Rav Eliyahu Henkin's suggestion of being podeh with tzedaka for taanis bechorim?

To be podeh? I don't know. I have never heard of it. I'm not familiar with it at all. Wow!

Is there any benefit for a person to make his own personal siyyum of something like a Sefer in Tanakh, or a masechta mishnayos, as opposed to listening in to somebody else on the phone?

It has to be something like a full Seder Mishnayos or a masechta  of gemara. I have heard that in Eretz Yisrael they have a fleishig restaurant, and during the 9 days they have someone run through all of Pirkei Avos every night and they make a siyyum and then – they say! – everybody can eat meat. That's a joke! What do you mean you run through Pirkei Avos? If a person is afraid they won't hear a siyyum and will have to make their own, let him start now! Start now learning a short masechta. We have Artscroll, it will help them out.

What should the criteria be for re-opening shuls?

When the health organizations will tell us that everything is okay and people will be much less nervous, and the Federal Government Department of Health, and different state and city authorities, and different countries, will determine that you can relax disease-related restrictions, then it will be okay!

Some people are pushing to make minyanim in houses or standing outside with people at distances from one another. Is this something you would encourage? Or is it forbidden?

Minyanim in houses is a bigger problem than in the shul! They will be closer to one another – 10 in a room! Outside? Okay, maybe. Maybe! But only if there's no risk. I don't know. If the government or the Board of Health think it's okay, then it's fine. I'm concerned though. I'm over 70. I'm concerned about the outdoor approach too. Personally, I wouldn't want to participate.

Some concerns have been voiced about setting these requirements and people not following them and endangering others, and there is the question of "lo plug" (no differentiation) about these precautions.

That's right! You have to have a lo plug. If you say the healthy people can go to shul and people over 50 cannot go, then you'll have people over 50 who will say they are healthy – and they have a lower resistance, it's a danger for them. There are also people who are actually sick and they will say 'we feel healthy', and they go to shul. It's beautiful that people want to daven tefillah betzibbur, but they're putting their lives at risk – and putting other people at risk. It is sakonas nefoshos – a life threatening risk. It is not right. Not right at all. You are correct, we have to make a "lo plug."

There is concern that if shmura matzas are not available, is one allowed to use regular (non-shmura) matza for the seder.

For years the practice used to be that the matzah manufacturers would bake all the matza they made "lesheim mitzvas matza" (for the sake of the mitzva of eating matzos), which means it can be used for the seder even if it is not shmura. We need to find out if they still have that practice. They used to, because they knew that most Jews in America do not buy shmura, they buy peshuttos (non-shmura matzah). The Shulchan Aruch says you can be lenient in that situation, but you still need the asiyya lishma, it needs to be baked for the purpose of the mitzva of matza. If the manufacturers still make it all lishma, you can use the regular matza for seder night.

Many shuls have scheduled communal kashering – should they be cancelled? And do rabbonim have an obligation to review the dinim of kashering with their congregants so that they do it properly?

They have to cancel scheduled koshering. And it's not so difficult to kasher. Balebatim can be educated to do hag'ala on their own. The rabbis should teach their balebatim.

What about washing hands with soap a second time, after washing one's hands before hamotzi?

That's okay. It's completely fine.

What about women going to mikva during this period?

The Governor of New Jersey is now saying nobody is allowed out after 8 PM. This is going to pose a problem. A lot of women have to go to mikva, they can't all go after 8 PM. The Shulchan Aruch Yoreh De'ah at the end of siman 197 says that whenever there is an 'oness' (unavoidable situation) and the woman can't go to mikva at night, we're lenient, and she can go to mikva the next morning bayom (during the day). Usually we don't even allow tevila bayom on day 8 or 9. But if it's because of an 'oness', and the current situation is certainly an 'oness', you have no choice, and the woman may go bayom. This is explicit in the Shulchan Aruch.

I received a call today from the chair of a hospital Ethics Committee asking our position on a situation for which the hospital unfortunately feels a need to prepare: would we permit the removal of a respirator from an end-of-life coronavirus patient to be used by another patient whose life, in the opinion of the medical staff, could be saved? 

Every legal system has a principle that the ends justify the means. The question however is, which ends, and which means. If a woman is in labor and her husband is rushing her to the hospital at three o'clock in the morning on the highways where there are no other cars, the police will radio ahead to let the husband pass through all the red lights so that the woman can arrive in the hospital on time.

The halacha considers the mitzvah of "vo'chai bohem" (no mitzva is there so that it will cause loss of life) to be of supreme importance and it takes precedence over almost all of the other mitzvos in the Torah. Sick or elderly people whose life might possibly be endangered by fasting on Yom Kippur are required to eat. Likewise, if one's life may be in danger, we all know that we must violate Shabbos by driving to the hospital even if there is only a sefek sefeka (the slightest chance) of a danger to life, and even though driving a car on Shabbos constitutes a melocha d'oraisa (Torah prohibition).

The halacha, however, has three exceptions to the rule where pikuach nefesh does not take precedence. One of the three is murder. We may not kill one person in order to save the life of another person. We may not make calculations that the life of one individual is more valuable than the life of another individual (see: Mishnah at the end of seventh chapter of Oholos; see: Gemara Pesochim 25B). Even if one individual is on a respirator and his chances for survival are very slim, and even if he survives he will not live that many added years, and another person is in need of the respirator whose chances of survival are much better and will probably live many more years, the halacha declares that we have no right to make such calculations. Even if the individual on the respirator is a gosses (certainly going to die within a very short period of time), the din is still the same. One who kills a gosses b'yidei shomayim, is given the death penalty (Sanhedrin 78A).

The Rash in his commentary on the last Mishna in the eighth chapter of Terumos, quotes a passage from the Talmud Yerushalmi which has been codified both by the Rambam (Yesodei HaTorah 5:5) and by the Shulchan Aruch (Yoreh Deah 157:1 in the Rema). The Yerushalmi states that if murderers surround and capture the city and threaten to kill all the people in the city unless they will hand over one person whom they will kill, this is not permitted. The Kesef Mishna in his commentary on the Rambam points out that this Yerushalmi is adding a chidush, that even if the situation is such that at the end of the day we will be saving more lives by killing that one person, the halacha still forbids this as an act of murder. Even if the murder is only in the form of Garam Retzicha (one caused a death), which would not deserve a death penalty, the halacha still does not permit it.

The Origins Of Magen David Adom By Saul Jay Singer

The first use of the Magen David Adom – the red star of David – as a symbol of medical assistance came during the Anglo-Boer War in South Africa (1899-1902), when it was used by the Ambulance Corps founded by Ben Zion Aaron in Johannesburg as a first-aid corps to assist the Boer forces.

South African President Paul Kruger, who provided initial funding for the enterprise, granted permission to the corps to use the Magen David as its emblem instead of the standard red cross. Kruger (1825-1904), who served as president of the South African Republic (or Transvaal) from 1883 to 1900, came to international prominence as the leader of the Boers against Britain during the Second Boer War.

Rare original 1937 Membership Card issued by the National Association of the Magen David Adom for Rapid Assistance in Eretz Yisrael.Advertisement

The embodiment of Afrikanerdom, Kruger remains a controversial and divisive figure, revered by many as a folk hero and despised by others as the defender of an unjust cause. While the Boers' treatment of Jews, who served on both sides of the Boer War, was mixed, Kruger was a great friend of the Jews and regarded them as "G-d's chosen people."

Even given his philo-Semitism, Kruger's dispensation permitting the use of the Magen David was particularly noteworthy considering that even after Israel MDA was admitted as a member of the International Red Cross (IRC) on June 22, 2006 after a battle spanning almost a century, the IRC continues to refuse to recognize the Magen David as a legitimate symbol even though it officially recognized the Muslim "Red Crescent" symbol in 1929 – ironically the very year of the great Arab riots and pogroms in Eretz Yisrael.

MDA in Israel was arguably born twice: first after World War I and then again in 1930. Some accounts attribute its origins to 1915, when Dr. Moses Erlanger, a Swiss-Jewish ophthalmologist, launched a society, which he called "Magen David Adom," to provide medical services for Jews captured and wounded during World War I. Some society members had served in British military hospitals, and the British military government recognized the Magen David symbol as the society's official emblem.

The idea of founding MDA in Eretz Yisrael began at a meeting in Philadelphia in October 1918, when Ben-Gurion, Golda Meir, and Henrietta Szold discussed the unavailability of sufficient medical help to support the soldiers of the Jewish Legion, who were then fighting with British troops in Eretz Yisrael to liberate the land from the Ottoman Turks. They organized a makeshift medical support organization to assist both the Legion and the settlers of the Yishuv, but the group disbanded a few years after World War I.

The actual birth of MDA is most frequently credited to nurse Karen Tenenbaum, a "Jewish Florence Nightingale" of sorts. Eretz Yisrael, which was by then under British Mandate rule, had neither first aid nor ambulance services, which became particularly problematic after the murderous Arab riots of 1929. It became sadly obvious that lives were being lost due to the lack of even the most fundamental medical services, and Tenenbaum decided to take action to address this deficiency.

On June 7, 1930, she assembled a group of seven Jewish doctors – Meshulam Levontin, Chaim Halperin, M. Rabinowitz, M. Frankel, Dr. Eliyahu, Dr. Barzel, and C. Leibowitz – at a cafĂ© on the Tel Aviv waterfront. They decided to establish a quick response volunteer emergency medical association to be called "Magen David Adom, Tel Aviv," and they commenced operation from a single branch out of a decrepit shack at the intersection of Rothschild and Nachalat Benyamin Streets in Tel Aviv.

The leader of the founding group was Levontin (1886-1957), who had studied medicine at Moscow University, received his doctorate at the University of Munich, and specialized in the treatment of tropical diseases at the University of Hamburg before making aliyah in 1911.

He was appointed the official doctor for the Jews of Hebron and Tiberias before being expelled from Eretz Yisrael by the Ottoman Turks. He went on to serve as commander of the medical unit of the Zion Mule Corps during World War I, working closely with Ze'ev Jabotinsky and Joseph Trumpeldor.

Upon his return after the war, he served as director of Hadassah Hospital in Tel Aviv until 1933, after which he served as head of the hospital's epidemiology department and founded the first blood transfusion service in Eretz Yisrael (1936). During Israel's War of Independence, he was a founder of Israel's Medical Service.

Levontin's original proposal to Tel Aviv city leaders – that they finance the purchase of two sets of bicycles supporting a bed to transfer the injured in case of disaster – was rejected. Meanwhile, Chaim Halperin returned from Egypt determined to purchase a modern ambulance he had seen there. Fundraising activities ultimately proved successful when, on June 24, 1931 the first MDA ambulance traveled from Levontin's home to the home of Meir Dizengoff, then mayor of Tel Aviv.

Newspaper ads placed by MDA yielded 100 volunteers, who were initially trained by Levontin, and the first graduation ceremony was held in September 1930 with 73 paramedics having successfully completed the first aid course. Additional MDA branches were opened in Haifa (1933) and Jerusalem (1934), and MDA's cornerstone for its new Tel Aviv headquarters was laid in January 1936.

Statistics show that during its first years, MDA provided first aid to 11,000 people, a remarkable success story given its limited resources.

A national MDA organization was established in 1935 to provide medical services to the public and the Haganah, and the society expanded during the following years, particularly after a second wave of Arab rioting from April 1936 until early 1939. By 1937, MDA covered all of Eretz Yisrael – serving anyone in need, including Christians and Muslims – and it boasted a fleet of hundreds of ambulances.

Exhibited here is an original document with "Regulations of 'Magen David Adom' in Eretz Yisrael":

  1. "Magen David" is a major branch of the international "Red Cross." Its purpose is to disseminate amongst the Jews of both Eretz Yisrael and in the Diaspora under the banner of "Magen David Adom" the idea of the "Red Cross" and to fulfill all of the tasks that are performed by the "Red Cross."
  2. Members are only accepted from age 20 and above.
  3. Authority to establish branches in Eretz Yisrael and the Diaspora vests in the Association.
  4. The Founding Committee consists of the following members:
  5. Mr. Y. D. Brutzkus, Berlin.
  6. P.G. Krinin, Berlin.
  7. Baron Adolf Ginzburg, Paris.
  8. Rav Rubinstein, member of the Polish Sejm (parliament), Vilna.
  9. Rav Nurok, member of parliament, Riga.
  10. Professor Chayot, chief rabbi of Vienna.
  11. Professor A. Einstein, Berlin.
  12. Professor Simonsen, Copenhagen.
  13. Advocate/Lawyer Y. L. Tittle, Berlin.
  14. David Yellin, head of the Vaad Leumi for the Jews of Eretz Yisrael, Jerusalem.
  15. Mr. Shaul Tchernichovsky, Tel-Aviv.
  16. Member's stripes will be determined at the first General Assembly after the Association's approval.

 

The well-known names on this list are Einstein, Yellen, and Tchernichovsky, but I could find no link between any of them and Magen David Adom (other than this document), nor any mention at all of Krinin (#2), Baron Ginzburg (#3), and Advocate Tittle (#9). Available information about many of the others is sketchy and, in any case, space limitations are such that I can only briefly discuss these MDA founding committee members.

1) Julius Davidovich Brutzkus (1870-1951) was a Lithuanian Jewish historian, scholar, politician, and a passionate Zionist who encouraged Jews to engage in political action and self-defense. He wrote many articles and books in at least eight languages on the history of the Jews in Russia and the cultural history of Mizrahi Jewry; served as Minister for Jewish Affairs in the Lithuanian government; and was elected to the Lithuanian Parliament (1923).

4) As rav of Vilna for 30 years, Rav Yitzchak Rubinstein (1880-1945) successfully prevailed upon the Czarist government not to exile the Jewish populations of Vilna and Warsaw. After World War I, he headed the aid society for war victims – one could reasonably surmise that it was this service that brought him to MDA's attention – and he served as the Lithuanian Minister of Jewish affairs and was elected to the Polish Sejm and Senate.

His election as chief rabbi of Vilna sparked a violent controversy with the followers of the Gaon Rav Chaim Ozer Grodzinsky who could not come to terms with their leader's election loss. Upon his arrival in America (1940), R. Rubinstein was asked by Yeshiva University to head its RIETS program.

5) Rav Nurok (1884-1962) was a religious Zionist and Israeli politician. After receiving his Ph.D., he became deputy chairman of the Jewish community in Moscow before settling in Riga, where he was elected to the Latvian Sejm on a religious Zionist ticket (1921). He was a founder of the World Jewish Congress (1936) and served as a delegate on behalf of Mizrachi to most of the Zionist Congresses before World War II.

After his wife and two sons were murdered in the Holocaust, he settled in Eretz Yisrael (1947), where he served in the first five Knessets; was appointed Minister of Posts; and lost an Israeli presidential election to Yitzchak Ben-Zvi (1952).

6) Zvi Perez Chajes – sometimes spelled Tzvi-Peretz Chayot – (1876-1927) was a rabbi, historian, biblical scholar, and a notable Zionist leader. After serving first as rav of Florence and then as a rabbi in Trieste, he served as the chief rabbi of the Jewish community of Vienna (1918) until his death.

He served as chairman of the Zionist General Council (1921-25), as a trustee of the Hebrew University, and as a member of the World Relief Conference, through which he may have become associated with MDA.

8) Professor David Simonsen (1853-1932) was a respected international scholar, rabbi, and bibliophile – his private 25,000-volume Jewish library was acquired by The Royal Library after he passed away – who was a central figure in Jewish Copenhagen for over six decades and served as chief rabbi of Copenhagen from 1892-1902. He was also a philanthropist who supported Jewish institutions throughout the world, including several post-World War I relief organizations, which may have brought him to MDA's attention.

10) Yellen (1864-1941), a distinguished teacher, writer, poet, translator, linguist, Hebraist, and grammarian, was a symbol of the integration of the Ashkenazi and Sephardi communities in Eretz Yisrael, a frequent theme of his scholarship. One of the leaders of the Yishuv, he was among the first public figures in Eretz Yisrael to openly join the Zionist movement and to openly participate in Zionist Congresses.

11) Tchernichovsky (1875-1943) is best known as one of the great Hebrew poets, particularly for his incomparable sonnets and as a two-time recipient of the prestigious Bialik Prize for Literature. However, he was also a physician who, after practicing medicine in Russia, settled in Eretz Yisrael (1931), where he served as chief physician of the Tel Aviv municipal school system. He also edited the section on medicine in the Hebrew encyclopedia and was a member of the Committee of the Hebrew Language.

Our document is undated, though it had to have pre-dated 1927, the year of R. Chayot's/Chajes' death. Unable to determine what it actually represents, I wrote to Magen David Adom, which forwarded a scan of a short article that appeared in the August 14, 1925 edition of Haaretz. According to that article, the IRC in Geneva received a letter from the National Committee of the Jews of Eretz Yisrael in Jerusalem forwarding a proposal the committee had received during its June 25, 1925 meeting regarding the formation of "Magen David Adom" to be a branch of the IRC and listing our 11 members as the founding committee. Nonetheless, I find it both interesting and somewhat strange that no MDA "timeline" or other materials that I have seen discuss this important development in the early history of MDA.

MDA stamps

The Israeli Postal Authority regards 1930 as the year of MDA's founding, as may be seen from the two stamps exhibited here. The first is a 1955 stamp it issued in honor of MDA's 25th anniversary, and the second is a 1980 sheetlet commemorating MDA's 50th, or jubilee, anniversary. Both stamps cite the beautiful line from the Talmud (Sanhedrin 37a): "Whoever saves one life is considered by Scripture to have saved an entire world."

The original form of the "whoever saves a life" teaching exists in two different versions, the best known one being, "Whoever saves a single life in Israel is considered by Scripture to have saved an entire world" (emphasis added). In several versions, though – including Rashi's and Maimonides' – the words "in Israel" are omitted. Although the debate regarding the wording involves a very important question – does the principle apply to saving any life or only a Jewish life? – the MDA universalist version is entirely appropriate given its treatment of every person in need.

Interestingly, the American-Israel Numismatic Association apparently considers 1919 as the year of MDA's founding. Last year, it marked the MDA centennial by issuing an MDA commemoration medal to each of its paid members.

See you tomorrow bli neder Passover is Wendesday night

Love Yehuda Lave, We want Moshiach NOW!

Rabbi Yehuda Lave

PO Box 7335, Rehavia Jerusalem 9107202

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