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Women & Sifrei Torah | Rabbi Anthony Manning | September 3rd 2025
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It's good to be uh back here for a a new
year. It should be with Masel and Braha.
Everyone should have a them and their
families. Gooden. Please God. Um I'd
like to thank our sponsors for this
year. Uh the Shia today is sponsored
specifically by Michael and Sharon
Croninberg. Thank you very much for the
sponsorship. Leu Nishmas um Sharon's
father Rav David Yizak Benhav Shiman
Morai. Rabbi David Burns, David
Bergstein, who served as a raing queens
in New York for for half a century,
close to 50 years. His side is on uh the
sixth of alul. So thank you for that
sponsorship and for all the work you do
in the shul. And thank you also to our
regular sponsors for 2025. The shirim is
sponsored anonymously
brand.
So um we have three shirim between now
and the end of sukus. Wednesday this
year doesn't have a great masle in terms
of shirim for the ou. So uh we only have
three. Uh so I decided uh I I have
promised you some shirim on medical
ethics which we we will get there please
god after sukas but I decided I need to
speak about inyanadoma a little bit and
it's always tempting to speak about
rashashana and sleas because that's
coming up uh soonest. Um, but I decided
to speak about Simhas Torah. Uh, partly
because Amy asked me to, uh, to do a
shar on women's laning on Sim Torah,
which I've never spoken about before and
generally um, which we will get to. But
I'd like to prepare three shirim for you
on topic we've never discussed any of
these issues before in in this format,
which is on women's involvement in uh,
the Shul service with the Safetera
specifically um, both in terms of
women's dancing with the Safetera. I
don't know about you, but I've been
involved in a number of communities
where this has been an extremely
divisive issue and uh the shul has been
really torn apart. I know at least two
communities in which this has happened.
Uh many of the people were very against
it. Many of the women were very against
it. Uh many of the men were very in
favor of women's dancing with cifrey
Torah. Um I think anything that gets
them home earlier for the kiddish I
think is uh is what they want. Um
sometimes the divide is Israelis who
tend to be very kind of uh conservative
little C on these issues and Americans
and Hudznikim who sometimes be a little
bit more liberal on these issues but not
necessarily. So what I want to do with
you please God is today I want to just
lay foundations. What are the dim denim
of cifrey Torah? What uh are the denim
of cifrey Torah and contact with tuma?
Because one of the issues that is often
raised as a as a question mark about
women's connection with cif to Torah is
is there a problem if a woman is in need
if she's menstruating is that an issue
for her to touch the sacred Torah to
lift the sacred Torah to carry the
sacred to maybe even to look at the
sacred Torah we need to deal with those
issues square on before we deal with
anything else. Next week I'm going to
look at the issue of dancing in shaw
where the whole minag comes from in
dancing with the cphrit tora which is a
relatively new minhag that people take
the sephre tora and they dance around
the room with the cif tora used to be
that people danced around the safer tora
people stood in the middle and people
danced around the safer tora but that's
not what is done most places now and
then we'll get into women's laning and
uh hopefully in a couple of weeks from
now okay so that's uh that's our next
three weeks mapped out uh please god it
should be vat
So let's start at the very beginning. I'
I'm not going to go through the the
early sources on the sheet in great
detail because they're fairly
straightforward. I brought you in number
one which is worthless mentioning when
the safetra first appears in the when
Moshe the end of his life coming up soon
in the parishes writes it down
when Moshe finished writing
all the whole until the very end that
itself is a very loaded issue. Did he
write all the way to the end where it
says that he's already died? How can he
write something which is not true? If he
says he died and he's writing it, it's
obviously she or is that prophecy? He
will die. Did Yeshua write them? That's
a sh which we had which we're not going
to have again right now. Maybe in the
future please God.
He says to the he commands them no say
and they are the ones who carry the
kadesh with the in. said to them,
"Take this. This is the master copy
and put it next to in the in the Aaron."
There's a debate whether it's inside the
Aaron the safet next to the or outside
the the edge on a on a shelf if you like
next to the Aaron cades, but put it next
to the Aaron cadesh. The higher sham
and this will be the testimony. This
will be the witness. This will be the
master copy. Any future cifree Torah
will be checked against this one. And
there's a whole history. What happened
to that safer Torah? Did it get lost
some? Was it was it hidden away when the
Aron Codes was hidden away? Um what is
the cif to that Ezra the Torah of Ezra
from the second sample? Is that the same
one? Is that a different one? Not for
now. Very interesting, etc. But it is
important to understand that the very
first time the safer Torah appears it is
put in the Aon and the Aon is put in the
holy of holies in the kesh kadoshim and
no one ever goes there other than the
coal on yam kipa etc unless there's a
need I imagine if they had to get it out
to check something they could go in but
um the point is that the sephorra is
very very detached from the people
that's the first thing I brought you in
number two which I'm not going to read
now the the very important story of
Yoshi Yahu who who finds the the safety
who finds this safety when they're doing
renovations in the Ba Mikdash in the
midb and and the revolution that that
caused with the people and the and the
chuva revolution you can read that and
around on that for yourselves but that's
an important reappearance of the safety
and I brought you a few uh a few little
uh you know tidbits of information the
earliest verses that we have from the
safety were found just down the road
here in Kfom by uh by the old city near
the pagan center where it shows you the
burkas kanim or at least something very
similar to burkas kanim dating from the
time of kiskao from the safetera many
fragments of the cifre tora of cphrto
were found with the dead sea scrolls
which date back 2,000 years the engi
scroll that was found in engedi which is
from the third fourth century contains
two chapters of iigra with exactly the
text identical to the text we use today
which is very interesting the oldest
complete safeter that we have today
which is kosha is called the belong
Bolognia safer tora and it's from the
12th century 12th 13th century and it's
in the museum in Bologna. I don't know
if it's available to be seen there. I've
never been to the Bologna I don't think
but if anyone has any uh photos from
there then maybe they can see the
safeter there. Now in terms of the of
the safetra so let's look at a few
sources. Number ra number three in the
rama mitzvah
and of course he gets this from the we
just read. You have to have a designated
place for the safer Torah. It can't just
wander around which makes it interesting
and surprising. And here I've tried to
weave in things about Yam Kiper and
Rashon as part of what we're doing. Look
in number four, a surprising source. So
the Mishna says in Yuma on Yam Kipper
when the Coen Gad read from the safetra,
they didn't just take out the safer
Torah and give it to him to read.
So the coord comes up to read says the
Mishna
notra. So these are all positions of
authority in the temple takes out the
safety
and he gives it to the
scan to the deputy
and he gives it to the doll.
The coal takes it and he reads, "Why is
it passed around?" The yalami
immediately comments here, "How can you
do this? How can you pass around a safer
Torah like this? This is not the way to
treat a safer Torah to pass it from
person to person." Number five says
in every time you have a dealings with
the sacred terra you say that the he's
saying to the ra here
you always people always follow the
Torah
and here you say
the Torah is going to the people rather
than people going to the Torah. How can
this be?
They are very very people. Okay, hat
bah. It's covered hatra for it to go to
these people. Meaning, you're right. We
would never normally hand the Torah
around from person to person. It's not
appropriate in this case. These are the
four leaders of the of the of the
nation. You're allowed to do that.
Interestingly, the people themselves
brought cifer. I I I hadn't really
focused on this before. Look at number
six says the Gomorrah
after the coming god had read everybody
would bring had brought this cifree
Torah with them to the temple
and they read they read from the
safetraim
to show off the safetra to all the all
their friends what does he mean
how beautiful their safetra was shorter
meaning how how proud they were that
they'd have this beautiful safetra made
and it's a mitzvah because
as we see a famous idea when the Jewish
people stood went through the yans this
is my god and I will beautify him
if you're going to get a lulv get a
beautiful lulv if you can safetra n with
beautiful safetra but claf
by by an expert scribe with beautiful
ink with beautiful claff
and they brought them on.
Why why do you need to know that?
because there's no avith in yushim on
purpose then and the kipa of course as a
dinner of shabas you can't carry on yom
kipa anyway they brought their creatorra
interestingly
this was an exception to the rule as
well they had their safety there but
they brought it there to read
interesting I don't know what this
looked like in the in the azara all of a
sudden everybody this feels a bit more
like simra to me everyone's opening up
cif tora reading maybe there were little
cifray but this was a minute that they
had that people brought and it was a
one-off thing a special one-off thing
for yum kipper Number seven,
if if there are people who are
imprisoned, Jews who are in prison, now
today, Jews who are in prison are
usually in prison because they're
crooked or they committed crimes and
we're not particularly sympathetic to
the fact that they say, "Well, I need to
lora." Well, if you needed to land for a
safe terror, why did you end up in
prison? Um, okay, fine. Um in those day
in those days uh we're talking about
someone who was captured hostage who's
held by um non-Jews in a prison and the
host and they say you can bring in a
safe if you want to the prison fine
we don't allow you to bring a safetyra
to the prison because why not because
we're not sympathetic to the prisoners
these are prisoners who didn't do
anything wrong but because we don't shle
around ciforra you don't move cifra
around says the ramar
If you're just going to read it,
but if you're if you're going to
actually make it avon
and set it up beforehand, then you can
do that. Meaning you have to have
something which is more something which
is more fixed. You can't just have cifer
wandering around
and if he's an important person
then you can do it because we saw on
you're allowed to make an exception for
important people. Now, we're going to
have to plug all of these ideas into,
well, what do we do on simas to Torah?
And then when, let's say, the women of
the community say, well, we also want to
say for Torah, how do these ideas uh
play in? Now, you might say, well, our
women are even more hashov than our men
in the community. You could say that. Is
that the relevant uh analysis? Well, we
we'll get to that, but not really today.
And the underlying reason that Mishna
brings down again, number eight is we go
to the Torah, the Torah doesn't come to
us. So, number nine, again, I said I'd
do these quickly. We'll we'll we'll slow
down in a few minutes.
So you're not allowed to say you're not
allowed to leave when the safetra is
still out. You're meant to stay until
they put it back. So it says there are
meaning it's not that one individual
can't leave. The shul can't just leave
to go somewhere to a kdish or something
like that and the safety has left that
on its own. And then he says if you uh
if you're taking it to another home then
another place that well let's read it
if you if you are putting it in like to
a next door.
So if there's only one exit you have to
wait. You follow the safer Torah. Let
that go out of that door and you follow
it
to the place where it's going. Always
follow the savior Torah.
If there's another door and it's not
going out of the other door, fine. So,
you can leave from the other door. It's
not an insult.
You can go out of the other door,
but you always have to be following the
safer, not the other way around.
says,
"Okay,
if you have a proper Aaron kadesh, which
we have ins
then you have to walk to the safer you
have to walk there. try and get there to
the front of the iron.
There's a mitzvah to bring the kids, the
babies, okay, to kiss
to get them excited, etc. So, people are
bringing their babies and their kids to
kiss the safer, etc. Um, which is a
beautiful minhag. I find these days in
some shors in Israel things are so hefta
that people just walk in the middle of
the service right up to the aron kodesh
with the kids open up the iron kesh to
show the kids the creator tora maybe
it's just a British in me that is
thinking like like what is going on here
the whole shaw feels like it's it's a
summer camp but um and then of course
the kid runs around the aron kesish and
and there's all the grumpy old men sort
of frowning I'm one of those people okay
frowning in one shaw in uh in London
which will remain nameless They actually
rope off the the area up to the iron
codition with a big sign that says no
entry. Okay, which is very interesting.
Which is maybe a touch unfriendly, but
nevertheless, okay, fine. So, how are
you allowed to walk the safety around
the shaw? Meaning, we take a long route
around the shaw. Who says you're allowed
to do that? Says Raad Ysef has a chuva
on this number 10. Look at what he says
in Ysef in his safer actually not the
chuva.
Everyone from the community should go up
to the to kiss it mouth hand etc etc.
You shouldn't bring the safer to the
person with the safer.
You shouldn't be leaning over with the
safer to for people to kiss it. They
come to it. It doesn't go to them.
Fine.
And you're allowed to. It's it's a you
need a to go the the long route in order
to why because it's covered Torah. It's
not demeaning to the Torah to take it
around. Not everybody has to run to the
Torah. So then it reaches you you raised
the question which we're going to talk
about next week. In some shors, a minig
developed and one of uh one of the shors
in London did this for a while that the
men would carry the safety to around the
shaw for the other guys to kiss it and
hand it over to a woman in the Ezra
nshim. The woman would then take the
safer Torah around the Ezra Nashim, hand
back to a man. The man would bring the
safer Torah back to the Aron Kesh. Is
that appropriate? Is that within the
spirit of this mitzvah? Is that allowed
or not allowed? One of the questions we
have to ask ourselves is not the
question of whether women should be
touching or carrying cifra, but whether
this is the right thing to do with the
safer Torah. I don't have a clear answer
on that. You might turn around and say,
well, now that we take the long route,
which is covered at Torah, so this is
just the longer of the long routes and
it's more cover the women want to kiss
the or you might say, no, no, no, it's
enough already. We we we go this far. We
shouldn't be shleing out that far as
well. I I don't have a clear answer. The
Zohar is very concerned about moving a
safer Torah really anywhere. Look at
number 11 on the top of page three says
the Zohar
the group with that that are learning
the Zohar says
go exiling if you like a safer from even
from one sh to another you're not
allowed to do that
all the more so into the
He says, "Wait a second. The this
parallels the went into
the takes steps away. So too here
it's a kind of golas. The safetra might
go from one to another.
It might go to the street
and then it will go to the midbah
meaning it's a sense of of of loss. It's
a golus. It's a almost the safety is
getting further and further away like
the is getting further and further away
said
the people in Baba were very scared of
this mitzvah.
They never moved a safety even from one
to another. And in case you don't
realize how strict some post have taken
this to be, Raviakov Endan objected very
strongly to taking a safer Torah to a
Shiva house at all. Even if it's there
for days says that's not how it works.
The people will Davin in the Shiva house
and then when he comes to create a
Torah, they'll all come to shul and
they'll read the safer Torah in the
Shaw. Ah, you shouldn't be leaving a
Shiva house. Yeah, but that's better
than take shleing a safer Torah to the
Shiva house. who takes a safer Torah to
another house. We don't do that. Now,
that's not the min. As you know, we do
take a safer Torah. There is a a
commonly held perception that as long as
you read from it three times, then
that's okay. That is a little bit of a
myth. Okay? And I brought you somewhere
in one of the footnotes, Rav Avit
Zatovski
has one of his myth busting uh long
essays where he says it's not correct.
>> In other words, that's what we do. Bring
it to the house.
>> Right. That's that's what's commonly
done. But ra Jacob emden said you
shouldn't do it at all which is very
interesting.
Oh rather sorry that was sofa not of
yakov emden. Ravakov emden didn't like
bringing a turret to a shiver house
because there were little babies there
and diapers and all sorts of things.
It's just not appropriate for a safe
terror to be in a shiver house. Also I
brought you Ravaldenberg. I didn't bring
you the whole chuva. Rafaldenberg was
very critical of people who do bar
mitzvah of the cottel and they have a a
minion and then somebody runs off and
brings the safer Torah which is what
everybody does. He says that's not how
you do it. What you have to do is you
have your minion and then the minion has
to go to an aron kadesh together to to
or at the very very least the whole
minion has to go pick up the safer Torah
and bring together with the whole minion
the safer Torah not just one guy. Oh, we
need a safer Torah. Like you need
something from, you know, Ramy Levy. Oh,
get someone get a safer TRA. No, no,
that's not how it is. It has to be very
uh with a lot of cover, etc. Um,
oh, we'll get to the women of the wall.
Okay, don't worry. We'll get there. This
this is all part of the discussion.
Ravadi Ysef has a chuva in number 12
which I'm not going to read out in
detail but he's asked about hakus
says it's one thing on simas Torah when
we dance around and we take out all the
cifray Torah but that's at least to read
them we read them so you could argue you
know it's just a long route to to
reading them
[Music]
>> right right
>> what about when they just take a safer
orphan out into the street to dance with
the safeterra on the night of m's
reading anything. By the way, one of the
reasons for the people justify the min
of laning on the night of simra which is
very strange. When do we ever lane at
night alikabala? There are real problems
laning at night. Why do we lane at night
on simkas? to justify taking out all the
cifrey Torah and dancing with the cifrey
Torah. It's kind of expos now that we've
taken them all out. How passes that we
don't read from them. But on no one's
going to read anything. It's in it's
it'sikim.
I never even thought of them but maybe
except theim. You're right. But in
Israel, they don't take the safer to
theim. Israelis all over Israel do
hakafne. There are no inra or places
like that. And I bet they do have
coverage and dance around. So Ravadia
has a long cha you can read it for
yourself. Basically he says cover. It's
cover tora. Once it becomes cover then
it's fine because you're doing it for
the Torah. What defines what is cover
and what is inappropriate? Good
question. And the answer really is his
last line. If you if you look in the
last two lines of number 12.
So also taking out a safer to the
street,
excuse me, the whole purpose is
he's very clear on it. No problem. cover
our Torah
that's he quoted before
and then he says at the end
this has become
Israel Torah who the fact that it's the
min means that it must be right and now
we have to find a reason to justify the
min so that raises the question which
we're going to talk about next week well
what if we want to make new Minhagen
Minhagen starts somewhere
They start usually with the people. They
don't start from the top down. They
start from the bottom up. So there's
always a a question when these new
things come. Oh, that's not the min.
Yeah, but the min wasn't the min either
until the min was the min and now it's
the min. So So who who starts? Do you
have a number of sort of naughty people
kind of pushing the envelope at the
beginning which everyone's sort of
tutting about and then oh well that
became the min. Let's let's do that or
not. We're going to talk about that. We
have to address that full on. But he his
basis for supporting this is min Israel.
Um I'm going to go quite fast here. The
13 and 14 talk about standing in front
of the safer Torah. It's interesting the
Gmorra debates which is the calv. Do we
stand in front of a safer Torah because
if we stand in front of a RV all the
more so we stand in front of a safer
Torah where the RAV learned the Torah.
That's one way of looking at it. And the
Gomorrah elsewhere learns the opposite.
If people stand in front of a safer
Torah, then all the more so they have to
stand in front of a Rav who is Torah
Shabal pair who overrides the safer
Torah. The safer Torah says that you
only you hit somebody 40 lashes and the
Rabonim say no it's 39. So who who beats
who? The Rabonim beat the cifra. So you
all which way do you learn the kakoma?
It's very interesting. You can think
about that yourself. Uh it is M to sit
um with the safer Torah and the Rambam
says that and some people have a min top
of page four that they do sit but he
says you have to sit with extreme focus.
Look at the Rambam
Torah. If you are going to sit in front
of a safer Torah rush you have to be
very focused.
This doesn't feel like in okay
this is the this is the witness of God's
voice on earth.
He quotes the
we give every kind of cover we can
shown.
If you are if you play fast and loose
and you desecrate the cover of the
Torah,
then you yourself will be desecrated in
some way in front of others.
One of the strong practices has grown up
that we don't touch the safer Torah on
the parchment. And if you look at the um
the origins of this, you'll see as
follows. Number 16,
your hands may not be dirty
or have anything sort of dirty on them.
He's not talking about the parchment.
He's talking about even on the outside
of the Torah. You have to have strong
you have to have a strong personal
hygiene. And we'll actually raise that
issue in a few minutes. Is it possible
that the issue of women who were nida in
nida touching the safer Torah is it
possible that the whole issue was a
personal hygiene issue and that's a very
serious question which we'll come to in
which case that's going to impact on the
modern reality of the way that things
work these days we'll see that but
certainly hygiene on the hands is a very
important point even if you're not
handling the claf and all the more so
look in number 17
if if a person grasps Say naked. See,
what does naked mean?
He'll be buried naked.
We're going to bury somebody just a
naked body. You can't mean that.
He'll be buried naked of his mitzvah or
her mitzvah. Well, really
one time they touched the claf and they
they got no mitzvah. Noah
you have to say
you'll lose any mitzvah that you're
trying to do with the safer Torah
whether it's gel reading if you touch
the the the scroll itself then you any
benefit any reward that you were
thinking of for that mitzvah it's gone
because it's been overwritten by the
inappropriateness of the way that you've
held the safer Torah and
you need a and of course Saridim have
those little what do you call them the
handkerchief things hanging from the top
of the safeterra partly so that when
they need to move the safer Torah around
because the sarim do they don't have an
in the same way they have they do it
with the midp etc
have you know the tool and they don't
need to touch it so touching a safer is
a major a major no no there is a one
view that arum means I brought you some
sources in 19 arum might mean that the
person has to wear Talis every time they
touch or inter interact with a safetera
arum might mean the person not that the
claf is arum but the person is not
dressed properly which raises the
question again if a man has you can't
handle a safeter without wearing a talis
so should we be giving it to anyone
without wearing a talis so you're going
to say well give the woman a talis and
she'll wear a talis as well okay I don't
think that's what was going on here but
but that's not the is means the actual p
parchment itself so all of this is by
way introductions to how seriously we
take a safer Torah. And I just want to
mention to you that Rabbi Minima, who
many of you probably know, he was one of
my Rabon Hamtar many years ago. I found
he has a shir online on women um dancing
with cifrey Torah. And his main focus in
that shar is the points that we've made
so far today, which is that it's not
about women per se. It's not about the
technical issues of Nida and which we
will deal with now. It's much more about
the how are you handling a safer Torah?
We shouldn't even be doing what the men
do now. It's problematic even more so to
spread it. But I'm not saying that's the
only way to look at it, but it's an
important way to look at it. And I
actually saw him at a wedding a couple
of nights ago and I I mentioned it to
him and uh we discussed it a little bit.
Yes.
>> In addition to the respect, there's a
secondary thing that if you touch the
parchment, it's not going to last that.
>> Correct. It's it damages the parchments
and that even brushing it with sitsus is
not good for the letters, etc., etc.
Okay, fine. Uh, let's now talk about
Tuma. This is fascinating and it's going
to bring us to areas we haven't looked
at before.
Says number 20
Ezra. So Ezra was maken 10 things. When
Ezra brought the Jewish people back to
the land of Israel, he made 10. And I'm
looking at one of them specifically.
If men and actually it was men and women
originally I'm not going to deal with
the women's side of that but if men had
a seinal emission usually because of a
sexual relationship with their you know
with their wife but not necessarily they
were not allowed to touch the safer
Torah or to to read from the safer Torah
to learn from a safer to learn Torah at
all or even to Daven
so the Gmorrah says feel dahu isn't it
in the Torah the Torah itself talks this
isn't a tak of Ezra this is an actual
mitzvah in the Torah that if a man has a
seminal mission he can't do certain
things
he has to go to the mikvah says the
gorum
on a Torah level the only thing that a
man is restricted from doing if he has a
simission is eating kchim eating trauma
if he's a cohen eating kchim if they're
going to the ba mikdash so and now Ezra
comes
to a new thing. These men are not
allowed to learn Torah because they are
ballet Korean. Now, why why would he
attack in that? So, if you flip over the
page to page five, so there are two
reasons. This is already in the Mishnas
in brahas. So, you know, one of the
first things if your little boy starts
to learn Mishnice and they start in
Brahas, one of the first thing he comes
ahead up with in Brahas is this issue of
Valkeri and what he can and can't do,
which is sometimes a bit awkward if your
kid's quite small, but you have to
navigate that. Um Ezra was concerned
about a couple of things. He was
concerned that the men would be
overindulgent sexually and a that would
distract them from holier things that
they were doing during the day. Not
holier, let's not say holier, but other
things. And also they will be
unreasonably demanding on their wives.
And it could be because of the general
status spiritually of the people when
they came back from Bavl. They were in a
pretty bad state. And Ezra said, "Look,
these guys, they need they need, you
know, kicking into shape." So he said to
them, "If you're going to have a sexual
relationship with your wife, then you're
not going to be able to dav and you're
not going to be able to learn until
you've been to the mikvah." And what he
was hoping is they would just tone down
on the uh the inter the intercourse with
their wives, if you like. So they
wouldn't be It didn't work that way.
Half the men basically said, "You know
what? So I won't d and I won't learn.
It'll be fine because they couldn't be
bothered to go to the mikvah. So it
backfired completely. You had a group of
men who just stopped dabbling. And the
other group said, you know something, it
is a bit of a pain. So I won't be with
my wife. We'll just you know they
abandoned their wives and they just dav
and learned these rather than go to the
t of the mikvah. So the whole thing
basically backfired in both directions.
Okay, which says a lot about human
nature and therefore they canled it. It
was at a certain stage canceled
according to well many mforim. We'll
talk about that in a minute. Um but uh
it was very clear that this was only for
bala baler not bala bala read from the
Torah balin. Okay. Number 21. Look in
the topha says but what about other
people who are tame? What about other
people who are tame? Is there a problem
with tumor? And the Mishna and the topha
here wants to go out of its way to
emphasize this is not a problem of
tumor. It's a problem which was an
external problem that we wanted the guys
to be a little bit more detached from
their wives in order to learn etc etc.
Look at what it says in number 21.
Hzavin a man who is a zav. A zav is a
more serious tumor than balaria. Zavis
has an actual disease. He has to keep
Shivvene etc. Hazavos and women who have
a zava as opposed to a nida. A zava is a
woman who experiences um uterine
bleeding not at the right time of
menstrual cycle. Theidos in a woman who
is having a regular menstrual cycle in a
woman who's just had a baby who is tame
seven days for a boy 14 days for a girl
etc.
Christ for Torah. They're allowed to
read the Torah
and they're allowed to learn oral law.
There's no restrictions on them
whatsoever because they're tummy.
But the men who are for the reasons we
just discussed, it's a completely ring
fenced separate thing. But if a woman is
a nida or a zava or your ledes or or a
man is no restrictions whatsoever. By
the way in the back door this is a very
interesting very early source that
there's no restriction on women learning
to shab
mean the gummor the gummor is not the ta
is not talking about that issue here but
it says quite sort of nonatulantly if a
woman is a zid of course she can learn
mishna and learn garam oh you mean she
can learn gammorra oh interesting so
that this is an interesting source on
that but why is a regular person who is
tame not restricted from learning to
because number 22 gives a source in the
garra
Because Torah is not susceptible to
my words are like fire and fire is not
by the way also disagrees with the whole
takana on the baleri as well. That's a
separate issue. But the is certainly
like rebu when it comes to other tame
and therefore the ram bambas number 23
khim anyone who's tilid
whether a woman who has nid au ki even a
non-Jew and all non-Jews according to at
least this den have a den of tav
at least mutar is safer tora they're all
allowed not only to learn to but to
grasp the safer Torah to hold the safer
Torah the spine to read from the safer
Torah shaim dra Torah tum there is no
prohibition because of tum for any of
these people to hold the safer Torah and
the passing is that way number 24
anyone who's
whether the woman even if the woman is
actually menstruating
she can hold the safer to she can read
from the safer so that really could be
the end of the sh almost everyone agrees
that this is the case that a woman even
if a woman is a need is allowed to hold
a safer Torah to grasp because
but we're going to go on to see right
now that there are other minhagim not
like this just in parenthesis what is
the now for so most of the rishonim or
many of the rishonim at least say the
whole thing was canled and they don't
have to go to the mikba before they
learn and they dav some rishonim hold it
was only cancelled for learning but not
for davining and they still have to go
for davining um and other rishonim hold
well they don't have to go but it's a
good idea idea to go and actually there
are many that go every morning to the
mikvah including on shabas um for partly
for kadusha and trying to kind of get
themselves ready for but partly
according to those ronim that hold that
a baleri is still not allowed to davan
until he's been to the mikvah that are
ronim like that and therefore those
people who go to the mikvah are are
being they're being concerned for that
opinion um and but now it's mostly that
do that but but not only okay at the
basic. Yes sir.
>> Oh, good. So that is completely not
related to this. That is alpaba. The a
cemetery is a place which is very ti.
It's almost two opposite things. You go
to the mikva before going to to
something which is kadesh before the
basa mikdash. The basik the basak forest
is the most opposite thing to kadushi
you could possibly imagine. It's a
mockum tum. So you have to ask the local
cabalists here who know more than me.
But my understanding is that if you go
to a place with such strong tumor and
you yourself are vulnerable because you
are also tame you have that lack of
protective force with you. You will be
more susceptible to be uh attacked by
the sidra or the whatever it is. And the
same reason for women who are near not
going to a cemetery. I think that the
the tuma makes you more vulnerable to
the dark forces that might be there in
the site. It's not become it's not to
become tahor cuz it's a if you do that
it's obviously a wasted exercise. Now
despite the fact that this is the hala
there is a very ancient men and it's not
just people sometimes paint this as a
very fringe opinion. This is a very
ancient meaning that women who are
knitted do not have interactions with
Torah. I'm not saying that's the but
you'll see the strength of these
minhagim. Look in 25 just we'll start
with this which is astounding. This is
from the gaonim. They go only in the
period just after the Gomorrah and this
is from a safer called
which is a not a very well-known safer.
It's around 11th century brings together
a lot of the says as follows but
when she's actually bleeding and
menstruating she can't go into the shen
until she's finished and she's keeping
her seven clean days and she's not
actively menstruating.
And he brings the Pak of the woman who
just had a baby
kesh.
Now that's not talking about a shul.
That's talking about kotchim. That's
talking about a woman who just had a
baby has to wait a certain amount of
time 7 days plus 33 14 days plus 66
before she can eat kotchim. But it's
applying it to the bet. She can't go to
the bet.
And he brings in one of the names of one
of the
this was the inad
that they women would not go to sh did
not go to shik
says they didn't even do do things
outside the sh we'll see right now
that's only when she's bleeding
what about when she's keeping her shake
we'll see this is how this is understood
later how do we know
which again is is from the the
but it's applied here to a woman.
Not only is she not allowed or she
shouldn't well it says she's not allowed
to go to the
if she hears
she's not allowed to say
very extreme.
Not only that, you are not allowed to
make a
in front of a woman who is still
in case she kind of thinks that oh I say
a and she says a ven
and this will be a massive a woman who
is said a to you this is this is not
something
>> that hasn't come to the
>> we'll get we'll get that we'll get that
so this is again I I'm not suggesting
for one second that this is or ever was
but this is a this is an opinion which
finds its way through the guide. Go to
page six. I brought you another
alternative text of the mikos that says
well no that was during the time when
she was actively bleeding but when she
was in a shiv aim it was not a problem.
Now you might ask yourself well what's
the difference if you're if you're
worrying about tuma
a person is tame until they go to the
mikvah. A woman is just as tame in her
nether cycle before she during her shiv
and aim in terms of the laws of as she
is when she's acting. So why would you
make a distinction? Before the source we
just saw, we didn't make any
distinction. Number 26 says there is a
distinction. So again, you're going to
have to ask why would there be a
distinction? What is the difference? And
is it we'll see soon a question of
hygiene issues or is it a question of
actual Torah? Having said all of that,
there is a counter um approach during
the gonim. Look at number 27.
They ask this is second from the
are you are is a woman allowed to pray
or to go to the he said
it's fine what's the problem why is it
an issue so to number 26 or 28 brings a
nice source from the shame
they asked the head of the yeshiva the
rashiva mid
not only is we going to not stop her
from paying but we're going to say she
has to dav she has to do all the normal
davining what's the source
when the Jewish people went to the hari
and god himself came to teach them Torah
all the men were there all the women
were there all the babies were there
they didn't say all the women should
come but not you please you can stay at
home and you can you know catch up later
no no everybody was there without any
exception
and
the an interesting source. So you see in
the gaonim two completely diametrically
opposed sources one group of and it says
this was the min of yeshivas women can't
go to shul women can't even dav women
can't say brahas women can't say amen
you can't even say amen in front of a
woman who's anah and the other is like
what are you talking about all the women
were at harina there's no problem let
the women come to sh let the women do
everything I don't know how
controversial this was in bavl at the
time whether you had people getting very
fbrrent about this side or that side but
that's with a guy in it. And now we come
to a safer which is very unusual. And I
must confess when I was preparing this
shar I'd never really even heard about
this safer certainly let alone got into
it and it's called the Bryer Denida.
What is the brighter Denida? So this is
a collection of halas and we'll talk
about where it might come from. Is it
authentic? Is it from the Gammorra etc.
Um and it says some very unusual things
exactly like the things that we've just
been learning about. Now look at number
says this
that to the temple she shall not come
that's talking about
she's not allowed to come to aul she's
not allowed to go to even to a bet
midrash what is this brighter denita so
there is a major debate about it it
first appears in the quoted by various
ronim in the 12th 13th century the
ramban quotes it and I brought you in
the ramban on is uh on the Pik. You can
look at the Pik of Rael when Lavan comes
searching for the trfim and he says,
"Please get up and leave the room. I
need to search the room." And she says
to him, "I'm sorry, Dad. I can't get up.
I'm having my monthly cycle." Whatever.
If that's what it means, maybe it means
she's pregnant. Not getting into that
now. Uh and and he just runs away. And
the Ramban on that Pik says, "Ah, that's
what you see in this Bryce Denida that
that nobody wants to be near women in
this situation. and they run away from
them and you're not even allowed to walk
on the ground that they walked on. He
brings that if if if somebody were to if
the spittle from such a person landed on
a child, you have to take the child to
the mikvah if like very extreme things.
He's quoting from this brighter than the
Rambam monades. We have no idea whether
he knew about this brighter but in the
morim
he quotes customs of ancient pagans and
the way they treated in his view
mistreated women who were having their
cycle and he quotes almost exactly the
same things that we Dafka don't do that
the pagans do are as listed in this
Bryce that we should also do which is
very interesting so you had these two
very strong counter kind of approaches
where there's one approach which is
trying to introduce that of the Jewish
community and there's another approach
the Rambam which is saying this is
actually the opposite of what we do and
the Rambam makes a big point of the way
that Hilkas Nida is is calibrated so
that on the one hand the husband and the
wife wouldn't be actually physically
together but that she wouldn't feel any
in any way excluded that she'd be there
in the home in the bedroom in the round
with the kids and they'd be because
excluding women in this is is a pagan
you make them live in a hut down at the
bottom of the village you
>> that's correct the Ethiopians we talked
about that when we do the Ethiopians.
But it's funny because one side is
painting this as a pagan practice and
one side is quoting this thing called
the brighter denina. Now the brighter
denina also does other strange things.
Um for example it brings a very
countercultural version of the famous
bat call. You know the bat call that B
and B Sham are arguing for years and
this one says the is like us and this
one says like us.
according to this brighter than the back
comes out.
Whoa. Like where did that come from?
According to professor Sha Lieberman,
this was an anti-nomian
[Music]
anti-hakic sects that was trying to kind
of infiltrate into Judaism. There are
some that thinks it was a carite forgery
like a piece of karite propaganda. It's
very very interesting as to where this
brighter denita comes from. In case you
are interested in learning more about
it, uh I brought you at the bottom of
page six everything I could find in the
amount of time that I had to find it
about four or five different websites.
uh a couple of articles uh and
apparently the the way that the person
who has the most to say about this wrote
in 2014 but he wrote in French so if
your French is not up to it then you
might not be able to get very far on
that but uh that that's the brighter
India and he's quoted and what's more
interesting for us is it became
mainstream because it was adopted by a
safer called the shared dura which is a
mainstream Ashkanazi halaka safer in the
13th century and then it gets quoted by
Senna ura
and Senna Orena in the 16th century in
Yiddish takes on whole sections from
this brighter diner and then mainstreams
that into the culture of women in
Yiddish speaking countries which is very
very interesting. So if you want to know
where where is this coming from when
people are worried about this need
question when it's not even the clearly
not the says
what do we why where are we getting this
from the answer is we're getting it from
here which has been you know pushed into
if you like the the the mainstream of
certainly
or not pac but at least min go to page
seven I'm going to summarize a little
bit I'm not going to read every one of
these but uh rashi interestingly the
school of rashi quotes these ideas but
says it's ara it's a humra it says it's
a goodra that women will take on these
extra things but it's ara it's
definitely not the the ravy within 12th
century Germany quotes this price of den
as he approves of it he says that that's
this is the this is the min the women
didn't go to shul etc he said they did
davin though they let them dav but they
didn't let them go to shul okay
interesting the rua also says as a
student of the rava also brings the
custom that women who were nidat didn't
go to shul and by the way the schuls
didn't have a nezshin in those days so
you know where they're going to go even
if they go to shul but they didn't come
to shul the introduces something very
new and we need to see this in 33
what about women coming to when they're
he says he's in the 15th century in
Austria
I have allowed this when
and similar days. We'll see what he
means by similar days.
There are many people the culka three
times a year Jews even then people come
on but certainly women who didn't come
during the year they want to come on
they want to hear the want to hear the
laning
they want to come to
and he says and I want to rely on a
principle that there is an idea that we
don't want to upset the women we want to
in we want to give ru
We'll see where this is coming from
because they'll be really sad
and they will be really upset and
depressed because everyone's going to
surely
to be in the community forash
and they have to stand like pariah
outside
not the rest of the year by the way. He
says the rest of the year they can stay
at home but everyone can come.
We'll see this in a minute. They will
allow the women to do in the in the
mikdash.
Even though that looks as though you're
you're mistreating the sacrifices again.
I'm not sure exactly who the is. He
quotes from elsewhere.
Even though I allow it, I am aware that
there is a tradition in Ashkanaz that
this is completely prohibited and these
women must not be inul
another version smaller version of the
he says
it's not prohibited but the women don't
do it and good for them
it's really only it's only etc and he
quotes from the so it's very interesting
that the trumpet which was very
influential on Ashkanazi Minhag and the
Ramar he says yam I allow it but not the
rest of the year. It is worth saying in
parenthesis and this is something to be
aware of that the the the relevance of
hilot nida for women in the medieval
period was much much less than it is
today. Women had far far fewer menstrual
cycles say 600 or 700 years ago than
they do today. The average woman today
has around 450 menstrual cycles in her
life, which if they were Jewish and
observant would mean they were basically
15 years of their life in NIDA. Okay,
that's a long time. Okay, back in the
day um in the in the medieval period,
number one, people people reached
puberty later, not so much later, but a
little bit later. They certainly reached
menopause way earlier in their 30s. Many
women were really malnourished, worked
very hard um and had low body fat and
did not have their menstrual cycle at
all and many other reason and many of
them died in childbirth. There were just
many many reasons why people just didn't
and when they were married they were
pregnant feeding pregnant feeding
pregnant feeding pregnant feeding almost
the whole of their life. So how how many
cycles are they even going to have
between all of those factors? So
actually when you say this to people
they're thinking like that's strange.
Why has that changed? But it's changed
radically. So it wasn't as relevant as
you might feel it is today. But there
are these two uh ideas that are going
side by side. The Gmorra number 34
brings this source of of the just look
at it briefly. Amariosi
Ablo
father interesting father was a title
they gave also to Rabonim. I mean now
it's just priests really called father
Patrick. Okay.
So father said
there was a family in the mikdashim
and they took it to the nashim for the
women to do. There was a tob. You put
your hands on the Corbin and you
transferred if you like yourself into
the Corbin is an obligation for women
for men. But here they took it to the
women.
Not because we hold that women are
obligated in
it was a family. The women were
grumbling and complaining. Hey, what's
going on? We this is our corban. Why are
the men doing we're not doing? So the
answer says you know something why have
a fight about something that doesn't
need to be a fight take it to the nash
let the women do and and shalom is very
interesting how far do we take that
meaning we don't want to make trouble
when you don't need to make trouble why
make a whole sector of the community
unhappy when you can give them it's not
not even technically on the other hand
maybe this is different they were really
the family of the corban it's not random
women it's not just a community
>> this could be a really strong justific
ification for women doing the tour.
>> It's certainly a major factor and we're
going to talk about it that there is an
idea that when something is not
prohibited, why cause so much upset by
prohibiting something which is not
prohibited. On the other hand, there has
to be a limit. We're not going to just
let everyone do everything because you
know we don't want to cause trouble. So
there is the all of there are all of
these different ideas going through.
Let's just skip to the chase maybe page
eight. I brought the ager the safer ager
says you know by the 15th century in
Germany. He says, "You know something,
the women all do go to shaw, but they
don't look at the writing of the safer
Torah when they do hagba if they need
it, which is very interesting. We'll see
that finds its way into the shar as
well." Look at number 36, the bet in
Spain. Bet says, "I don't know what's
going on with all this Ashkanazi stuff
with the Nidus and all that." And he
says,
"The women where I come from in Spain,"
he says,
"I never heard of women not coming to
Shaw." Any women, all our women came to
Shaw in Spain. He says, "Because
not only that, he saw the people making
a big mistake.
They were applying the laws of from the
Bikdash to women not coming to." He
said, "I heard about this." And he said,
"And it's a and it's a it's a complete
mistake, but
you have to stop it. There are these
wrong incorrect minhagim which are
taking people into this place where
they're comparing the shaw to the temple
and it's not the same thing at all."
Bottom line, bottom line, um the rules
in number 37 like I said that all tame
are able to handle a cifree Torah.
There's no prohibition on going to sh
and daving etc etc. Let's just pick it
up with the ra because the rema is the
Ashkanazi sack. If you look here in the
third line in number 237 towards the end
there is a view
that a woman when she's having her
actual menstrual cycle and bleeding she
shouldn't come to the bedet
or even dav
or even mention
or even touch a safer here he means a
safer Torah does he mean others for him
and the other view is that that is
completely permitted and that is the
main view. So it's interesting that the
other very restrictive view still made
it into
as a there are those people who do that
in the Ashkenazi community. Yes.
>> According to that day what about
>> okay good. So they didn't do any of it
according to this of the view and that
was stamped later on they came no like
like uh you know no that's it they they
don't bench they don't say nothing again
this was very frowned upon because
they're ignoring mitzvah benching
kiddish some of them mitzvah I agree
it's astounding but he brings that as a
view and he says we don't pass in that
way
is that women come to
and sorry the other way
Even though it's not the
Poland is the women are restricting
themselves
but when they are in their
lenient again why we'll see in a minute
and even in a place where you want to be
governed
and here's an important linear
on these big uh days when everybody
comes they can come
like all other women
that's going to be a very important word
what does that mean
>> great distress for them not to come
and they're standing outside when other
women are coming in so we're going to
have to ask what is the line of
that's what he says
Now, who decides who's in great
distress? Do the women say, "We feel
very distressed that we can't do dancing
with the safetra." And the men say,
"Well, you shouldn't feel that way." Uh
or or do do you turn do you turn around
to someone who says that they're
distressed and say, "Well, you shouldn't
be distressed." But we are distressed.
Meaning that line will change. Yes.
Briefly, because we got to finish. If
there are so many women that need tight
>> Yes.
>> If these women didn't come to school in
a small community with shoes to
>> Yes.
>> then you knew the woman was in need.
>> Yes. Yes. Yes. Correct. But I think that
we are way more sensitive to that issue
today than they used to be. Women used
to wear different clothes when they were
needed. So that everybody knew they were
needer. And as I said that people were
needed far less than they are today.
Let's just finish off because it's time
to to to finish. I want to finish with
just one source finally uh which is the
the uh the Raviak of Emd number 39. So
we've seen these different back and
forth and number 39 he says I don't
understand why there will be a
difference between when they're actually
menstruating and when they're in the
shikim in terms of it's exactly the same
until they go to the mikvah and he says
maybe the whole issue was
maybe it's when they're actively
bleeding
It's a hygiene issue. He says it was
very difficult. There were very few
personal hygiene products available in
those days for women. It was very hard
for them during that when they were
actively bleeding to actually be
anywhere in public which was not
embarrassing for them and and unhygienic
for them. And they thought that's maybe
that's the whole issue here. Maybe
that's the difference between this time
and that time the shivim. And if that's
the case, that's going to open up a
whole door for a lot of modern day
postkim to say, well, we live in a
different world today. Nobody has an
issue today. There are feminine hygiene
products available and everybody's fine.
Uh, and therefore, why should there be
any issue at all? We'll we'll raise that
next week and we'll see. But this is the
framework uh for where everybody's
coming from. Uh, and we'll have a lot to
pick up on next week. Please God.