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The Israel
Koschitzky Virtual Beit Midrash
Gemara Sukka Yeshivat Har
Etzion
SHIUR #08:
ASSORTED ISSUES
By Rav Shmuel
Shimoni
A WOMAN'S OBLIGATION IN SUKKA
The Gemara learns that a woman is exempt from sukka by way of a
special derivation: "'The home born' (ha-ezrach) to the exclusion of
women," and then suggests that the exemption might be a law that was given to
Moshe at Sinai (halakha le-Moshe mi-Sinai), and the verse is merely an
allusion to the law but not its actual source (asmakhta). Regarding both possibilities, however,
the Gemara asks: "Why is a verse necessary; why is a traditional law necessary?
Surely, sukka is a time-bound positive precept, and women are exempt from
all time-bound positive precepts!" Abaye and Rava offer two different answers to
this question, each of which requires discussion. In any event, the question arises: Even
after we understand why a special verse or traditional law was needed to exempt
women, is the exemption based on the general rule regarding time-bound positive
precepts, or on a special rule unique to the mitzva of sukka?
The Meiri (ad loc.) assumed as obvious the first approach: "Women,
slaves, and minors are exempt from sukka. This means: Women [are exempt] because
sukka is a time-bound positive mitzva. And even though they are obligated
in matza, they are exempt from sukka. And slaves [are exempt] because they are
equated to women." The Ritva, however, implies otherwise. The Gemara on p. 21b states as a
novelty: "We learn [from this] that slaves are exempt from sukka" (see
Tosafot, ad loc.). The Ritva
comments there as follows:
You
might ask: What does this come to teach you; this is obvious, for sukka
is a time-bound positive mitzva, and women and slaves are exempt from all
time-bound positive mitzvot! This is not difficult, for it is stated at
the end of this chapter that we need a halakha given to Moshe at Sinai to
exempt [women], for we might have thought: "You shall dwell similar to
[normal] residence a man and his wife.
Or else that we learn "the fifteenth" from the festival of Pesach;
just as there women are obligated, so too here women are obligated. According to this, we need to learn from
the words of Rabban Gamliel that slaves are exempt from sukka, either
based on a verse or based on a halakha given to Moshe at Sinai.
In other words, even after the derivation from the verse or from the
halakha known by tradition, the general rule governing time-bound positive
precepts does not apply to sukka, and therefore a source is also needed
to exempt slaves from sukka.
If, indeed, the exemption of women from sukka is not based on
the ordinary rules regarding obligation in mitzvot, but rather the Torah
granted them an explicit exemption, it is possible that this is the basis for
the custom in certain communities that women recite a blessing over other
time-bound positive mitzvot, but not over sukka. They recite a blessing over the
other mitzvot, based on the view that while they are exempt, they are
nevertheless connected to the mitzva, and their actions have value at the level
of "one who is not commanded but does."
But they do not recite a blessing over the mitzva of sukka,
because the Torah explicitly removed them from the mitzva (we will discuss below
the special reason for exempting women from the mitzva of
sukka).
ABAYE'S
RATIONALE
Abaye
said: In fact, sukka is a halakha [given to Moshe at Sinai.] And it was
necessary, for I might have thought: "You shall dwell" similar to [normal]
residence; just as residence a man and his wife, so too sukka, a man
and his wife. Therefore it teaches
us [that this is not true].
According to Abaye, the erroneous initial assumption is two-tiered:
1)
If a man dwells in a sukka without his wife, his dwelling does not
fall into the category of "normal residence."
2)
This being the case, the obligation of dwelling in a sukka can be
extended to a woman, despite the fact that according to the ordinary rules, she
should be exempt from a sukka.
And this is in order to allow for a man's dwelling in a sukka to
meet the required threshold. It is
not that the woman is obligated to help her husband fulfill his mitzva (as, for
example, the Ran in Kiddushin says that while a woman is exempt from the
mitzva of procreation, there is a mitzva for her to assist her husband in
fulfilling his obligation). Rather,
in order to allow her husband to fulfill his obligation in the proper manner,
the Torah veered from its ordinary rules and imposed the mitzva even on the
woman. There is a certain
difficulty in this argument, and thus it is possible that it should be
formulated in a slightly different manner: The nature of the mitzva of
sukka is "like normal residence," and thus the obligation falls on the
house as a whole, and not just on the men.
This second level, with all its
novelty, is certainly rejected in the end.
But what about the first level? Does the presence of a person's wife
constitute a significant aspect of "normal residence"? To answer this question,
we must examine additional sources.
The Gemara in
Arakhin states (according to the printed version):
All
are obligated in sukka: priests, Levites, and Israelites. This is obvious; if they are not
obligated, who is obligated? It was necessary to mention priests, for I might
have said: Since it is written: "You shall dwell in booths," and the master
said: "You shall dwell seven days" like [normal] residence; just as [normal]
residence, a man and his wife, so too a sukka, a man and his wife. And since priests are fit for [the
Divine] service, they should not be obligated. Therefore it teaches us: While they are
exempt at the time of service, at other times they are obligated, just as is the
case of wayfarers. For the master
said: Wayfarers who travel by day are exempt from sukka during the day,
but obligated at night.
(Arakhin 3b)
And Rashi explains:
"They
are fit for service" and they cannot live together with their wives in a
sukka, for they must not have relations with their wives, because the
[sacrificial] service of the festival is cast upon them. Thus, I might have said that they are
exempt.
"Therefore it teaches us"
even though "like normal residence" is not possible for them, whenever it is
possible for them they are obligated.
Thus, at the time of service, they are exempt; at other times they are
obligated.
The Gemara's conclusion seems to be that at the time of service, when the
priests must protect themselves from the ritual impurity contracted through
relations, they are exempt from sukka, because their dwelling in the
sukka would not fall into the category of "normal residence." [It is
interesting to note that this exemption is valid even though they are unable to
engage in relations even in their houses, and thus the sukka matches the
present situation of the house.
This implies that the law of "normal residence" necessitates a certain
objective level of dwelling in a sukka, something that connects to
questions that we dwelt with in our shiur on the law of
mitzta'er]. Thus, it may be
concluded that the possibility of marital relations in the sukka is part
of the law of "normal residence."
This has a
ramification in the direction of stringency, namely, that whenever possible, a
man should bring his wife into the sukka with him. Thus, for example, writes the Maharil
(Hilkhot Sukkot, no. 4):
The
essence of the mitzva is for a man to sleep in the sukka with his
wife. He also said that in his
younger years he had conducted himself in this manner.
See also Torah Temima (Vayikra 23:42), who writes that
while single women are exempt from sukka, married women are obligated to
assist their husbands in fulfilling the mitzva of sukka and thus to
remain with them therein. In this
context, there is room to speak also of a certain allowance. Namely, that even if in general we
accept the view of those who say that women should be prevented from fulfilling
mitzvot from which they are exempt (Eruvin 96b), in the case of
sukka, there is no room for this.
Thus writes the Ra'avan:
You
might raise an objection from Rabbi Yehuda to Rabbi Yehuda, that here he says
that we object to women [fulfilling mitzvot], and in tractate
Sukka (2b) Rabbi Yehuda says that it happened that Queen Helene used to
dwell in a sukka that was taller than twenty cubits, and the Elders used
to go in and out without objecting.
Answer
"You shall dwell" similar to normal residence, and residence
means a man and his wife; and just as a woman dwells [in a sukka] because
of her husband, so Helene dwelt [in a sukka] because of her sons.
(Ra'avan, no. 84)
Alongside these points, however, the most far-reaching ramification
follows from the words of the Gemara itself, that a person who is unable to do
so, i.e., to bring his wife into the sukka, is exempt from the mitzva of
sukka. Based on this, the
Rema suggested that it is possible to justify the widespread custom not to sleep
in a sukka:
And
it seems to me that it is has become customary to be lenient, because the mitzva
of sukka is to sleep therein as a person sleeps in his house, a man with
his wife. As Chazal have
expounded: You shall dwell like [normal] residence. And as it is stated in the Maharil that
he would sleep with his wife in the sukka. But in our time, when not everyone has
his own sukka, but rather many people eat and drink in the same
sukka, it is impossible for them to sleep together with their wives at
the same time. And if they leave
their wives in their houses, and the men sleep in the sukka, it will
sometimes cause distress, and it is not called "normal residence." And they
already said: "The women of my people you cast from their pleasant houses"
(Mikha 2:9) this refers to one who sleeps in the same room where a man
and his wife are sleeping, even if the woman is a menstruating woman. And he will sometimes even come to
nullify thereby the mitzva of ona (required conjugal
relations). Or he will nullify that
which is stated: "And you shall rejoice, you and your household," for sometimes
his wife will be distressed by this.
And because of this the custom developed to be lenient about the
matter. However, one who fears the
word of God should strive to find a place where he can sleep without distress
and he should sleep there and serve God with joy. And this is the custom of the meticulous
[in mitzvot]. And so is it
explicitly stated at the beginning of the first chapter of Arakhin that
when a person cannot be together with his wife, it is not called "normal
residence," and he is exempt from sukka. And so too is it implied in chapter
Ha-Yashen regarding a bridegroom who is exempt from sukka (25b),
and regarding women who are exempt from sukka (28b). And while this may be rejected,
nevertheless, it is from this that the custom developed, and it is a strong
argument. (Darkhei Moshe
639, no. 3).
And in his glosses to the Shulchan Arukh, the Rema writes:
As
for the customary practice to be lenient today about sleeping - that only those
who are meticulous about the mitzvot sleep in the sukka some say
that this is because of the cold, that sleeping [in a sukka] in cold
regions involves distress (Mordekhai, chap. Ha-Yashen). But it seems to me that this is because
the mitzva of sukka involves a man and his "house," a man and his wife in
the manner in which he lives all year round. Thus, in a place where a person cannot
sleep together with his wife, because he does not have his own sukka, he
is exempt. It is, however, good to
be there together with his wife as he lives all year round, if it is possible
for him to have his own sukka.
(Shulchan Arukh, Orach Chayyim 639:2).
The Rema in the Darkhei Moshe mentions several factors, i.e.,
mitzta'er and the nullification of a mitzva (see Taz, Magen
Avraham and Mishna Berura [ad loc.] who emphasize these
factors). But the focus of his
argument seems to rest on the rule raised by Abaye in our passage: "Just as
residence a man and his wife, so too a sukka a man and his wife,"
based on the assumption that this was not rejected. The Rema implies that if indeed a person
finds it impossible to live with his wife in the sukka, there is no
reason to remain in the sukka, but he is obligated to strive to be able
to be with his wife in the sukka.
From the words of the Maharil, it sounds as if this is merely a more
complete fulfillment of the mitzva, which he had observed during his
younger years, but there is value to dwelling in a sukka even without
this added fulfillment.
It should be noted that an alternative reading is brought in the margin
of the Gemara in Arakhin, according to which the Gemara reads as
follows:
All
are obligated in sukka: priests, Levites, and Israelites. This is obvious; if they are not
obligated, who is obligated? It was necessary to mention priests, for I might
have said: Since it is written: "You shall dwell in booths," and the master
said: "You shall dwell seven days" like [normal] residence; just as [normal]
residence, both during the day and at night, so too a sukka, both during
the day and at night. And since
priests are fit for [the Divine] service, they should not be obligated. Therefore it teaches us: While they are
exempt at the time of service, at other times they are obligated, just as is the
case of wayfarers. For the master
said: Wayfarers who travel by day are exempt from sukka during the day,
but obligated at night.
According to this reading, of course, the Gemara does not touch upon our
problem at all, for it does not deal with the issue of a man dwelling together
with his wife in the sukka.
See Responsa Maharam Chalawa (no. 16), who understood that a person's
dwelling together with his wife is not at all a condition for "normal
residence":
Dwelling [in the
sukka] without one's wife is called dwelling
And even though we find in
chapter Ha-Yashen: "You might have thought: 'You shall dwell' similar
to [normal] residence; just as residence, a man and his wife, etc." There it
means as follows: You might have thought that women are obligated in
sukka because it says "You shall dwell," which implies similar to normal
residence, and a woman is also included in normal residence. Therefore, when the verse states: "You
shall dwell," this includes women.
And from there we learn that a man's dwelling without his wife is called
dwelling. For if you don't say
this, rather than Abaye saying that were it not for the halakha [given to Moshe
at Sinai], I might have said that women are obligated because it is stated "You
shall dwell," similar to [normal] residence, on the contrary - Abaye should have
said that were it not for the halakha [given to Moshe at Sinai] that
exempts women from sukka, I might have said that married men are
obligated in sukka only together with their wives, since it is says "You
shall dwell," similar to [normal] residence, and the residence of a man without
his wife is not called residence.
Rather, it certainly implies that it is obvious that a man's residence
without his wife is called residence.
Nevertheless, since it says "You shall dwell," I might have said that it
must be similar to [normal] residence; just as [normal] residence, a man and his
wife, for she too is included in residence, so too dwelling in a sukka, a
man and his wife, so that she should be obligated in sukka. But in any event it is called residence
and dwelling even with the man himself, and even if his wife is not with
him.
RAVA'S
RATIONALE
Rava
said: It was necessary, for I might have thought that we learn "fifteenth"
"fifteenth" from the festival of Pesach; just as there, women are
obligated, so too here women are obligated. Therefore it teaches us [that this is
not true].
Why does Rava think that a special source is necessary to exempt women
from sukka, but there is no need for a special source to teach that women
are exempt from lulav, so that we should not learn the same gezera
shava of "fifteenth" "fifteenth" from the festival of Pesach? To
clarify this matter, let us open with a distinction proposed by our revered
teacher, HaRav Aharon Lichtenstein, shelita, between the mitzva of
sukka and the mitzva of lulav:
It
seems obvious that a distinction may be drawn between eating matza and
dwelling in a sukka, on the one hand, and lulav and maror,
on the other. For the taking of a
lulav, and so too the eating of maror
are merely mitzvot
that must be observed on their [respective] festival, but they do not shape and
define that festival. Go out and
see, that in the scriptural verses and in the formulation that the Sages gave to
the blessings, these festivals are called the festival of matzot and the
festival of sukkot, on account of the eating and the dwelling, whereas
the lulav and the maror do not determine the name of the
festival. It is also possible that
this distinction is reflected in the fact that these two mitzvot apply
only on the first day. (Alon
Shevut, no. 150).
I heard a similar distinction voiced by my teacher, Rav Tabory. He added that the way to test whether a
particular mitzva constitutes an obligation that applies because of the day and
over the course of the day, or whether it is an essential factor that shape the
character of the festival is the time of the obligation. A mitzva that applies because of
the day applies only during the daylight hours, i.e., by day and not at night; a
mitzva that shapes the character of the festival begins together with the
festival, i.e., at night. Thus, the
obligation of sukka begins at night, as opposed to the obligation of
lulav which is only during the day.
Rav Tabory added that women are obligated in those mitzvot which
determine the very essence of the festival; they are only exempt from those
mitzvot which apply because of the day. This, he argues, is the foundation of a
woman's obligation in the mitzva of matza, which is derived by analogy
from the prohibition to eat chametz: "Women are obligated to eat matza
by Torah law, as it is stated: 'You shall eat no leavened bread with it;
seven days shall you eat unleavened bread with it' (Devarim 16:3)
whoever is governed by the prohibition to eat leavened bread is governed by the
obligation to eat matza. And
women, since they are governed by the prohibition to eat leavened bread, are
governed by the obligation to eat unleavened bread" (Pesachim 91b). Their inclusion in the prohibition of
chametz indicates that they are included in the essence of the festival
of Pesach, and the flip side of the prohibition to eat chametz is
the obligation to eat matza, since it too fashions the character of the
festival of Pesach. This is
also the rationale behind learning a gezera shava from Pesach to
Sukkot to obligate women in sukka, for those mitzvot that
determine the nature of the festival are binding even upon women, and this is
true regarding matza and sukka, but not lulav.
If this is true, however, why according to the bottom line are women
exempt from a mitzva that fashions the nature of the festival like the mitzva
of sukka? Rav Shelomo Fisher, shelita, in his derashot,
suggests that this may be understood based on the words of the Rashbam
(Vayikra 23:43) regarding the mitzva of sukka:
"That
your generations may know, etc." (Vayikra 23:43) Its plain meaning is
like those who say in tractate Sukka: an actual sukka. And this is what it means: You shall
make for yourself a festival of booths when you gather from your threshing floor
and your wine-press, when you gather the corn of the field and your houses are
filled with every good, grain, wine and oil, that you shall remember that I made
the children of Israel dwell in booths in the wilderness for forty years without
settlement and without inheritance.
And from this you will offer thanksgiving to Him who gave you an
inheritance and your houses filled with every good, and you will not say in your
hearts, "My power and the might of my hand have gotten me this wealth"
And
therefore we go out of our houses that are filled with every good at the time of
the [harvest] gathering and we dwell in sukkot as a reminder that they
did not have an inheritance in the wilderness, nor houses to dwell in. And for this reason God established the
festival of Sukkot at the time of gathering from the threshing floor and
the wine-press, so that their hearts not swell on account of their houses that
are filled with every good, lest they say, "Our hands have gotten us this
wealth."
The Rashbam explains that the mitzva of sukka does not
involve an expression of thanksgiving for the sukkot provided by God in
the wilderness, but rather it emphasizes the difference between our situation
during the time of those sukkot and our situation following our
inheritance of the land of Israel, with a reminder that prevents thoughts of "my
power and the might of my hand." Based on this explanation, Rav Fisher suggests
that women, who are not included in the inheritance of the land, are also not
included in the mitzva of sukka.
A MINOR'S OBLIGATION IN
SUKKA
Women, slaves and minors
are exempt from sukka. A
minor who does not need his mother is obligated in sukka. It once happed that the
daughter-in-law of Shammai the Elder gave birth and he made an opening in the
ceiling and spread sekhakh over the bed for the child
"The
home born" to the exclusion of women; "all" to include minors
- But surely
we have learned: "Women, slaves and minors are exempt from sukka. This is not difficult: Here regarding
a minor who has reached the [age of] training [in mitzvot]; here
regarding a minor who has not reached the [age of] training [in
mitzvot]. A minor who has
reached the [age of] training [in mitzvot] is [obligated] by rabbinic
law! It is by rabbinic law, and the verse is merely an allusion.
It
once happened that the daughter-in-law of Shammai the Elder gave birth, etc." A
story to contradict [what was just stated]? [The Mishna] is surely lacking,
and it teaches as follows: "And Shammai is stringent. And it once also happened that the
daughter-in-law of Shammai the Elder gave birth and he made an opening in the
ceiling and spread sekhakh over the bed for the child.
"And Shammai is stringent." The Ritva notes (and so too it is clear from
the Gemara in Yevamot 15a) that we are dealing with a basic halakhic
position and not merely with an added stringency: "It does not say that Shammai
practiced stringency for himself, for in such a case where the minor is not
obligated by Torah law, nor is the father obligated by rabbinic law, for the
minor has not yet reached the [age of] training [in mitzvot], there is no
reason to practice stringency to the extent of removing the ceiling, and this
falls into the category of one who is not commanded about a matter and does it."
If this is true, however, Shammai's position is astonishing what value is
there in training a newborn infant in mitzvot? The Maharshal in
Yevamot appears to have been bothered by this problem, and therefore
explained the matter in a slightly different manner:
"For
the child" this means, because she also had a child who was about five years
old, and could not separate from his mother.
It seems, however, that many understood the Mishna according to its plain
sense, that Shammai spread sekhakh for the sake of the newborn infant,
and thus the matter requires explanation, as stated by the Penei Yehoshua
on our passage: "It seems that there is no reason for this stringency, for
what training applies to a newborn infant who has no understanding whatsoever to
be obligated in a positive precept."
The commentators have proposed two different approaches to understand the
position of Shammai and his disagreement with the Sages. According to one explanation that was
suggested in different formulations by the Ritva and the Penei Yehoshua,
we are dealing with a localized law regarding the mitzva of
sukka. The Penei Yehoshua
first suggests that we are dealing with sort of a scriptural decree: "Since
regarding sukka, the Rabbis supported [their decree] with the derivation
from the word 'all,' therefore it is possible to be more stringent about
sukka." This, of course, does not explain why the Sages saw fit to be
more stringent about sukka than about other mitzvot.
The Ritva at first proposes an explanation for the existence of a
localized stringency regarding sukka that applies by Torah law:
He
maintains that [the minor's] father is obligated by Torah law, for "You shall
dwell" similar to [normal] residence, a man and his children. For regarding the man himself, he
expounds the verse in this manner, even though we do not expound the verse in a
similar manner to obligate a woman in sukka.
According to this, Shammai's position is not at all connected to the law
of training in mitzvot, but rather to the father's obligation in the
mitzva of sukka, the full observance of which can only be achieved
together with the members of his family.
In this context, the Ritva mentions Abaye's initial understanding
regarding a woman, but it must be emphasized that we are dealing with different
cases: Abaye suggested a far-reaching initial assumption, that in order for a
man's fulfillment of the mitzva of dwelling in a sukka to be
complete, the Torah expanded the circle of those who are obligated to include
women. [Or according to another
formulation that we proposed: the nature of the mitzva of sukka is
"similar to normal residence," and therefore it is the household as a whole that
is obligated in sukka, and not just men.] Here we are not talking about
expanding the obligation to include minors something that is impossible - but
rather about imposing an obligation on the father to make sure that his children
are with him, so that his own dwelling in the sukka be similar to normal
residence.
As we shall see below, the Ritva himself retracted this novel approach
and chose another, but the Penei Yehoshua remained with this explanation
to the end, though it is not clear whether he understood that this obligation is
by Torah law:
It is
more reasonable that this stringency of Shammai is not based on training [in
mitzvot], but rather he is stringent on account of the severity of the
mitzva, because of "You shall dwell" similar to [normal] residence. Even though there is no proof, there is
a hint to the matter, for it is written: "Your children like olive plants round
about your table" (Tehillim 128:3).
This is not the case with a woman, to which this does not apply at all
even as a stringency, as proven from the fact that he [= Shammai] did not spread
sekhakh for the sake of his daughter-in-law. This is because a woman is not under the
authority of others, and even in his house, a man cannot force his wife and
remove her from a permanent dwelling to a temporary dwelling.
It is clear from his words that in contrast to the position of the
Torah Temima cited above, a woman is not bound by an obligation to assist
her husband in fulfilling the mitzva of sukka by remaining there with
him.
In any event, regarding minors, it is stated here that according to
Shammai their dwelling in the sukka with their father is meaningful not
only because of the mitzva of training children in mitzvot, but
because of "dwelling similar to normal residence." The Sages did not accept
Shammai's conclusion, but we cited earlier the words of the Ra'avan who applied
the principle even not according to Shammai. The Gemara on p. 2b relates that Queen
Helene dwelt in a sukka with her seven sons, the oldest of whom, who no
longer needed their mother, were obligated by rabbinic law, based on the law of
training minors in mitzvot, to dwell in a sukka. This obligation was based on the law of
training minors in mitzvot, but the Ra'avan writes that her allowance to
dwell with them in the sukka was based on the law of "dwelling similar to
normal residence," in order to allow them to fulfill their obligation of
training in mitzvot in the proper manner:
You
might raise an objection from Rabbi Yehuda to Rabbi Yehuda, that here he says
that we object to women, and in tractate Sukka (2b) Rabbi Yehuda says
that it happened that Queen Helene used to dwell in a sukka that was
taller than twenty cubits, and the Elders used to go in and out without
objecting. Answer
"You shall
dwell" similar to normal residence, and residence means a man and his wife,
and just as a woman dwells [in a sukka] because of her husband, so Helene
dwelt [in a sukka] because of her sons. (Ra'avan, no. 84)
Here we have three novel ideas:
1.
The very principle that "normal residence" requires that the family dwell
together in the sukka is true even according to the Sages.
2.
It is true even with regard to a mother and her sons.
3.
It is necessary not only for the parent, but for the child as well.
Let
us now turn to the second approach, which, as stated above, the Ritva
preferred:
Or
else, and this is correct, [Shammai] is stringent about the training of a minor
in [the mitzva of] sukka by rabbinic law to obligate him to eat with him
in the sukka since it is possible and he is fit for that. For this is the law regarding every
mitzva to obligate [the minor] in training whenever it is possible and he is fit
for that. And the Sages maintain
that since [the child's] mother is exempt from sukka, he is not fit for
training in [the mitzva of] sukka as long as he needs his mother, for he
should not be separated from her.
Later in the tractate, the Gemara states that the age for training in
mitzvot varies from one mitzva to the next:
A
minor who knows how to wave - is obligated in lulav; to wrap himself
[he is obligated] in tzitzit; to take care of tefilin his father
is obligated to buy him tefilin; if he knows how to speak his father
teaches him Torah and to read the Shema
; if he can eat roasted meat in
the amount of an olive a korban pesach is slaughtered for him, as it is
stated: "according to every man's eating" (Shemot 12:4). (Sukka 42a-42b)
As a rule, the criterion is the minor's ability to fulfill the mitzva in
its entirety. The Ritva understands
that all agree that this criterion applies also to the mitzva of
sukka, and that Shammai and the Sages disagree about the age that is
relevant regarding the mitzva of sukka.
According to the Sages, as long as the child needs his mother, he
cannot really function in the sukka, whereas according to the Shammai,
the child's very presence in the sukka constitutes a perfect fulfillment
of the mitzva, and therefore the law of training in mitzvot can be
applied to him, "since it is possible and he is fit for that." This explanation
remains difficult, for Rashi explains the basis for the law of training in
mitzvot (Sukka 2b) as follows:
[Regarding] a minor who
does not need his mother, we say below that [his father] is obligated to train
him in the mitzva of sukka by rabbinic law, for they obligated him to
train the minor in a mitzva that is appropriate for him, so that he
trained and accustomed to mitzvot.
Is it not clearly evident that an infant's dwelling in a sukka
will not train him to fulfill the mitzva, that he be "trained and accustomed to
mitzvot"?
It is possible that indeed Shammai disagrees about this point, and has a
different understanding, not of the mitzva of sukka, but of the law of
training a minor in mitzvot.
Chinukh bears not only the modern sense of "education," but also
"inauguration" as it is applied to the consecrated vessels in the Temple
initial use in a particular manner.
Chinukh as applied to children means that the Sages expanded the
world of mitzvot to include also minors, and they demanded that just as
adults fulfill mitzvot, so too minors are included in those
mitzvot wherever it is possible, on the assumption that their actions
have meaning even now. Even if the
newborn infant's dwelling in the sukka will have no influence on his
future, it involves joining him to the Torah-observant world in the present.
***************************************************
Until the next shiur, you are asked to learn on your own the rest
of page until the end of the chapter; we have already dealt with most of the
laws appearing therein. The next
shiur will be an introduction to the third chapter of tractate
Sukka and to the mitzvot of the "four species" taken to fulfill
the mitzva of "taking the lulav." It is recommended to see the following
sources:
1)
Mishna 41a; Yerushalmi, halakha 11 until "hatkana achar
hatkana"; Sefer Ha-Mitzvot of the Rambam, positive precept, no.
169.
2)
36b, "De-tanya be-sukkot
eitz avot le-sekhakh."
3)
41b, "Tanya Rabbi Eliezer
zerizin be-mitzvot."
(Translated by David Strauss)
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