Julian Ungar-Sargon

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Daf Ditty

A wide-ranging commentary on the daily page of Talmud.

Oil on canvas painting by German Baroque painter Johannes Spilberg depicting Esther’s fateful dinner party

Pesachim 100: הגם לכבוש את המלכה

jyungar March 1, 2021

For the source text click/tap here: Pesachim 100

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It happened [once] that Rabban Shimon Ben Gamliel, Rebbi Yehudah and Rebbi Yossi were reclining [and eating] in Akko [on Friday afternoon], and the day was over (i.e., it became dark, and Shabbat began). Rabban Shimon Ben Gamliel said to Rebbi Yossi, “Let us stop [eating because of] Shabbat.” He said [back] to him, “Every day you prefer my words in front of Yehudah, [and] now you prefer the words of Yehudah in front of me. ‘Do you also want to kidnap the queen with me in the house?’ (Esther 7:8)” This angry retort leads us to understanding modern notions of argumentation in education…

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Pesachim 99: Arvei Pesachim

jyungar February 28, 2021

For the source text click/tap here: Pesachim 99

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Munich Manuscript 95 (1342 CE) Location: Cod. hebr. 95 pg. 0129

Pesachim 98: Silence

jyungar February 27, 2021

For the source text click/tap here: Pesachim 98

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Silence …..

Last night I became mad. Love saw me and said:

I am here. Don’t shout, don’t wail. Just be silent!

Don’t talk about the mundane, talk of nothing but beauty.

I am the servant of this magnificence. Just be silent!

I said: O Love, what I fear is something else.

Love said: There’s nothing else. Just be silent!

I will whisper great secrets in your ear. Just nod yes. And be silent.

I said: Love! Is this face angel or human

Love Said: Neither angel nor human. It is other. Just be silent.

I said: I will lose my mind if you don’t tell me.

Love said: Then lose your mind, and stay that way. Just be silent.

You who sit in this house filled with images and illusions,

Get up, walk out the door. Go, and be silent.

–Rumi

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Pesachim 97: Korbanot

jyungar February 26, 2021

For the source text click/tap here: Pesachim 97

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The Torah gives clear parameters for the animal that is to be brought as the korban Pesah. It must be a male that is one year old (see Ex12:5). What if an animal is set aside as a korban Pesah and it does not meet those basic criteria? What is left unclear in the Mishna is what is to be done with the proceeds. The Mishna appears to offer two contradictory rulings.

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Pesachim 96: Pesach Mitzrayim

jyungar February 25, 2021

For the source text click/tap here: Pesachim 96

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Pesachim 95: Second Passover

jyungar February 24, 2021

For the source text click/tap here: Pesachim 95

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In several places in parashat Bo, the Torah teaches us the laws of the korban Pesach. Some of these laws pertain to the korban which is brought and eaten every year on the fourteenth of Nissan known as Pesach dorot. Yet, much of what is mentioned in parashat Bo pertains to the first korban Pesach which was sacrificed in Egypt on the eve of the Jewish exodus from Egypt. This first korban Pesach is called Pesach Mitzrayim.

The Mishnah discusses the differences between Pesach Mitzrayim (the Pesach which the Jews celebrated when they left Egypt) and Pesach Doros (the festival of Pesach celebrated by all subsequent generations). The Mishnah says that one difference is that Pesach Mitzrayim was observed for one night, while Pesach Doros is celebrated for seven days and nights.

We compare and contrast the two…

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In Memoriam of Harav Emanuel Gettinger OBM

In Memoriam of Harav Emanuel Gettinger OBM

Pesachim 94: Bein Hashmashos

jyungar February 23, 2021

For the source text click/tap here: Pesachim 94

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A large part of this daf is devoted to discussions between the Sages about time and distance, and their relationship with the length of day and night.

According to the description in the Gemara, the way the sun appears crossing the sky during the day is due to a physical pathway that exists across the sky. The Ge’onim further note, that since Jewish scholars have embraced the positions of the scientific world with regard to these types of questions, the discussion and descriptions that appear in our Gemara are not

to be understood as literal truth.

I cite my father in law's novel approach to reading talmud and the cosmology of the day to explain sunset.(His Yahrzeit is shushan purim next shabbes)

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Pesachim 93: Modi’in, דרך רחוקה

jyungar February 22, 2021

For the source text click/tap here: Pesachim 93

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There is a dispute about how far away one must be in order to be exempt from bringing the Korban Pesach.

In our Mishnah, Rabbi Akiva interprets “a long distance” to be 15 mil away from the Beis HaMikdash. Rashi explains that this person finds himself at a distance which precludes his ability to arrive at the Beis HaMikdash during the hour when the Shechitah should be done, which is from midday until sundown.

Ulla said: The distance from the city of Modi’in to Jerusalem is fifteen mil.

This leads us into a discussion as to the claim by the Tiferes Yisroel that in our times where we have the means and ways of travelling in a much quicker fashion, when the time comes and we will be zocheh to bring the Korban Pesach, we will not be exempt even though we may be far way.

The town of Modi’in is used as an example of the distance from the Temple which leads us to examine its illustrious history.

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Pesachim 92: Pesach Sheni

jyungar February 21, 2021

For the source text click/tap here: Pesachim 92

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Someone who did not bring the first Pesach due to an accident or oversight, if he then did not bring the second Pesach due to negligence, is liable for kareis. This level of liability for not offering Pesach Sheni as prescribed follows the opinion of Rebbe (93a).

This is also the ruling of Rambam (below) in Hilchos Korban Pesach (5:2). Nevertheless, Ra’avad asks why there should be a distinction between different reasons why the first Pesach was not brought. Why is kareis only applied for nonparticipation in the second Pesach when the first was not done due to אונס, but not when it was not done due to impurity or due to one’s being far away?

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Animal bones found in a dump dating to the end of the second Temple period suggest that animal sacrifice powered Jerusalem's economy

Pesachim 91: Horned Altar

jyungar February 20, 2021

For the source text click/tap here: Pesachim 91

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The Torah (Deut 16:5-6) teaches that one cannot bring the korban Pesah “in any one of your gates” – that is to say, in one of the communities outside of the Temple; rather it must be sacrificed in the place chosen by God. This passage is understood by the Sages to teach a number of halakhot connected with the sacrifice.

On its simplest level, that pasuk teaches that the korban Pesah must be brought in the Temple. Rabbi Shimon understands this to mean that someone who brings the sacrifice on a bamat yahid – a private altar – will be held liable for transgressing a negative commandment. This only holds true, however, when private altars are forbidden, when the Jews all “enter through the same gate,” i.e. when the Temple is standing. During a time when private altars are permitted, the korban Pesah can be brought as a private sacrifice.

This leads us into a historical review of BAMOT and an intriguing feminist reading of the Tosefta regarding women’s participation in the chaburah for the Korban Pesach.

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Erotic scene found in Pompeii. Lupanar.

Pesachim 90: מְמנַּהֶ זוֹנהָ

jyungar February 19, 2021

For the source text click/tap here: Pesachim 90

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Our Daf quotes the Mishnah in Temurah that says that the prohibition of an Esnan of a Zonah takes effect on any object of Hekdesh that is given to the Zonah as her wage.

Tis leads us go an review of the ambivalent attitude towards prostitution in Talmud/antiquity down to modern times.

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Pesachim 89: Gluttony/Surfeit

jyungar February 18, 2021

For the source text click/tap here: Pesachim 89

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A dilemma was raised before the Sages: If there is among the members of a group one of them who has fine hands, a euphemism for one who always hastens to take a large quantity of food, what is the halakha concerning whether they can say to him: Take your allotted portion to eat and leave; and don’t take any more from the other’s members portions?

In our case, having “fine hands” means that he has the ability and reputation of taking more than his share.

This leads us to a review of gluttony and surfeit in antiquity down to modern neurobiology of food addiction.

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Pesachim 88: Go and Slaughter

jyungar February 17, 2021

For the source text click/tap here: Pesachim 88

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In our daaf there was an incident involving the king, queen, and Rabban Gamliel. It happened that a dead lizard was found in the kitchen of the royal house. Since a lizard is one of the creeping animals whose carcasses impart ritual impurity upon contact, they wanted to pronounce the entire meal ritually impure.

What is this species of lizard and how is this hapax translated by Rashi and Chizkuni?

Is chameleon a possibility and if so what are the mythic and literary qualities of this subspecies of Iguania.

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Pesachim 87: Dual Loyalties

jyungar February 16, 2021

For the source text click/tap here: Pesachim 87

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Our new Perek begins with pesukim from the book of Hosea, which leads to a discussion about the place of the Jewish people in the Diaspora.

One of the comments is made by Rabbi Oshaya, who teaches that God was being generous with the Jewish people when he dispersed them among the nations of the world, since their distribution around the world guarantees that they cannot all be threatened together.

Rabbi Elazar said: The Holy One, Blessed be He, exiled Israel among the nations only so that converts would join them.

This leads us to a meditation on the meaning of exile and the notion of dual loyalties as recently as statements made by the former president about Jewish democrats.

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Food House of Julia in Pompeii

Pesachim 86: Table Manners

jyungar February 15, 2021

For the source text click/tap here: Pesachim 86

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Our Daf tells a story about Rav Huna the son of Rav Natan who visited Rav Nachman bar Yitzhak and behaved in what appeared to be an uncouth manner –

He agreed to sit immediately without first offering a polite refusal

He accepted a cup of wine, again without an initial polite refusal

He drank it in just two sips.

He looked directly at his hosts without diverting his gaze.

When asked how he could behave so poorly, and still call himself a Rabbi, he explained each of his actions based on a statement from the Talmud including the maxim:

You should do whatever the host tells you to do, unless he commands you tzei (leave).

This leads us in an exploration of table manners in the talmud (halacha) and antiquity

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Pesachim 85: Nikanor’s Gate

jyungar February 14, 2021

For the source text click/tap here: Pesachim 85

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For what reason were the insides of the gates of Jerusalem not sanctified? Because lepers protect themselves by sitting under them; in the sun they protect themselves from the sun and in the rain, they sit in the gateway to protect themselves from the rain. Lepers are not permitted to enter Jerusalem. In order to allow them to use the gates of the city as shelter from the elements, the gateways were not sanctified.

A contradiction in the Mishnah regarding the status of the doorjamb is noted. The contradiction is resolved by distinguishing between the gates of Yerushalayim and the gates of the Azarah.

The gate of Yerushalayim is considered outside Yerushalayim, while the gates of the Beis Hamikdash are considered inside the Beis Hamikdash, besides for the gate of Nikanor. The Gemora says that the gates of Yerushalayim were not made holy, because there were lepers and others who used to go under the gateway for shelter.

Who was Nikanor, where did he come from? And what did he contribute to the Temple?

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A 15th-century depiction of shechita and bedikah.

Pesachim 84: Giddin

jyungar February 13, 2021

For the source text click/tap here: Pesachim 84

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It is a mitzvah to burn any meat that passed its deadline and became nosar. The official time for this burning is only on the morning in which it became nosar. It cannot be burned at night. However, since this burning does not override the laws of Shabbos and Yom Tov, any leftover meat of the korban Pesach along with its sinews and bones are burned in the courtyards of Yerushalayim on Nissan 16, the first day of Chol Hamoed in Eretz Yisrael.

Even though Rav says that sinews are not considered meat, Rebbi Yochanan argues with Rav and says that they are considered meat. Rebbi Yochanan apparently maintains that although they are hard, since they can be softened through boiling they are considered meat, like the ligaments mentioned in the Mishnah.

Why do Rav and Reish Lakish rule that the sinews of the neck are not considered meat, even though they can be softened through boiling? Apparently, Rav and Reish Lakish maintain that cooking the sinews of the neck does not soften them sufficiently, and thus they are not comparable to the Gidin mentioned in the Beraisa which become completely softened through cooking.

What are giddin? Are the sinews of the neck different, we discuss the talmudic account of bones, sinews and tendons, which leads bas to the work of Asaph Harofeh the Person Jewish Physician who cites Hippocrates.

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Pesachim 83: Korban Pesach and Gid HaNashe

jyungar February 12, 2021

For the source text click/tap here: Pesachim 83

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It is a mitzvah to burn any meat that passed its deadline and became nosar. The official time for this burning is only on the morning in which it became nosar. It cannot be burned at night. However, since this burning does not override the laws of Shabbos and Yom Tov, any leftover meat of the korban Pesach along with its sinews and bones are burned in the courtyards of Yerushalayim on Nissan 16, the first day of Chol Hamoed in Eretz Yisrael.

Even though Rav says that sinews are not considered meat, Rebbi Yochanan argues with Rav and says that they are considered meat. Rebbi Yochanan apparently maintains that although they are hard, since they can be softened through boiling they are considered meat, like the ligaments mentioned in the Mishnah.

Why do Rav and Reish Lakish rule that the sinews of the neck are not considered meat, even though they can be softened through boiling? Apparently, Rav and Reish Lakish maintain that cooking the sinews of the neck does not soften them sufficiently, and thus they are not comparable to the Gidin mentioned in the Beraisa which become completely softened through cooking.

What are giddin? Are the sinews of the neck different, we discuss the talmudic account of bones, sinews and tendons, which leads bas to the work of Asaph Harofeh the Person Jewish Physician who cites Hippocrates.

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Pesachim 82: Darash

jyungar February 11, 2021

For the source text click/tap here: Pesachim 82

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If the sacrificial meat of the Korban Pesach is taken out of its permissible area, from where do we derive that it must be burned?

From Lev 10:18, “Behold, its blood was not brought into the Sanctuary within; you should have eaten it in the Sanctuary, as I commanded”

Fro Moshe Rabbeinu’s admonition of Aron

Leading us to the Chatas Aron could not bring because of his animus and the wonderful insights about Moshe’s anxiety? Frustration? Fear ?

The Gemara (Zevachim 101a) praises the fact that Moshe Rabbeinu did not lie and claim he did not hear the halachah that, due to Aharon’s mourning, the korban could not be eaten. Rather, he unabashedly told the truth and admitted that he heard the halachah from Hashem but had subsequently forgotten it.

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Pesachim 81: וְשׂוֹרְפוֹ לפְִניֵ הבִַּירָה

jyungar February 10, 2021

For the source text click/tap here: Pesachim 81

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What is the reason that the Paschal lamb must be burned before the Temple and that those who prefer to burn it elsewhere are not permitted to do so? Rabbi Yosei bar Ḥanina said: In order to embarrass them.

Presumably, the reason that most of the offering became impure is because the owners were not sufficiently careful with it. Therefore, the Sages decreed that it be burned in a public place.

This "public place" is the Bira the location of which remains uncertain and subject to to controversy between Reb Yochanan and Resh Lakish.

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Julian Ungar-Sargon

This is Julian Ungar-Sargon's personal website. It contains poems, essays, and podcasts for the spiritual seeker and interdisciplinary aficionado.​