Parshas Emor
Why Can't I Play Ball Near The Cemetery?
These divrei Torah were adapted from the hashkafa portion of Rabbi
Yissocher Frand's Commuter Chavrusah Tapes on the weekly portion: Tape #
591, The Kohain and the Gerusha. Good Shabbos!
Rashi cites a teaching of our Sages concerning an apparent redundancy in
the opening pasuk [verse] of Parshas Emor. The parsha begins "Hashem said
to Moshe: SAY to the Kohanim, the sons of Aaron, and you shall SAY to
them..." [Vayikra 21:1]. Rashi cites the Talmudic lesson derived from this
redundancy: "To enjoin the adults with regard to minors" [Yevamos 114a].
This teaches that parents and the Beis Din may not allow children (prior
to Bar Mitzvah) to transgress. Even though such minors themselves are not
technically commanded to observe the Torah, adults have a responsibility
to see to it that minors are not in violation of Torah precepts.
It is for this reason that we may not, for example, give non Kosher food
to young children or let them desecrate the Shabbos. The whole concept
of educating our children (Chinuch) from a young age to observe Torah
laws is derived from this "redundancy" of "SAY to the Kohanim, the sons
of Aaron, and you shall SAY to them..."
Rav Yaakov Weinberg, zt"l, suggested a reason why the Torah chose this
venue of Tumas Kohanim [ritual impurity of the Priests] to introduce us to
the whole topic of "seeing to it that the adults warn the children". Rav
Weinberg noted that there is something specifically fundamental to Chinuch
[Jewish education] regarding Kohanim and their children.
Imagine the following scenario: The kids are playing ball. The ball field
is adjacent to a cemetery. What happens when kids play ball? Someone hits
a home run and the ball rolls into the cemetery. What do the kids do?
Someone runs into the cemetery to retrieve the ball. This may be somewhat
disrespectful to the dead, but technically speaking there is no problem
with that... unless one is a Kohain. But if one IS a Kohain, he cannot run
into the cemetery.
The father has to tell his son, "Moishele, you cannot play ball with the
other kids by the cemetery." The son asks, "What do you mean I can't play
ball with the other kids? Everyone is playing ball by the cemetery. Why
can't I play ball with the other kids?" The father explains, "Because you
are a Kohain and a Kohain can't go into the cemetery." The child still
protests, "But everyone else is doing it!" The father then has to explain
to his child, "Because you are different than everybody else and what
everybody else can do, you can't do. What is good for everybody else is
not necessarily good for you."
This concept is something that every father has to be able to give over to
his child. This is -– Rav Weinberg stated -– one of the greatest
challenges of Jewish parenting. We have to explain to our children that
they have to be themselves. They have to grow up to be individuals –- not
what somebody else is becoming. They have to grow up -- not imitating what
somebody else does or who somebody else is. Each person has to be himself.
And sometimes being one's self means being different.
It is clear that the Kohain has the challenge of teaching his child that
he is different from everyone else. It is appropriate then that this
lesson of "Chinuch" appears in this context and from here we apply it to
all Jewish parents in general.
One might suggest another reason why it is specifically in this context
that the Torah introduces the principle of "Chinuch".
It is relatively "easy" to get across to children the idea that they
should honor their parents, that they should act with kindness towards
those in need, that they should give charity, they should not slander,
etc. These are rational principles that we can sit down with children and
explain to them.
But it is a task of an entirely different magnitude to -– using the same
example as before –- try to explain to a young boy that he cannot go into
a cemetery because there is "tumah" there. "Where is 'tumah'? What is
'tumah'? Can I feel it? Can I touch it? Can I smell it?"
The bottom line is that we need to explain to our children "This is a
Divine Decree (gezeiras hakasuv)". This is a 'chok' –- something that
cannot be understand rationally. This the battle when trying to transmit
Torah requirements to our children. The primary task of Jewish education
is to transmit to our children the idea that they must accept certain
restrictions even if they do not understand them. This idea of "Na'aseh
v'nishma" (First do, understand later) is where chinuch becomes difficult.
Therefore, the Torah chose this parsha of ritual impurity from dead bodies
(tumas mes) to introduce the idea of "having the adults warn the minors" –
i.e. Jewish education of our young. This is where the chinuch battle
resides.
Receipt of the Torah is an Every Day Event
Parshas Emor contains the holidays of the Jewish calendar year. In
connection with the festival of Shavuos, the Torah says: "You shall offer
a new meal offering to Hashem" [Vayikra 23:16]. This "new meal offering"
is what is known as the "Shtay HaLechem" [Two Loaves]. Rashi cites the
simple interpretation of the expression "new meal offering", namely that
it must come from the new year's wheat crop.
The Kli Yakar gives a more homiletic interpretation of this expression.
The Kli Yakar suggests that the "new meal offering" alludes to Yom Matan
Torah [the day of the giving of the Torah]. The Torah should be seen as
new to us, every day, as if just we had just received it from Sinai that
very day. In other words, the sacrifice that symbolizes the essence of the
holiday of Shavuos is a "new meal offering". Shavuos represents the day
Torah was given and Torah equates with the idea that "every day it should
be fresh in your eyes."
How many times have we heard Parshas Emor? How many times have we learned
it? Torah is an amazing thing. People have been learning Parshas Emor for
thousands of years, but there is always something new. There is always a
novelty to be found in its pasukim. The Torah must be a "mincha chadasha"
-– a fresh meal offering. If the Torah wanted to pick one offering to
symbolize the essence of Torah, it could chose nothing more appropriate
that the new meal offering.
The Kli Yakar points out that Shavuos is unique among all Torah holidays
in that there is no specific calendar date associated with it. Pessach is
the 15th of Nissan, Yom Kippur is the 10th of Tishrei, and so forth. Each
Yom Tov has an exact date and time. Shavuos has no set day. (It is merely
50 days after the second day of Pessach. Depending on the number of days
in Nissan and Iyar in a given year, the date for Shavuous can "float").
The lesson behind this is that every day is a day of receiving the Torah.
There was only one day on which the Exodus occurred. But receipt of Torah
is an "every day event." The symbol of this holiday is the NEW meal
offering to Hashem.
Anticipating The Fulfillment of Mitzvos
The pasuk says, "You shall guard (u'shmartem) My Commandments and do them,
I am Hashem" [Vayikra 22:31]. The Chasam Sofer links the verb u'shmartem
with the similar expression in Parshas Vayeshev: "So his brothers were
jealous of him, and his father guarded (shamar) the matter" [Bereshis
37:11].
The commentaries explain that the meaning of the expression "his father
guarded the matter" is that Yaakov stood by, waiting and anticipating what
would happen with Yosef's dreams. Likewise, the Chasam Sofer exhorts: "You
shall guard My commandments" does not only mean that we should keep
mitzvos, but we should anticipate and look forward and think about the
opportunity to do mitzvos.
This, he says, is the interpretation of the famous Gemara at the end of
Brochos [61b]. When the Romans took Rabbi Akiva and were scraping the skin
off his body with metal combs, he had an expression of joy on his face,
because he waited his whole life in anticipation for the opportunity to
fulfill the commandment of martyrdom ["with all your soul"].
The Chasam Sofer says this is the same nuance implied in "You shall guard
(u'shmartem) My commandments" –- anxiously anticipating the opportunity to
perform mitzvos.
I heard a powerful story from Rabbi Paysach Krohn. In Amsterdam, the
community consecrated a new cemetery. They purchased a piece of land and
had a ceremony that everyone attended. It was a memorable event. Lo and
behold, after the ceremony, a Jew died and he had the "honor" of being the
first person to be buried in this particular cemetery.
The procession arrived at the cemetery with the coffin, and to everyone's
surprise they found that the grave was already fully dug out. Normally,
this was something that occurred after they already arrived at the
gravesite. The members of the Chevra Kadisha were at a total loss to
explain who dug up the grave.
Finally, they found out that there was a Kohain in the city. Never in his
life did he merit the mitzvah of burying the dead. The reason was obvious
-– a Kohain is not allowed to go to a cemetery because he is prohibited
from coming into contact with tumas mes [impurity caused by being in
proximity with dead bodies]. When this Kohain found out that a Jew died
and was going to be buried in a new cemetery that had no pre-existing
grave sites, he was overjoyed at the opportunity that presented itself.
Although designated as a cemetery, the land in question did not yet
contain any corpses. Therefore he was allowed to enter and dig up the
grave himself. He jumped at the opportunity. He dug up the ground by
himself so that at least once in his life he would fulfill the (very rare
-- for a Kohain) mitzvah of burying the dead.
This is a classic example of "And you shall guard My commandments". One
waits a whole life in anticipation of fulfilling a mitzvah. This, on a
smaller scale, is the equivalent of Rabbi Akiva's statement just before
being killed -– "When will this mitzvah come to my hand that I may fulfill
it!"
This write-up is adapted from the hashkafa portion of Rabbi Yissocher
Frand's Commuter Chavrusah Torah Tapes on the weekly Torah Portion. The
halachic topics covered for the current week's portion in this series are:
Tape # 010 – Can Kohanim visit Graves of Tzadikim
Tape # 053 - Are Our Kohanim Really Kohanim?
Tape # 096 - "Kovod Habrios": The Concept of Human Dignity
Tape # 144 - Kohanim in Hospitals: A Real Problem
Tape # 191 - The Bracha for Kiddush Hashem.
Tape # 281 - Kiddush Hashem: Is "Giluy Arayus" Ever Permitted?
Tape # 327 - The Cohain and the Divorcee
Tape # 371 - The Mitzvah of Ve'Kidashto: Honoring Kohanim
Tape # 415 - The Ba'alas Teshuva and the Kohain
Tape # 459 - Eliyahu Hanavi and the "Dead" Child
Tape # 503 - Standing Up While Doing Mitzvos
Tape # 547 – The Wayward Daughter
Tape # 591 – The Kohain and the Gerusha
Tape # 635 – Bracha of Mekadaish Es Shimcha B'rabim
Tape # 679 - Mrs. Cohen is Having A Baby
Tapes or a complete catalogue can be ordered from the
Yad Yechiel Institute, PO Box 511, Owings Mills MD 21117-0511.
Call (410) 358-0416 or e-mail tapes@yadyechiel.org or visit
http://www.yadyechiel.org/ for further information.
Text Copyright © 2007 by Rabbi Yissocher Frand and Torah.org.
Transcribed by David Twersky; Seattle, Washington.
Technical Assistance by Dovid Hoffman; Yerushalayim.
Rav Frand Books and Audio Tapes are now available for sale! Thanks to www.yadyechiel.org and Artscroll.com.