Shimita/Kashrut

Shmita is a special mitzvah that we have the privilege to particpate in every seven years.  Whether you follow the heter mechirah or use only kedushat shviit or eat only food grown by non Jews there is certainly alot of information to keep up with.

We are sure that you are all learning about Shmitah in your respective programs this year. You certainly have access to learned teachers  for all your Shmitah questions.

On Here 4 The Year we would like to share information and interesting articles with you that you may have not seen. If you would have something about shmitah that you think would be good to post on our site, please let us know.

Here are some new books to help guide you throughout the year.

The Council Of Young Israel Rabbis In Israel has put out a guide in English that is easy to read and only costs 40sh called SHMITTAH 5768 ,A PRACTICAL GUIDE. They have revised their calendar to make it more user friendly www.youngisraelrabbis.org.il

There is a new book in Hebrew called "Katif Shviit" put out by Machon Torah Vehaaretz www.toraland.org.il

Rabbi Elozor Barclay and Rabbi Yitzchok Jaeger Guidelines to Shemittah Questions and Answers about the Laws of Shemittah Targum Press.  Targum press also has an online shmitta calendar www.targum. com

Below is an amazing article by Rav Shlomo Aviner on Shmitah
I Choose Heter Mechira"

Rabbi Shlomo Aviner - Chief Rabbi of Beit El

[Translator' s note: "Heter Mechira" [literally the "sale license"] refers to
produce from Jewish fields that were formally sold a non-Jew the way Chametz
is. "Otzar Bet Din" refers to where Jewish fields are handed over to a
Jewish court. Then, its Jewish farmers tend to the fields, harvest and
process the produce as employees of the Jewish court, and bring the produce
to market. The produce is holy.]

Question: If I can't find "Otzar Bet Din" produce, should I be lenient and
purchase "Heter Mechira", or is that forbidden, such that I should prefer
produce from Arabs.

Answer: Don't buy seventh year produce from Arabs. Buy from Jews. First of
all, you have to realize that heter mechira is not something forbidden or
barely permissible. Rather, it is clearly permissible, with a strong basis
in halachah. This is not the place to go into a halachic discussion since it
was already decided 119 years ago, and the greatest sages supported it,
including Rabbi Yitzchak Elchanan; Rabbi Yehoshua of Kutna; Rabbi Yehoshua
Leib Diskin; the Aderet; Rabbi Naphtali Hertz, Chief Rabbi of Jaffa; The
Sochochover Rebbe; Rabbi Shmuel Mohliver; the Rishon LeTziyon Rabbi Ya'akov
Shaul Elyashar; Rabbi Yosef Engel; and Maran HaRav Avraham Yitzchak Kook. In
recent generations, we do not have anyone who comes close to their level and
can nullify their words. Therefore, our master Rabbi Tzvi Yehuda Kook wrote
that if someone does not wish to use the heter mechira, he is just choosing
a high level of strictness and saintliness (LeNetivot Yisrael 2:224) It is
known that with saintliness we have to be very careful lest it lead to sin,
as Ramchal [Rabbi Moshe Chaim Luzzatto] explains in his Mesillat Yesharim,
Chapter 20, on saintliness.

We have to examine well if our not availing ourselves of the heter mechira
is not a stringency that will lead to a leniency, which would be a reason to
distance ourselves from that practice. Indeed, numerous leniencies and many
sins are involved in refusal to make use of the heter mechira:

1) Doing so harms the ability of Jews to earn a living. After all, it says,
"Help your brother survive" (Leviticus 25:36). We have to take pains that
our fellow Jews do not become poor.
"Buy from your neighbor" (Ibid., 25:14). If you have the possibility of
buying something from a Jew or a non-Jew, you have to prefer the Jew, for he
is our brother. This applies even in the Diaspora.

2) "Libeling the decisions of our predecessors" (Ketuvot 103a). If someone
uses the expression "it is forbidden" regarding fruits provided in
accordance with heter mechira, he is libeling the great rabbis who followed
it. (see LeNetivot Yisrael, ibid.)

3) Scorning others. A major precondition for achieving saintliness is not
scorning others who do not behave as we do (Yerushalmi Berachot 2:9). Here,
the use of the expression "forbidden" scorns those Jews who eat these
fruits. (LeNetivot Yisrael, ibid.).

4) Undermining Rabbinic Authority. It is told about Rabbi Tarfon that he
following the strict approach to reciting the Shema like Bet Shammai. The
Rabbis said to him, "You deserve punishment for that, "for you violated the
words of Bet Hillel" (Mishnah, Berachot 1:2). This is puzzling, considering
that Bet Shammai is stricter. Hence how did he "violate the words of Bet
Hillel"? Ramchal therefore explains: "The controversy between Bet Shammai
and Bet Hillel weighed heavily on
Israel. It was finally decided that the
law follows Bet Hillel forever. This constitutes the upholding of the Torah.
This final ruling will remain binding forever and ever, and will never be
weakened. G-d forbid that the Torah should become two Torahs. Therefore,
according to the view of this Mishnah, it is more saintly to hold like Beit
Hillel, even if they are more lenient, than to be strict like Bet Shammai.
This precedent provides us with the eyes to see in what direction the light
of truth and faith will reside, so that we can do what is right in G-d's
eyes." (Mesillat Yesharim, end of the Chapter "Mishkal HaChassidut" , Chapter
20).

5) "Give them no consideration" (Deuteronomy 7:2). Some say that every act
that strengthens the foothold of non-Jews in the Land violates the above
verse, which the Talmud explains as meaning, "Give them no foothold in the
Land" (Avodah Zarah 20a). It is clear that the more we provide non-Jews in
our land with a livelihood, the more rooted they will be in it. By the way,
one of the arguments used by those who oppose the heter mechira is that by
the sale we violate "Give them no consideration" . Yet according to what I
have written here, the exact opposite is the case. The heter mechira is what
strengthens the Jews' foothold, and not using it strengthens the foothold of
non-Jews.

6) Supporting terrorists. If we buy from Arabs in Gush Katif, for example,
it is obvious that we are economically strengthening terrorists who until
today have been involved with terror. By such means we are strengthening
terror.

7) Non-Jews' lands that really belong to Jews. If someone buys produce from
non-Jews, he is working on the assumption that their lands really belong to
them. Yet that assumption is refuted by reality. How did so much land in
Eretz Yisrael come to be owned by Arabs? Did they buy them from Jews?
Certainly not! Rather, when we were expelled from our land, it remained
desolate, and down through the generations they took control over our land.
It is theoretically possible that Jews sold land to non-Jews, but the
possibility that this actually happened is infinitesimally small. 99% of
Arabs lands were squatted on by Arabs. This approach is recognized
officially by Turkish law as well: If someone settles on empty land, it
becomes his. The conclusion is that almost all of the Arabs' land are really
Jewish lands, and all the laws of shemittah apply to them. Moreover,
according to Halachah, conquest affords ownership. Therefore, the Wars of
Independence and the Six Day War afforded ownership. This matter is agreed
upon by almost all the poskim [halachic decisors]. Even the Satmar Rebbe
admitted that the State of Israel has ownership over its lands. Therefore,
in his view and the view of others, produce should be purchased only from
non-Jews from outside the Land.

The following paradox results: Arab land is really Jewish, and the
prohibitions of the Seventh year apply to them, and Jewish lands sold via
the heter mechira belong to the Arabs, and the prohibitions of the seventh
year do not apply.

In conclusion, we see that compared to the one problem of heter mechira,
which was decided on by the greatest rabbis for the past seventeen
Sabbatical years until today, the failure to avail ourselves of the heter
mechira involves a whole plethora of very complex halachic problems. Thus,
it is bizarre to call that a "stringency" when it is nothing but an enormous
laxity.

As far as Otzar Bet Din, that is not free from problems either. I will
describe what the matter is. Our sages wrote:
"At first the emissaries of the court would go door to door through the
city. If someone brought fruits to the emissaries, they would take it and
provide him with three meals' worth, and the rest they would place in the
city storehouse. When the times came for figs, the court emissaries would
hire workers who would cultivate them and process them into clumps of dried
figs. When the time of olives arrived, the court emissaries would hire
workers who would pick the olives, process them, put them in barrels and
store them in the city storehouse. When the time came for grapes, the court
emissaries would hire workers who would pick the grapes, crush them, put
them into barrels and put the barrels in the city storehouse. Then they
would distribute the food on Fridays, to each man in accordance with his
family's needs." (Tosefta Shevi'it 8:12)

Presently Otzar Bet Din is run the following way: The farmer himself is
appointed as an emissary of the court and he is paid money not for the
fruits themselves but for his effort and investment. Anyone can see that
Otzar Bet Din as well has several problems:
1) Rambam did not quote this Tosefta as law, nor did the poskim who followed
him. Rather, it was the novel invention of the Chazon Ish to rule this way.
2) The Tosefta makes no mention of payment. After all, the fruits of the
Land are hefker! [Free for all takers].

3) To say that the field's owner deserves payment for his work and
investment is a very novel idea. If these farmers are being paid for their
toil and investment, then the price for all the fruits should be uniform,
whether the fruit is attractive or low-quality. To say that if it is nice
that is a sign that the farmer worked more and invested more, and therefore
deserves more money, is far-fetched.

4) In any case, the appointment of the farmer himself as the court emissary
is a very revolutionary idea.
In a word, even regarding Otzar Bet Din there are not a few questions. True,
there are less questions than regarding Arab produce, but this isn't so
smooth either.

Therefore, let us quietly and self-confidently follow the heter mechira,
which was established by the greatest rabbis, already seventeen
shemita-cycles ago.

Let us strengthen the agriculture of our Jewish brethren.

Let us strengthen our hold on the Land. Let us strengthen our faith in our
rabbis' rulings.
Online Shiurim:
Rav Rimon from Alon Shvut at the Women’s Beit Midrash –
go to www.etzion.org.il/keshet

and click on the ארכיון השיעורים [archion ha-shiurim]
button on the top of the page

You can find freely downloadable MP3 copies of recent shiurim on shmitta by:

Rav Chaim Malinowitz (Beis Tefillah, Ramat Beit Shemesh Aleph)
http://www.beistefillahshiurim.org/cgi-bin/buildindex2.py?shiur= HilchosShmit
ta

Rav Chaim Soloveichik (Ohr Shalom, Ramat Beit Shemesh Aleph) at
http://ohrshalom.613.org (follow the link at the top left)

Rav Elimelech Kornfeld (Kehillas Ha'Gra, Ramat Beit Shemesh Aleph) at
http://www.kehilla.org.il/audio.asp

Rav Avishai David (Beit Midrash Torani Leumi, Beit Shemesh) at
http://www.bmtl.org/online.html

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