Ask The Rabbi 13 July 1996 Issue #113 =========================================================================== Researched at Ohr Somayach, Jerusalem This Issue Contains: 1. Dubious Dates 2. Answer to Yiddle Riddle =========================================================================== All Ohr Somayach Publications are now available in Adobe Acrobat and Microsoft Word formats from our web site: http://www.jer1.co.il/orgs/ohr =========================================================================== M. Friedman wrote: >Dear Rabbi, > >As I understand it, the reason for celebrating Rosh Hashana and other >holidays for two days in the Diaspora was that, given the slow pace of >communication in days gone by, it was necessary to be certain that the >holiday was celebrated on the correct day. But given the instantaneous >communications of the present, what is the reason for continuing this >practice instead of conforming the celebration to that done in Israel? * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Dear M. Friedman, Your question is not as new as you might think. In fact, it is a question asked by the Talmud! Originally, the New Month (Rosh Chodesh) was declared monthly by Israel's Torah court. Many people lived far away and didn't hear about it until after the festivals. To ensure that they observed the festival on the correct day, they observed two days. With the progressive dispersal and persecution of the Jewish People, the Sages saw a need for a fixed calendar. So your question was as valid 1,500 years ago as it is today: Since today we have a fixed calendar, the doubtful status of the second day no longer exists. Why, then, do we keep two-day festivals? To answer this question, let's visit Shostka, Ukraine in 1939, where 35 Jews live. The nearest synagogue is in Kiev -- a day-and-a-half journey by train. The synagogue phone number is not allowed to be listed in the phone book (if you had a phone). Jewish calendars are banned. When is Passover this year? According to noted `refusenik' Rabbi Eliyahu Essas, shlita, Jews knew the festival dates via word of mouth and short-wave radio. But it wasn't easy. People often tried to find out the holiday schedule three years in advance. Forseeing this and worse, the Sages established two-day festivals. Thus they ensured that festivals be kept correctly, even in the face of repressive decrees against Torah observance. Speaking of the former Soviet Union: A man in Kiev in 1952 gets a letter from Moscow's CSBMV (Central Soviet Bureau of Motor Vehicles). At last, his request to buy a car has been approved. Immediately, he calls Kiev's CDLDA (Central Department of Licencing and Distribution of Automobiles) and is given an appointment for Tuesday, October 3, 1963. "Morning or Afternoon?" he asks. "Tavahrisch!" laughs the official. "That's ten years from now! What difference is it to you if you come in the morning or the afternoon?" "Well," says the man, "the plumber's coming in the morning..." Sources: o Tractate Beitza 4b =========================================================================== Yiddle Riddle: As the sun moves from east to west, Shabbat and Yom Tov occur first in Israel, and then in America. Which mitzva is observed first in New York, and then in Jerusalem? Answer: Reading Megillat Esther! In New York (as in most places inside Israel and out) Purim is celebrated on Adar 14. But in Jerusalem, as in any city which had a wall around it in the days of Moses and Joshua, Purim is celebrated on Adar 15. This distinction commemorates the special miracles experienced in Persia's capital, the walled city of Shushan. Sources: o Tractate Megilla 2a =========================================================================== Do you have a question about Judaism, and don't know where to find the answer? Just "Ask The Rabbi" and you'll get an answer. Ohr Somayach has a staff of Rabbis dedicated to answering YOUR questions. Our Rabbis have researched questions on what Judaism says about Magic, Virtual Reality Minyan, Why Honey and Locusts are Kosher, and Why People Point Pinkies at the Torah. For each question that we answer in the weekly column, DOZENS of answers are sent to individuals around the world who also asked questions during that time. Please feel free to avail yourself of this service. Just submit your question to "Ask The Rabbi" and we'll begin researching your answer. If you feel your question is personal, just tell us, and we'll be certain to send the answer only to YOU! 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