It Is a Chessed
Parshas
Mishpatim
Posted on January 22, 2014 (5774) By
Rabbi Label Lam | Series: Dvar Torah
| Level: Beginner
And if a person opens
a pit, or if a person digs a pit and does not cover it, and a bull or a donkey
falls into it, the owner of the pit shall pay; he shall return money to its
owner, and the dead body shall be his. (Shemos 22:33-34)
the owner of the pit:
[This refers to] the creator of the obstacle [i.e., the pit], although the pit
is not his, for he made it in a public domain, Scripture made him its owner,
insofar as he is liable for its damages. -[Bava Kama. 29B] -Rashi
At some point the Torah begins to
sound like a law book. Anyone who knows even a little about the Written Torah
realizes that it is an incomplete law book. There is not one Mitzvah that can
be performed without detailed explanations from the Oral Torah as can be
discovered in the Talmud. Giant volumes are launched from single lines in this
week’s portion. Therefore if one listens in on the discussions in Beis Midrash,
a study hall, where they are learning, for example Bava Kama, the tractate busy
with damages, one would likely hear amidst the din a conversation about this
“din”-judgment or that din. You might think you have just found yourself
transplanted to a law school.
Is it everyone’s business to
become a lawyer? What is the special goodness that flows from all that focus on
the minutiae of property law and small claims if so few will become true judges
and lawyers?
One of my Rebbeim once
told us about a mystifying incident his wife had encountered. She was walking
along Maple Avenue in Monsey on the side of the street opposite the home of
Rabbi Mordechai Schwab ztl., the acclaimed “Tzadik of Monsey”. She was struck by
the sight of Rabbi Schwab in front of his house with a large pair of pruning
shears. There was the elder Rabbi himself cutting branches zealously like any
ordinary gardener. She watched in wonderment and amazement. Why was this great
Rabbi trimming tree branches by himself? When he noticed that she was watching,
he looked up seeking to cure her curiosity he told her, “It’s a Chessed! (An
act of kindliness) It’s a Chessed!”
By the time she came
home and reported the incident to her husband she was even more mystified. What
had he meant? What was the Chessed in cutting tree branches? Was it that the
trees need relief, like a haircut? How was it a Chessed to the tree?
Her husband listened
and instantly realized what was going on. The tree he was working on was on his
property but its branches were reaching into the public domain. He clearly
wanted to avoid the possibility that his tree could cause damage to a passerby
with its low hanging limbs. This was his tree. Although it was rooted on his
property, he was the owner of what is the equivalent of an open pit in the
public domain that needs to be covered.
He was being
responsible to others. No one should get poked in the eye, or have their
Shabbos hat knocked off and get soiled on account of his tree. That was the
Chessed.
Amongst the many
practical aspects of learning Bava Kama and all the myriad details about
damages is to become a more responsible citizen and to learn the thousands and
millions of ways a person should be extra careful not to be the cause of harm
to others.
Something as simple
as leaning back in a chair is not only hazardous to the one rocking back but it
also challenges the structural integrity of even the strongest of chairs. You’d
be surprised how many metal legs give way in seemingly structurally sound metal
chairs. In school we remove a few from circulation every week.
The Jewish People
accepted the Torah on condition of becoming “a Holy Nation” that goes beyond
mere civility where it is the thin blue line of policing deters people from
wrong doing. No, every individual needs to be aware of his responsibility to
people and their property too. Kindliness is not only scheming what we can do
to help but thinking ahead about avoiding what might hurt. In that way it is
a Chessed!
DvarTorah, Copyright
© 2007 by Rabbi Label Lam and Torah.org.
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