T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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530.1 | I'm glad you asked that question.... | TAVENG::CHAIM | The Bagel Nosher | Tue Aug 30 1988 02:31 | 19 |
| Lee,
You have asked a very good question and it is not merely academic.
I believe that when the Yovail (Jubilee in Hebrew) is actually observed
then it is considered the end of a cycle and the following year
is the first year of the next cycle. When the Yovail is not actually
observed (like in our time) for various and sundry reasons, I believe
that the authorities are in conflict exactly how to reckon the
calender. Some say it is totally disregarded and every seven years
is Shmita. Some say that eventhough it is not observed it should
still be reckoned relative to Shmita. Some say that it should not
be reckoned NOW but when the Yovail will again be observed then
it should be reckoned RETROACTIVELY in order to redetermine what
the status of the current year is.
I hope this hasn't totally confused you. I know that when I studied
these areas in the Talmud that it did me.
Cb.
|
530.2 | now i'm confused | VAXWRK::ZAITCHIK | | Tue Aug 30 1988 13:28 | 27 |
| re .1
first: hi Chaim!
Your answer confused me, and I thought I knew the answer to .0 !!!
Correct me if I am wrong but what I think ( and what I think you
also said) is that when the Yovel was observed then the 50th year
was NOT the 1st year of the following shmittah cycle but was an
"intervening" year (nisht-ahin-und-nisht-aher). Of course the YOVEL
was hardly ever observed, not just because the people were sinful,
but because the Yovel was suspended when the 10 tribes went into
exile according to the main opinion of chazal, so that the time
frame for its observance is a very short one indeed. (And of course
during that time the people were not exactly known for scrupulous
observance, to put it mildly.)
"Nowadays" (which as noted is virtually all of Jewish history) there
is no Yovel and the 50th year is simply the 1st year of the next
7 year cycle, like the 36th or 43rd or ... -- i.e. nothing special
about '50'. (This is the way we do it today in Israel. Maybe you
could add here if there is anyone who goes by another psak as to
the yovel. I mean I know there are opinions who say to ignore the
whole shmittah thing altogether, but I am refering to
a different opinion as to how to count the 50th year. Is there anyone
who does differently "lhalacha"?)
As I write this to you from Maynard I feel like saying
libi bmizrach v'ani bsof ma'arav !
shana tovah
ps/moderator, excuse the personal "dash" to cb
|
530.3 | It could get very confusing... | TAVENG::CHAIM | The Bagel Nosher | Wed Aug 31 1988 03:30 | 16 |
| Zaitch (that's how I've known him for many years),
What you said in .2 is correct. I don't know of anyone who practices
differently now adays. (Perhaps some of the Briskers or Chason Ishniks
are "Nohaig Shviis l'chumrah" in a year that would have been "Yovail").
If I recall correctly, potentially there is a problem when we
start again celebrating "Yovail". The question is do we discount
the past and start counting from year 1, do we figure out how many
"Shmitas" have been and figure out which cycle and which year we're
in, or do we go even further and compute cycle and year as if we've
been counting "Yovail" all along.
Shana Tova
Cb.
|
530.4 | | NEWVAX::LAFFERTY | Future hindsight | Fri Sep 02 1988 22:42 | 17 |
| Chaim and Zaitch,
Thank you both.
So then if I understand correctly, the full Yovail cycle is 50 years.
(Seven Shmita + Yovail). But since Yovail has not been observed
in quite some time, Yovail is not counted if it is not observed.
(Correct?) But counting of Shmita is continued and if Yovail were
to be observed anew it should be calculated from the time of the last
observed Yovail. (Am I keeping up?) I guess it's vague to me why
if Yovail is not kept, it is not counted for the purposes of keeping
track of when it would occur. I find myself in the camp that says
it should still be reckoned relative to Shmita. Hmmmmm. Well another
question: When does the next Shmita begin?
Thanks again,
lee
|
530.5 | ...more... | VAXWRK::ZAITCHIK | | Mon Sep 05 1988 23:56 | 14 |
| Just noticed in Rambam (Maimonides) Laws of Shmittah & Yovel chpt
10 para 3 a rather confusing comment that is much debated/discussed
by the commentators ad loc: during the 2nd Temple period they did
not observe the Yovel but DID "count" it in order to ...
aha! the "..." ! that's the problem, viz. Rambam's text is unclear
in meaning. He says "in order to sanctify the Shmittah years", but
this seems to be in contradiction to what he says elsewhere, namely
that the Shmittah years do not depend upon counting Yovel (as we
all know). See the commentators for further discussion. I haven't
really had a chance to figure it out but I just wanted to put you
on to a specific text that relates to your own feeling in .4
-Zaitch
(I guess that is what I'll use as my name in this note!)
|
530.6 | | NEWVAX::LAFFERTY | Future hindsight | Sun Sep 18 1988 01:25 | 29 |
| T'anks for the reference.
It sounds like from this, then, that even though Yovel was not observed,
that it was still reckoned. I wondered if this might not be the case at
some point, in some communities, in the time since Yovel was last observed.
I would like to entertain comments on the following passage as a brief
and accurate assessment of the intent and value of Yovel observance.
The wonderful provision of the Jubilee year can better be appreciated
when one considers, not only the beneficial results to the individual
Israelites, but especially the effect on the nation as a whole.
When the Jubilee arrangement was properly observed, the nation was
restored in the Jubilee year to the full and proper theocratic state
that G-d purposed and established at the beginning. Government was
on a sound basis. The national economy would always be stable and
the nation would have no crushing debt. The Jubilee brought about
a stable standard of land values and also prevented a great internal
debt and its resultant false prosperity, bringing inflation, deflation
and business depression. The benefits to the individual strengthened
the nation, for none would be underprivileged and crushed into
unproductiveness by a bad economic situation, but all could contribute
their talents and abilities to the national welfare. With the Almighty
providing blessings of the yield of the ground and with the education
that was provided, Israel, while obedient, would enjoy the perfect
government and prosperity that only true theocracy could provide.
Thanks again,
lee
|
530.7 | When is/was it? | DECSIM::GROSS | Wanted: inane comment to fill this slot | Mon Sep 19 1988 10:04 | 4 |
| Does anyone know the actual date of the Sabbatical year or the last Jubilee
year?
Dave
|
530.8 | 5747 | GRECO::FRYDMAN | wherever you go...you're there | Mon Sep 19 1988 10:40 | 4 |
| The Hebrew year 5747 ( sept 86-sept 87) was the last Sabbatical
(shimta) year.
---Av
|
530.9 | or we could switch to the chicken standard | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | obviously, member of some cabal | Mon Sep 19 1988 12:58 | 10 |
| er:.6
That _does_ have a :-) attached to it, doesn't it?
Definition of "perfect theocracy": When _I_ rule with absolute power,
and everyone else agrees that I'm God's true one and only prophet.
(Relative addressing applies: All readers use first person. Note
potential for endless loop.)
BTW, what would your mortgage payments be if there were 3 years
left to Yovail and you needed to borrow $150,000?
|
530.10 | Rent, with option to rent again? | YOUNG::YOUNG | | Mon Sep 19 1988 16:09 | 11 |
| Re: .-1
Would you borrow $150,000 for a three year rental? That is $50,000
per year, over $4,000 per month. The total for 50 years would be
$2.5 million. Even around Boston, that is expensive property!
Property "values" are highest after Jubilee, and drop until the
next one.
Paul
|