American Orthodoxy

Semikhah and Mesorah: A Response to the OU Panel

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Editors’ Note: The Orthodox Union’s recent statement regarding professional roles for women in Orthodox synagogues has sparked heated debate for the sake of heaven. In the hopes of contributing to that ongoing conversation, Lehrhaus has convened a symposium to reflect upon the statement. Over the course of the next week we will post further installments, so please check back frequently. Each contribution will contain links to the other pieces in the symposium.

Symposium Contributions: Sara WolkenfeldTzvi SinenskyShmuel WiniarzLeah SarnaRivka Press SchwartzMatt ReingoldLaura Shaw FrankChaim TwerskiChaim Trachtman,  Shayna GoldbergShaul RobinsonTodd BermanJeffrey FoxElli FischerJeffrey WoolfZev Eleff & Ari Lamm

Jeffrey S. Fox

This essay analyzes the opening shiur in Shiurei Ha-Rav (Jerusalem: Mesorah, 2005), Rabbi Eliakim Koenigsberg’s book of summaries and transcriptions of Rabbi Soloveitchik’s shiurim on Yoreh De’ah.[1] The shiur’s analysis of women serving as shohatot, ritual slaughterers, has recently been used by the rabbinic panel of the OU to articulate the panel’s opposition to women serving as Orthodox clergy. In the opening two essays on Rabbi Soloveitchik’s shiur on the laws of Kashrut, the Rav offers two approaches to the following  passage in the Yoreh De’ah section of Shulkhan Arukh ( 1:1):

הכל שוחטין לכתחלה, אפילו נשים. הגה: יש אומרים שאין להניח נשים לשחוט שכבר נהגו שלא לשחוט. וכן המנהג שאין הנשים שוחטות.

Everyone is permitted to slaughter from the outset, even women. Rema: And some say that we should not permit women to slaughter because the custom has developed not to slaughter. And that is the custom, that women do not slaughter.

Rabbi Yosef Karo decided that women may, if properly trained, serve as shohatot.  That ruling was in accordance with the simple understanding of the Gemara and the majority of Rishonim (See Tosafot Chullin 2a “Ha-kol Shohtin,Rosh Chullin 1:1(2), Mishneh Torah: Sefer Kedushah- Hil. Shehitah 4:4, Rashba Torat ha-Bayit 1:1, 7a, Ran on Rif page 2a “v-kulan she-shahatu) The Rema, in response, claims that we should not allow women to do shehitah and that such is the minhag.

Rabbi Soloveitchik’s Approach to Women as Shohatot:

It is important to state upfront that this is not a conversation of equals. The gadlut of the Rav far surpasses my learning. However, I feel that responding to a written essay is appropriate. Everyone who is writing about this sensitive issue must do so from a place of honest humility. I would like to analyze the written position of the Rav and make three basic claims:

  1. This first claim will address a textual problem within the shiur. Rabbi Koenigsberg, in his transcription of the notes from the shiur, relies on a text from the Semak that does not appear in the standard printed edition.
  2. Second, the Rav, based on his understanding of the exclusion of women from shehitah, read Rambam’s approach to serarah in a way that leads to an internal contradiction within Rambam.
  3. The creative application of a ‘custom of abstention’ to explain a passage from the medieval period reflects a world in which there was no reality of advanced women’s learning in the Orthodox community. In addition, the Shakh’s position, which is central to the Rav’s thesis, is only operational regarding matters of ‘common’ practice. Some later aharonim appear to ultimately reject the Shakh.

These three claims make the article of the rabbinic panel read less like a formal pesak and more like rabbinic advice (חוות דעת). It is certainly the case that different rabbinic scholars can and should express their opinions on matters of communal policy. No one questions the gadlut be-Torah, and indeed the courage, of these rabbanim, but given the range of possible positions on this matter, it is unwise for the OU to adopt this paper as a matter of national policy.

Claim I: The text of the Semak

The Rav claims that a woman may not serve as a shohetet because it violates Rambam’s understanding of serarah (coercive communal authority) or mesimah (appointment).[2] The Rav links this minhag to serarah in order to help explain a strange formulation found in the Kol Bo (n.107) and cited by the Beit Yosef (Yoreh De’ah 1). The Kol Bo quoted the Semak (Mitzvat Aseh n.197) as saying “women may only שוחטות לעצמן—slaughter for themselves.” One implication of this phrase might be that women may not slaughter on behalf of others, or the community.

It is important to note that the Beit Yosef (Yoreh De’ah 1) quoted the Kol Bo’s version of the Semak (Mitzvat Aseh n.197) in which the word “לעצמן—for themselves” appears. The Agur (Hil. Shehitah, Siman 1062) cites the Semak in the same way. However, the standard printed editions of the Semak do not have this phrase. The standard printed editions simple have נשים שוחטות without any qualification. The Orhot Hayyim (Shehitah n.3) does not have the words “for themselves.” Much of the Rav’s shiur is built on the distinction between “לעצמן”, and for the community.

In his first comment in Yoreh De’ah, the Peri Hadash accepts the inference that לעצמן means that women may slaughter for themselves and not the community. However, he does not refer to Rambam and serarah. Instead, he claims that the job of the town-shohet requires hard work (זריזות גדול) and that women are too lazy (עצלניות) to perform the task. This is not a generous way to speak about women. However, it is clear that the Peri Hadash did not see the appointment of a woman as the town-shohet as a problem of serarah or minuy as he forbids that job for tangential reasons that I think all would agree no longer apply to women today.

To be clear, the position of Rema himself is based on the Agur (Hil. Shehitah, Siman 1062) who simply states that women may not serve as shohatot (the Agur is, in turn, based on the unusual approach of Eldad ha-Dani, quoted in Tosafot on Chullin 2a “Ha-kol Shohtin”).[3] Rema did not quote the Kol Bo’s version of the Semak. Rather, he stated unequivocally that the minhag is that women may not slaughter. The Rav explains his inference from the Kol Bo’s citation of the Semak that women may not serve as a shohetet for others because it is a position of communal authority. He posits that once there was an office of the “town-shohet”, that appointment could not be filled by a woman.

Serarah and Converts

Before turning to the internal contradiction created within Rambam, let us understand the full extent of the Rav’s position. Rambam’s approach is based on a parallel between the types of serarah that women and converts may attain. In chapter one of Hilkhot Melakhim, Maimonides first describes the limitations of the convert (Hal. 4) and then moves on to women (Hal. 5).  There is a connection between the limitations placed on female leadership and what might be available to converts. The halakhah is that a convert may serve as a shohet (Mishneh Torah, Hil. Shehitah 4:4; Tur, Yoreh De’ah 1; Darkhei Moshe 2). If that is case, asks the Rav, how are we to distinguish between women, who may not serve as shohatot, and converts, who are permitted to serve as shohtim?

Accordingly, the Rav offered two different categories of appointments: מינוי של חשיבות ומינוי של שררה  an appointment of importance and an appointment of (communal) authority. For the Rav, a convert can attain the status of an appointment of importance, חשיבות, just not one of authority. Therefore, since the shohet is only a מינוי של חשיבות (an appointment of importance) a convert may serve in that capacity. However, since a woman may not serve in any kind of מינויneither of importance nor of authority—she may not function even as a shohetet.

The Rav’s position is very extreme. According to Rabbi Soloveitchik, the appointment of a woman to nearly any position of communal leadership would ultimately violate his understanding of serarah. For most of the Modern Orthodox community today, placing these kinds of limitations on the leadership potential of either converts or women is anathema. In theory, being hired or appointed by a synagogue to serve as a halakhic adviser (Yo’etzet Halakhah) ought to be at least a position of importance. In addition, there are women who serve in administrative positions of Modern Orthodox day schools across the country. These professional capacities would likely fall under the category of a forbidden appointment for the Rav.

Claim II: Rambam on ShehitahInternal Contradiction

Rambam (Hil. Shehitah 4:4) rules that women may serve as shohatot. To him, it is clear that a woman may study with an expert and be trained by a hakham in order that she too may be considered an expert (מומחה). Rav Moshe Isserles, the Rema, in his Darkhei Moshe on the Tur (Yoreh De’ah 1:3) claims that the practice and requirement of receiving formal training and a kabalah has its source in Rambam himself (Hil. Shehitah 4:3).

The language of Rambam is significant in order to understand some basic shehitah terminology. He wrote (Hil. Shehitah 4:4):

היודע הלכות שחיטה ושחט בפני חכם עד שנעשה רגיל הוא הנקרא מומחה. וכל המומחין שוחטין לכתחלה בינן לבין עצמן. ואפילו נשים ועבדים אם היו מומחין הרי אלו שוחטין לכתחלה.

 One who knows the laws of slaughtering and slaughtered in front of a hakham until they became accustomed is called an expert. And all experts may slaughter even from the outset by themselves (בינן לבין עצמן—meaning without someone watching over their practice). And [this law applies] even to women and slaves, for if they became experts they can slaughter from the outset.

When Rambam uses the phrase “בינן לבין עצמן—by themselves,” he does not mean to imply that women who are experts may only slaughter for themselves. Rather, his point is that once a person has become an expert they no longer need supervision to ensure that they are carrying out the physical behaviors according to the law. This usage is likely what the Kol Bo’s version of the Semak means as well.[4]

What emerges from Rambam’s own words is that serving as a shohet(et), which requires training and expertise, simply cannot be a violation of serarah or mesimah. The Rav argued that the implementation of training and the granting of a degree (kabalah) shifted the status of the shochet(et) from “איסור והיתר בעלמא (just a prohibited and forbidden matter)” to a “מינוי הקהל (communal appointment).” Therefore, women became ineligible.[5] However, I submit that this position cannot be maintained within the language of Rambam himself. It may be a way to explain the Kol Bo’s citation of the Semak (which does not reflect the extant version of the Semak himself, and is not the most convincing read of that passage), but it does not work within Rambam.[6]

What is perhaps even more interesting is that semikhah in the twenty-first century is often categorized as “איסור והיתר בעלמא—‘just’ a prohibited and forbidden matter,” which is not, by definition, a problem of serarah.

While the Rav’s lomdus here is creative in helping to understand certain language from the rishonim, it does not reflect the lived experience of many Jews in the twenty-first century.[7] The Rav is one very important voice among many poskim who have addressed this question. He happens to have concluded in a restrictive manner based on an unconvincing read of Rambam.

Claim III: מנהג בשב ואל תעשהA Negative Custom

This brings us to the first approach outlined in the Rav’s essay. Here the Rav develops an idea that he calls a “מנהג בשב ואל תעשה (a negative custom or a custom of abstention).” Although the Mishnah (Eduyot 2:2, Zevahim 12:4) states explicitly: “לא ראינו ,אינו ראיה (not seeing something cannot serve as evidence),” there are instances of communal decisions to abstain from a certain behavior that can develop a kind of negative custom.

The Shakh, in a number of places, develops the idea, based on a teshuvah of the Maharik (Siman 171), that within the context of customs it is possible that not seeing or not doing something (לא ראינו) can serve as evidence (ראיה) of a negative custom (See Yoreh De’ah 1:1). The Rav points out a few examples from the laws of mourning in which customs of abstention developed after the Talmud (See Rema Yoreh De’ah 381:1, 389:3).

The Shakh, in his comment on Hoshen Mishpat (37:38) explains that the a negative minhag can only be created in the context of something that “arises regularly,” שכיח טובא. The Shakh himself wrote in the beginning of Hilkhot Milah (264:2) that the practice to not have women serve as mohalot cannot be considered a minhag with obligatory force because it is so unusual: “דבר שאינו מצוי אין בו מנהa matter that is uncommon is not subject to [the force] of minhag.” At the end of this comment he refers to a comment he made in Hilkhot Nidah (Siman 190:3): “ועוד דהדבר ידוע שדבר שאינו מצוי אין שייך בו מנהג—and it is known that [the concept of] minhag does not apply regarding something uncommon.”[8]

The Shakh then refers to a similar comment made by Rambam towards the end of the 11th chapter of Hilkhot Shehitah. In Halakha 13 Rambam is dealing with the question of what happens if an organ gets taken away before it can be inspected for treifot. He says that we can rely on a presumption that the organ was healthy and that the animal is therefore kosher. He concludes by saying, “ואין בזה מנהג שדבר שאינו מצוי אין בו מנהג—and this is not a matter of custom, because customs are not instituted regarding cases that are not commonplace.”

Rabbi Yonatan Eibescheutz, in his commentary on Hoshen Mishpat wrote (Urim ve-Tumim, 37:22):

ואני איני מבין בזה דבריו, דודאי במקום דהדבר תלוי וידוע דיש מקומות שנהגו כך או כך, או דיש מחלוקת בפוסקים, שפיר הוי לא ראינו ראיה.

And I do not understand [the Shakh] in this matter. For certainly in a place where some matter was unsettled and it is known that some places behave like this and some like that, or there is a debate among the poskim, then we can say that ‘not seeing’ can serve as evidence.

Rabbi Eibescheutz concludes his comment in support of the Beit Yosef and leaves the Shakh with a need for further analysis (צ”ע). He may not be rejecting the Shakh entirely, but even if he does not go that far, he is clearly not convinced by the Shakh’s application of this rule.

In his shiur, the Rav only referred to the Shakh’s comment in Yoreh Deah (1:1) in which he relies on the teshuvah of Maharik. While the Shakh does say that minhagim of abstention or withholding can be created, he explicitly says that this only possible in a manner that is common or regular. Given the unusual nature of a panel of esteemed rabbinical scholars convened on behalf of this OU, one is hard pressed to claim that this is a “common” question. It is, in fact, the unusually sensitive nature of this question, that necessitated this entire panel. The issue of the granting of ordination to women and their appointment as members of clergy is a thoroughly new and uncommon question.

Three Decades of Women Learning 

It is hard to overstate just how different the reality of women’s advanced learning is today than it was twenty-five or thirty years ago. In the universe of the Orthodox community pre-1990, it would have been unreasonable to imagine a group of women learning for semichah. There were, no doubt, over the course of Jewish history individual women who excelled in learning and who perhaps deserved to receive semikhah. However, until:

  1. Modern Orthodox High Schools began teaching Gemara to girls on par with their male colleagues and;
  2. those same women had places to learn in Israel that could extend their skills and;
  3. shiurim to attend at Stern or on a college campus;

no one could even have asked the question.[9]

To claim that the Rav would apply the notion of a negative minhag to an idea that existed only in the abstract is untenable. The year that the Rav passed away was also the first year of the Drisha Scholars’ Circle. The only place in America where women could learn Gemara and/or Halakhah in a full-time setting was Drisha. There were fewer than a dozen women who had those skills. It is not reasonable to assert the creation of a minhag of abstention in a world in which no one was asking the question.

There were of course non-Orthodox women who were being ordained as Rabbis by the mid-1980s. For the purposes of defining a custom of abstention, the group of Jews who must be seeking semikhah is the Orthodox community. We do not define the parameters of minhagim based on Jews who do not observe Halakhah in accordance with our worldview.

Conclusion

What emerges from this careful reading of the Rav’s Yoreh De’ah lecture is that there are different ways to read these same sources.[10] At a fundamental level, the OU panel has chosen a specific approach to a certain set of mekorot. However, there are other voices from within the mesorah that lead to a different understanding of this very sensitive issue. This debate is extremely important for the Modern Orthodox community. Future discourse should be based on careful reading(s) of the sources of our tradition. We all need to raise the level of discourse to reach the outcome most in tune with Ha-Kadosh Baruch Hu.


[1] I would like to thank the students of Yeshivat Maharat as well as Rabbanit Devorah Zlochower for their helpful comments and insights in the formation of this article. There may very well be different versions of this shiur as the Rav was well known for revisiting material that he had taught in the past as though it was the first time he was encountering those texts. However, I can only evaluate the Rav’s Torah based on what appears in writing. It was (loosely) translated by Rabbi Gil Student. In addition, Rabbis Aryeh and Dov Frimer used this shiur to argue that the Rav would certainly be against the granting of semikhah to women. I will deal with their claims below.

[2] See Sifrei on Devarim, ed. Louis Finkelstein (New York: Jewish Theological Seminary of America, 1969),  209, lines 5-7. See also Mishneh Torah: Sefer Shoftim, Hil. Melakhim 1:4-5.

[3] Eldad ha-Dani was a Jewish traveler from the ninth century who wrote a small Hebrew handbook of halakhah that dealt with the laws of slaughter. He was from Africa; likely Ethiopia. Many of his traditions violate standard talmudic law.

[4] See the Peri Toar (Yoreh De’ah 1) who explains the word לעצמן from the Kol Bo as “לחודייהו” which is the language of the Rabbis. This is a much more convincing explanation for this strange formulation. In addition, Rabbi Eliyahu Landsaufer, in his Kanfei Yonah uses the phrase in exactly this way.

[5] The formulation of the Rav’s language by Rav Koeningsberg is important here. The key line reads as follows:

”ונראה דמאחר שנהגו ליטול קבלה מחכם כדי לשחוט, ממילא לא חשוב ענין השחיטה כמעשה איסור והיתר בעלמא שכל א‘ ראוי לו, אלא הרי הוא כמינוי הקהל“.

This makes it clear that for the Rav, the receipt of a degree makes the shift from one category to the other automatically (ממילא).

[6] In addition, Rambam’s position on serarah is a minority voice among the rishonim.  The Rav’s expansion to nearly all appointments, is an even greater minority position. See Rabbis Aryeh and Dov Frimer, who wrote: “the fact [is] that a large cadre of leading poskim have disagreed to varying extents with the Rav’s sole reliance on the Rambam, his analysis of serara, and his distinction between serara and minui kahal. Furthermore, many poskim accept the efficacy of democratic elections (kiblu alayhu) as a means of circumventing serara considerations in other communal leadership positions (such as shul presidency and elected political positions), and they may well feel the same about Rabbinic positions).” They also penned an extensive footnote listing those Poskim who disagree in their more complete Hebrew article. I have made a similar claim in my own treatment of the broader question.

[7] Rabbi Michael Broyde and Rabbi Shlomo Brody in a lengthy footnote in their article on Orthodox Women Rabbis (p. 44n.21) responded to the claim of Rabbi Aryeh Frimer that based on this shiur, the Rav would obviously forbid the granting of semikhah to women. They are not convinced at all that this shiur was meant to be a statement about halakhah, but that it appears rather to be an in-depth shiur in lomdus. In addition, it is just as likely that a synagogue president could be a problem of serarah but a shul Rabbi perhaps may not because the rabbi can be fired. They quote a tradition from Rav Ahron Soloveichik to that effect.

[8] See the Peri Megadim, Siftei Da’at 2 who points out that the creation of a custom of abstention can only be done in an area that is commonly found (שכיח טובא). The Mahatzit ha-Shekel (1) assumes as well that women must have been asking explicitly to serve as shohatot and then be turned down in order for the negative custom to develop.

[9] This argument was already made explicitly by Rabbis Broyde and Brody (p. 45) of their above-cited article: “Given the lack of formal education for women, the question of women rabbis, quite simply, did not arise on a regular basis. There is no basis for a mesorah which would assert that women were regularly qualified to serve as rabbis, but did not do so for some halakhic reason.”

[10] For a complete treatment of the nature of semichah today as well as a more complex approach to serarah (authority) please see my prior article.

Jeffrey S. Fox serves as the Rosh haYeshiva and Dean of Faculty of Yeshivat Maharat, the first Orthodox institution to grant semikha to women. Before coming to Maharat, he served as a pulpit Rabbi in New Jersey for nearly seven years.