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Prepared by Rabbi P. Feldman of Kollel Iyun Hadaf, Yerushalayim Rosh Kollel: Rabbi Mordecai Kornfeld
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Chulin 73
CHULIN 73 (14 Nisan) - dedicated l'Iluy Nishmas Chayah bas Aryeh Leib Shpira
(nee Sole), on the day of her Yahrzeit.
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1) DOES THE FORBIDDEN LIMB BECOME "NEVEILAH"?
(a) Answer #2 (Ravina): A Mishkav is not destined to be cut,
but the limb of the fetus is destined to be cut (because
it is forbidden);
1. Anything destined to be cut is considered to be cut
already.
2. Suggestion: This is like R. Meir.
i. (Mishnah): If a handle of a vessel is too long
and is destined to be cut, when immersing the
vessel, one must immerse as much of the handle
as will be kept;
ii. R. Yehudah says, the entire handle must be
immersed.
3. Rejection: All agree in the case of the fetus -
since foods are not strongly connected, we view them
as if they were already cut.
(b) Question: According to Ula, we understand why the Mishnah
said that the limb was cut - if not, the fetus would be
Tahor;
1. According to Ravina, even if the limb was not cut,
the fetus is Tamei!
(c) Answer: This is true; the Seifa says that it was cut
merely for parallel structure to the Reisha.
(d) (Mishnah): The fetus is like something that touched a
slaughtered Treifah.
(e) Question: A slaughtered Treifah is not Tamei!
(f) Answer (Shmuel's father): A slaughtered Treifah is
Metamei Kodshim (mid'Rabanan).
(g) (Mishnah): We find that slaughter of a Treifah inhibits
Tum'as Neveilah - similarly, slaughter of the mother
inhibits Tum'as Neveilah from a limb (that left the
womb)!
(h) (Beraisa - R. Meir): If you say that slaughter of the
mother is Metaher the limb, it should also permit it (to
be eaten)!
(i) Chachamim: It is easier to permit something which is not
part of the slaughtered animal than something which is
part of it.
1. If part of the fetus was cut off (from the fetus)
inside in the mother, slaughter of the mother
permits it; if the spleen or kidneys of the mother
were cut off, they do not become permitted.
(j) Question: How does that answer R. Meir's question?
(k) Answer (Rava): The Beraisa is abbreviated, it means as
follows:
1. R. Meir: If you say that slaughter of the mother is
Metaher the limb, it should also permit it!
2. Chachamim: We learn from a Treifah - slaughter is
Metaher it, but does not permit it.
3. R. Meir: Slaughter is Metaher the Treifah itself -
you have no source that slaughter of the mother is
Metaher a limb (which is not part of the mother)!
4. Chachamim: Slaughter helps more for something which
is not part of the slaughtered animal than for a
part of it
i. If part of the fetus was cut inside in the
mother, slaughter of the mother permits it; if
the spleen or kidneys of the mother were cut,
they do not become permitted.
(l) Support (that this is the argument - Beraisa - R. Meir):
If you say that slaughter of the mother is Metaher the
limb, it should also permit it!
1. Chachamim: We learn from a Treifah - slaughter is
Metaher it, but does not permit it.
2. R. Meir: Slaughter is Metaher the Treifah itself, or
a dangling limb of an animal - you have no source
that slaughter of the mother is Metaher a limb
(which is not part of the mother)!
3. Chachamim: Slaughter helps more for something which
is not part of the slaughtered animal than for a
part of it.
i. If part of the fetus was cut inside in the
mother, slaughter of the mother permits it; if
the spleen or kidneys of the mother were cut,
they do not become permitted
2) WHEN IS A LIMB CONSIDERED TO HAVE FALLEN OFF?
(a) Version #1 - (Reish Lakish): R. Meir and Chachamim argue
about a dangling limb just like they argue about the limb
of the fetus.
(b) (R. Yochanan): They only argue about the fetus' limb, but
all agree that slaughter makes Nipul (makes a dangling
limb Ever Min ha'Chai, as if it fell off in the animal's
lifetime, it is Tamei.)
1. (R. Yosi bar Chanina): According to R. Yochanan,
Chachamim say that slaughter is Metaher the fetus'
limb but not a dangling limb, because the former
could have become permitted (had the fetus returned
the limb to the womb before slaughter), the latter
could not have.
(c) Question (Beraisa - R. Meir): Slaughter is Metaher the
Treifah itself, or a dangling limb - you have no source
that slaughter of the mother is Metaher the fetus' limb!
73b---------------------------------------73b
1. According to Reish Lakish, we can say that R. Meir
addresses Chachamim according to their reasoning;
i. I hold that slaughter does not Metaher the
fetus' limb nor a dangling limb - even if you
say that it is Metaher a dangling limb, you
have no source for the fetus' limb.
2. The Beraisa cannot be explained according to R.
Yochanan!
(d) Rather, the Amora'im argue as follows.
(e) Version #2 - (Reish Lakish): R. Meir and Chachamim argue
about a dangling limb just like they argue about the limb
of the fetus.
(f) (R. Yochanan): They only argue about the fetus' limb, but
all agree that slaughter does not make Nipul.
1. (R. Yosi bar Chanina): According to R. Yochanan, R.
Meir says that slaughter is Metaher
a dangling limb but not the fetus' limb, because the
former is part of the animal slaughtered, the latter
is not. (End of Version #2)
(g) (R. Yitzchak bar Yosef): All agree that death (without
slaughter) makes Nipul, slaughter does not make Nipul.
(h) Question: What limb does he refer to?
1. It cannot be a fetus' limb that left the womb - they
argue about this!
(i) Answer: He refers to a dangling limb.
(j) Question: Why must he teach this - both of these are
learned from Mishnayos!
1. (Mishnah - R. Meir): If an animal (with a dangling
limb) dies, the meat cannot become Tamei until it is
Huchshar (water falls on it); the limb has Tum'as
Ever Min ha'Chai, not Tum'as Neveilah.
2. (Mishnah - R. Meir): If an animal (with a dangling
limb and flesh) was slaughtered, (the limb and flesh
are) Huchsheru (Lekabel Tum'ah, but it is not Ever
Min ha'Chai); R. Shimon says, they are not
Huchsheru.
(k) Answer: The latter Mishnah could have been understood
differently, that R. Meir says that slaughter makes Nipul
(the limb becomes Ever Min ha'Chai), the flesh is
Huchshar.
(l) Question: But it says 'Huchsheru' (plural)!
(m) Answer: This could refer to dangling flesh and meat that
separated (after slaughter) from a dangling limb.
(n) Question: Why must the Tana teach both, surely the law of
Hechsher is the same for both!
(o) Answer: One might have thought, since the limb is (after
slaughter) Ever Min ha'Chai, which has a severe Tum'ah,
meat that separates from it does not need Hechsher - he
teaches, this is not so.
3) THE PROHIBITION OF A DANGLING LIMB
(a) (Rav Yosef): Rabah bar bar Chanah supports R. Yitzchak
bar Yosef.
1. (Beraisa): "Do not eat meat torn in the field" -
this includes dangling limbs and flesh, in Behemos,
Chayos and birds.
2. (Rabah bar bar Chanah): The prohibition is only
Rabbinic.
(b) (Rav Yosef citing Rav): If one eats it, he is lashed.
(c) A Talmid: No - Rav holds, one who eats it is not lashed.
1. Rav Huna: On whom should we rely?
2. Rav Yosef: Rav said both (in different cases)!
i. If the animal died (without slaughter), the
limb is Ever Min ha'Chai, one is lashed for
eating it;
ii. If the animal was slaughtered, the limb is
forbidden only mid'Rabanan.
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