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Makos, 10
1) AN ENTIRE YESHIVA GOING TO "GALUS"
OPINIONS: Rebbi Yochanan states that if a Rosh Yeshiva killed accidentally, then his
entire Yeshiva must go to Galus with him to the Ir Miklat. What is the reason for
Rebbi Yochanan's ruling?
(a) The SEDEI YITZCHAK points out that the previous Gemara teaches that when a
student killed accidentally and is sent to Galus, his Rav must go with him. The
Gemara bases this ruling on the verse that says that the accidental killer "will flee
to one of these cities *and live*" (Devarim 4:42). The phrase "and live" means that
the exiled person must have the basic necessities for life, one of which is the
ability to learn Torah, and therefore the Rav must go to the Ir Miklat with his
student. Similarly, when a Rosh Yeshiva is sent to Galus, it is essential to his life
that his students accompany him so that he will be able to teach Torah, for that is
his life. In this vein, Rebbi states (later on this Daf) that "I learned much Torah
from my teachers, and more from my colleagues, and from my students I learned most of
all." Accordingly, a Rav's life of Torah hinges mostly on his relationship with his
students. Once the Gemara established that this reason applies to a student, it ce
rtainly also applies with regard to a Rav.
(b) The IYUN YAKOV has an entirely different approach. He learns that the requirement
for the students to go to Galus with their teacher is not related at all to the needs
of the teacher. Rather, it is based on a different statement of Rebbi Yochanan. In
Chagigah (15b), Rebbi Yochanan is quoted as saying that a person should endeavor to
learn Torah only from a teacher who is "similar to a Mal'ach of Hashem." A person
whom Hashem permits to kill another Jew accidentally is not one who is similar to a
Mal'ach (see Insights to Makos 9:2:e:1). The students of that person are held
responsible for not thoroughly investigating to make sure that their teacher was fit
to teach them. Therefore, the students are punished by having to go to Galus with
their teacher.
The Iyun Yakov adds that this logic does not apply to a mere friend of a person who
killed accidentally. We do not say that the friend of an accidental killer must go
into Galus with his friend for not being careful to ensure that his friend was free
of sin. This is because it is only with regard to choosing a spiritual mentor, a
Torah teacher, that one who is not careful is held liable.
This answer, though, seems difficult to understand. Why is going to Galus with their
teacher the punishment for having chosen an unworthy teacher? If they were not
supposed to choose him as their teacher in the first place, then why do we make them
continue to learn from him?
Perhaps we can explain the answer of the Iyun Yakov based on the words of the RAMBAM
in Hilchos Teshuvah (2:1). The Rambam states that the genuine repentance is achieved
when the former transgressor is given the same opportunity to sin but refrains from
sinning. If the students would stay in their town while their teacher goes to Galus,
they would never have the opportunity to do true Teshuvah, since they would not have
the opportunity to learn from their exiled teacher. We make them aware of their
misdeed by sentencing them to Galus, and we thereby give them the opportunity to stay
away from their unworthy teacher while in the Ir Miklat. This makes them into true
Ba'alei Teshuvah. (Y. Montrose)
2) LEARNING TORAH FROM AN UNWORTHY TEACHER
QUESTION: Rebbi Yochanan states that if a Rosh Yeshiva killed accidentally, then his
entire Yeshiva must go to Galus with him to the Ir Miklat. Earlier, the Gemara
derived from the ruling that a teacher must go to Galus with his student who killed
accidentally that a teacher should not accept to teach an unworthy student, since
that student might kill accidentally and be sentenced to Galus. Why does the Gemara
not deduce the same thing from Rebbi Yochanan's Halachah -- that a student should not
learn Torah from an unworthy teacher? (MAHARSHA, ARUCH LA'NER, and others)
ANSWERS:
(a) The YALKUT GERSHONI answers with a simple explanation. The statement regarding a
student who kills accidentally was said by an early source, a Beraisa. The Beraisa's
statement supports the dictum of Rebbi Zeira (an Amora who lived later), who says
that one should not teach an unworthy student. The statement regarding a teacher who
kills accidentally was said by Rebbi Yochanan. It is Rebbi Yochanan himself who says
in Chagigah (15b) that a student must endeavor to learn Torah from a worthy teacher.
We cannot support Rebbi Yochanan's statement from a comment that he himself made!
(b) The IMREI TZVI explains that for a Rav to have to move his family to another city
in order to be near his exiled student is an extremely difficult ordeal. Such an
ordeal warns every teacher to be careful not to accept an unworthy student. In
contrast, the nature of students is that they often leave their homes to study Torah
with a certain Rav. It is no more of an inconvenience to be in one town away from
home than to be in another town away from home. Therefore, there is nothing in this
statement which essentially warns a student not to learn from an unworthy Rabbi. (Y.
Montrose)
10b
3) AN ACCIDENTAL KILLING WITH NO WITNESSES
OPINIONS: The Gemara describes one of the ways in which Hashem brings
justice to killers. If one person killed accidentally and without witnesses
(and thus he cannot be sent to an Ir Miklat), and another person killed
intentionally and without witnesses (and thus he cannot be put to death by
Beis Din), Hashem causes them to go to the same place, where the person who
killed accidentally falls off of a ladder in front of witnesses, and lands
on -- and kills -- the person who killed intentionally. Each person thereby
receives the proper punishment that he deserves -- the intentional killer
gets killed, and the accidental killer is sent to Galus.
Why does the accidental killer need to go to Galus? The purpose of going to
Galus is to get protection from the Go'el ha'Dam. If no one saw him kill by
accident, then the Go'el ha'Dam does not know who killed his relative, and
thus the killer is in no danger such that he should need to seek refuge in
the Ir Miklat! (MAHARSHA)
ANSWERS: Our question presumes that the purpose of going to the Ir Miklat is
for the sake of getting protection from the Go'el ha'Dam. In order to answer
this question, we must take a deeper look into what is involved with going
to an Ir Miklat. There seem to be three possibilities.
(a) The MAHARSHA writes, as we assumed, that the underlying reason of being
sent to an Ir Miklat is to protect the accidental killer from his victim's
relative, the Go'el ha'Dam, who has the right to avenge his relative's death
as long as the killer is not in an Ir Miklat. Even when the case of the
accidental killer cannot be judged in court because there were no proper
witnesses, nevertheless if the Go'el ha'Dam determines to his satisfaction
that the person actually killed (for example, through the admission of the
killer himself, or through witnesses whom the court does not accept), and he
kills the accidental killer based on this information, Beis Din cannot
punish him, since Beis Din cannot prove that he was wrong and that the
accused killer did not kill. Therefore, the accidental killer who killed
without witnesses might feel confident that no one will try to kill him,
while the the Go'el ha'Dam might actually try to kill him. In order to
protect him, Hashem arranges that he kills again b'Shogeg in front of
witnesses, thereby being forced to go to an Ir Miklat. This seems to be the
intention of the Maharsha.
(b) However, there seems to be an additional purpose for going to an Ir
Miklat. Going to an Ir Miklat is meant to be a Kaparah, an atonement, for
the killer, as we find earlier in Makos (2b) and in Shevu'os (8a).
Consequently, there should be a purpose in going to Galus even when no one
is pursuing the accidental killer in order to kill him.
This is also evident from the Mishnah later (11b), which derives from verses
that the accidental killer "shall live in the Ir Miklat, and he shall die in
the Ir Miklat, and he shall be buried in the Ir Miklat." This means that it
is a Mitzvah for him to stay in the Ir Miklat aside from the purpose of
escaping the Go'el ha'Dam. In addition, the Gemara there quotes a Beraisa
that teaches that if a person was sentenced to go to Galus and then died,
his bones are taken to be buried in the Ir Miklat. Obviously, his bones do
not go there in order to seek refuge from the Go'el ha'Dam. It is clear from
these and other sources that the main reason for Galus is atonement, and not
only protection.
The SEFER HA'CHINUCH also writes that the purpose of fleeing to an Ir Miklat
is both to protect the killer from the Go'el ha'Dam and to attain Kaparah.
The Aruch la'Ner therefore explains that an accidental killer must go to
Galus even if there are no witnesses. This is because he requires atonement
even when there are no witnesses. The Go'el ha'Dam, though, is not permitted
to kill him, as stated above. Since the accidental killer was negligent
about attaining atonement by going to Galus on his own accord, Hashem causes
him to kill accidentally in front of witnesses so that he will be *forced*
to go to Galus and achieve atonement.
(c) However, the words of the RITVA (2a and 2b) imply that there is another
reason for Galus. Galus is a *punishment* that is given to an accidental
killer. The killer must live in fear of the Go'el ha'Dam as a punishment for
his accidental killing. For this reason, the Ritva (2a) writes that if the
killer admits to having killed b'Shogeg, he will *not* be sentenced to
Galus, since the Go'el ha'Dam will not be allowed to kill him based on his
own admission (this is because such admission is similar to admitting that
one deserves to be killed, in which case he is not believed). This implies
that there is no purpose in going to the Ir Miklat when the killer does not
need to seek protection from the Go'el ha'Dam (i.e. when the Go'el ha'Dam is
not appointed by Beis Din and given permission to kill the killer). We find
support for this view in the Gemara (Sanhedrin 45b) which says that when
there is no Go'el ha'Dam, Beis Din appoints a Go'el ha'Dam. This shows that
going to Galus when there is no Go'el ha'Dam pursuing him is pointless.
Additional proof is cited from the Gemara in Kesuvos (33b) which cites the
verse that teaches that when a person mortally wounds someone, we lock up
the perpetrator until the fate of the victim is determined. If he dies, then
the perpetrator is punished appropriately. The Gemara suggests that the
verse might be referring to a person who hits someone accidentally, and the
victim's life is in mortal danger; we incarcerate the perpetrator until the
fate of his victim is determined (if he dies, then the perpetrator is
sentenced to Galus). It is clear from that Gemara that Galus is a punishment
that is administered by Beis Din, similar to the punishment of Misah for a
person who killed b'Mezid.
According to this understanding of the purpose of Galus, our Gemara is
easily understood. Hashem wants to punish the person who killed
accidentally, without witnesses, by having him kill again accidentally in
front of witnesses.
How, though, are we to reconcile these statements of the Gemara with the
statements mentioned earlier (in (b) above), which imply a different purpose
to the law of going to Galus? The answer is that there are two different
purposes for Galus. One purpose is to attain Kaparah. For the purpose of
attaining Kaparah, a killer should flee to the Ir Miklat even if no one is
pursuing him. The second purpose is the element of punishment. For the
purpose of giving him a punishment, the Torah advises Beis Din to appoint a
Go'el ha'Dam to pursue the killer.
When the Ritva writes that a person who admits to killing accidentally does
not receive Galus since there is no Go'el ha'Dam, he does not mean that the
killer does not have a Mitzvah to run to the Ir Miklat. Rather, he should go
to the Ir Miklat because of the need to attain Kaparah. The Ritva means that
Beis Din does not *sentence* him to Galus, because Beis Din never enforces a
punishment which is solely for Kaparah, as the Ritva quotes in the name of
the RAMBAN (2b).
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