Letters. Jewish Action THE MAGAZINE OF THE ORTHODOX UNION Smoking Ban Takes Heat

Similar documents
Letters. Jewish Action THE MAGAZINE OF THE ORTHODOX UNION Shemittah Simplified

DEPARTMENTS. 2 Letters 6 President s Message Making Welcoming Shuls Stephen J. Savitsky. 8 Chairman s Message Gerald M. Schreck

Memories of Stockholm

Jewish Action THE MAGAZINE OF THE ORTHODOX UNION

InsidetheOU Ben Zakkai Reception: A Smashing Success

Rabbi Moshe Feinstein s Position Concerning Brain [-stem] Death Rabbi Shabtai A. Hacohen Rappaport

The Study of Medicine by Kohanim

A Good Life, A Good Death : Hebrew Perspective. Rabbi Barry M Kinzbrunner, MD Miami, FL

Downloading Music from Sharing Websites

Relationship of Science to Torah HaRav Moshe Sternbuch, shlita Authorized translation by Daniel Eidensohn

Science Series. Organ Donation. Can We Be Donors?

Naming of an Improperly Circumcised Child

Question : Reform's Position On...Homosexuality

The Halachah Of Kidneys

Music During Sefiras Ha Omer

Excerpts from: SPECIAL REPORT TO READERS OF The URANTIA Book, April (Minor editing to facilitate translation)

The Responsa That Led to Finding the Three Kidnapped Boys from Gush Etzion

THE TORAH U-MADDA JOURNAL

community. Observance of Halacha and increased Torah study are fundamental

Transplant debate New Jersey Jewish News. Bill raises conflicts among Orthodox on permissibility of organ donation

Rabbi Moshe I. Hauer

Brain-Stem Death and Organ Donation

Laws of Shabbat - Class #23

December, 2005 Orthodox Union. Intern Appointed

"Halacha Sources" Highlights - "Hearing" the Megillah

Synagogues effort hopes to harness the power of positive thinking, doing

Is Judaism One Religion or Many? Lo Sisgodedu and Its Contemporary Applications

Daily Living - Class #22

Librarian s Lobby By Daniel D. Stuhlman January 2007 Helping a Researcher Learn About KINS

SHE'AILOS U'TESHUVOS: COUNTING SEFIRAS HA-OMER UNINTENTIONALLY

CHAZARAS HA-SHATZ - WHAT FOR?

Why I am not a Conservative Jew (Part 2)

INQUIRIES 1. Inquiry QUESTIONS FROM ISRAEL ON PROSELYTISM

The Slifkin Affair Revisited Part 4: The Challenge of Truth

not only be an act of patriotism on my part, but that I would be rendering a very important service to the Orthodox Jewish community. Imagine, he said

ATTORNEY SOLICITATIONS FOR COMMITTEE REPRESENTATION WHAT RULES APPLY?

Organ Transplants: Responsa

The Use of Mausoleums for Jewish Burial

Southern Maryland Christian Academy Middle School Summer Bible Assignment

ONE VOTE FOR THE HETER MECHIRA. A Sermon delivered on Parshat Chayei Sara, November 3, Rabbi Haskel Lookstein

Burial of a Non Jewish Spouse and Children

WASHING BEFORE A MEAL: QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS (PART 1) THE PROCEDURE

- dbhbn ovrct. s xc. dxezd zexewn. y`xd - mipey`xd - 48 ohkaurh,racn,kkfn

Conversion to Jewish Faith

John Benjamins Publishing Company

CONFLICT: INDIVIDUAL VS. CONGREGATIONAL CUSTOMS

Laws of Shabbat - Class #24

Department of Community & Synagogue

PRESS DEFINITION AND THE RELIGION ANALOGY

Statements of Support from the Scouting Family

Max Gelb 3/15/11. These words, from the book of Isaiah, beautifully reflect Judaism s focus on time over

HOW GOOD IS GOOD ENOUGH?

Response to Rabbi Marc D. Angel s Article on Gerut

Our National Anthem. Hamaayan / The Torah Spring Edited by Shlomo Katz. Author : Shlomo Katz. Ha'azinu

The Posek: His Role and Responsibility

ASK U. - The Kollel Institute

Hilchos Nida Shiur 1

VOLUME I: NUMBER 3: CAUSING INJURY TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY

Democracy and Judaism

NIGHT SEMICHA PROGRAM. Shiur. Hilchos Shabbos. Based on the Hebrew sheets of HaGaon Rav Yitzchak Berkovits shlit a

Where the Truth Lies Ani Eisav Bechorcha

Get Instant Access to ebook Yalkut Yosef PDF at Our Huge Library YALKUT YOSEF PDF. ==> Download: YALKUT YOSEF PDF

9. YASHAN AND CHADASH: OLD IS

CHAPTER 1. The Obligation for a Gentile Society to Set Up a Judicial System

Docket No.: NEW YORK SUPREME COURT APPELLATE DIVISION SECOND DEPARTMENT. In the Matter of the Arbitration of Certain Controversies Between

The Network of Regional Batei Din for Conversion. The Rabbinical Council of America and The Beth Din of America

DEMOCRACY HALACHA. Daat Emet

~ lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll

RECITING SHEMA AND SHEMONEH ESREI: PROPER TIMES

Avrom Silver Jerusalem College for Adults

Honoring Seder - Night Pledges

What Could Be Wrong with a Compliment?

11 FATAL MISTAKES CHURCHES MAKE DURING CAPITAL CAMPAIGNS

Summary: Parashat Be Shallah. Can t Touch This: Muktzeh and the Essence of Shabbat

MEDICAL DURABLE POWER OF ATTORNEY FOR HEALTH CARE AND DECLARATION FOR USE IN COLORADO

Enabling the Sin Machzek Yiday Ovray Aveira

OC THINK TANK - CLOSING THE BACK DOOR

Moshe Raphael ben Yehoshua (Morris Stadtmauer) o h Tzvi Gershon ben Yoel (Harvey Felsen) o h

CULTURE AND COMMUNICATION STYLE

Moshe Raphael ben Yehoshua (Morris Stadtmauer) o h Tzvi Gershon ben Yoel (Harvey Felsen) o h

PROXY AND DIRECTIVE WITH RESPECT TO HEALTH CARE DECISIONS AND POST-MORTEM DECISIONS

In The Supreme Court of the United States

DA AT TORAH AND RABBINIC AUTHORITY SHIUR 1 - MODERN APPROACHES TO DA AT TORAH d ga, ;ruj - rsbk iufn

Tamar: Teacher of the Jewish People

Case Notes. Religious Schools and Equal Opportunity: Lessons from Goldberg v Korsunski Carmel School

Moshe Raphael ben Yehoshua (Morris Stadtmauer) o h Tzvi Gershon ben Yoel (Harvey Felsen) o h

THE SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH AN ANALYSIS OF STRENGTHS, WEAKNESSES, OPPORTUNITIES, AND THREATS (SWOT) Roger L. Dudley

May a Minor Read from the Torah?

Hilchos Shabbos Volume V Shiur 15

St. Simeon s Interpretation of Matthew 25:31-46 (A)

Confusion Reigns in the So-Called End of Life Arena. On July 10, 2013, a nighmarish story was reported by ABC news.

Rabbi Farber raised two sorts of issues, which I think are best separated:

World-Wide Ethics. Chapter Two. Cultural Relativism

SHABBOS CHANUKAH. by Rabbi Doniel Neustadt

CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT BY THE TWENTY-EIGHTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY Adopted at Indianapolis, Indiana, USA June 2013

Marriage Law and the Protection of Religious Liberty: Implications for Congregational Policies and Practices

Laws of Shabbat - Class #21

Rabbi Shlomo Zalman Auerbach s Stance on End-of-Life Care

Moshe Raphael ben Yehoshua (Morris Stadtmauer) o h Tzvi Gershon ben Yoel (Harvey Felsen) o h

BEIN HAMETZARIM. Rabbi Shlomo Francis

Transcription:

Letters Smoking Ban Takes Heat I am not a smoker and have never been one. I inculcated my children in their formative years with my disdain for cigarettes, and they too, as adults, do not smoke. In that regard, I followed the guidance of my father, an old-school MD general practitioner, who never allowed a cigarette, cigar or pipe in our house when my siblings and I were growing up. Notwithstanding all this, I must express my disappointment in the recent Rabbinical Council of America (RCA) ban on smoking as a violation of halachah, as reported by Jewish Action (spring 2007). In an age of bans on books, the Internet, TV, et cetera, when such bans have, at least in some quarters and at various times, been dismissed or otherwise met with derision to the point of being counterproductive, I respectfully submit that the RCA might have characterized its decision differently. But more to the point, I must respectfully take exception to the substantive conclusion the RCA reached, namely that its analysis must lead to the unambiguous conclusion that smoking is clearly forbidden by [halachah] [emphasis added]. Contrary to the RCA s opinion, it is not at all clear that Rabbi Moshe Feinstein, upon whom the RCA attempts to rely, would support the RCA s conclusion. The RCA argues that given the increased knowledge and awareness of health risks from the time of Rav Moshe s first (lenient) teshuvah in 1964 written within months of the famous Surgeon General Report it is safe to assume that even Rav Moshe would have agreed that [smoking] is forbidden. Conspicuously, however, the RCA omits to report or analyze two teshuvot of Rav Moshe from the early 1980s, in which he had the opportunity, but pointedly 2 JEWISH ACTION Fall 5768/2007 declined, to prohibit smoking, per se. (See Iggerot Moshe, Choshen Mishpat, vol. 2, 18 and 76.) Indeed, in his last teshuvah on the subject, addressed to Dr. Fred Rosner in 1981, Rav Moshe concluded that it is not shayach, relevant, to prohibit smoking. One may reasonably assume that Dr. Rosner, a well-known proponent of prohibiting smoking from a halachic perspective, had sufficiently educated Rav Moshe about the by then certainly wellestablished risks attendant to smoking. Yet, in reliance (in part) on Rambam Hilchot De ot, perek daled, Rav Moshe concluded that it was not shayach to prohibit smoking, i.e., it would appear that according to Rav Moshe, there are categories of things/activities that Chazal should not, or perhaps cannot, prohibit. Such matters conceivably fall under the rubric of davar tivei (cf., Iggerot Moshe, Even Haezer, vol. 1, 63) or are otherwise informed by an individual s ability to exercise his own autonomy in certain matters dealing with his own body and behavior a concept not at all foreign to halachah and that is supported by traditional sources even in cases of pikuach nefesh revolving around medical-related life and death decisions. (See, e.g., Is There Patient Autonomy in Halacha? by Rabbi Zev Schostak, located at www.medethics.org.il /articles/jme/jmeb1/jmeb1.7.asp.) Smoking, according to Rav Moshe, might well fall into that category of personal choice, too. Thus, to maintain, as the RCA does, that Rav Moshe would prohibit smoking today is entirely speculative. Perhaps, therefore, the RCA should supplement or amend its teshuvah by reporting the later teshuvot of Rav Moshe on smoking and then, instead of trying to divine what Rav Moshe would have held today, either objectively distinguish them or simply respectfully decline to follow them in reliance on the other formidable Jewish Action THE MAGAZINE OF THE ORTHODOX UNION www.ou.org/jewish_action Editor Nechama Carmel carmeln@ou.org Literary Editor Matis Greenblatt Assistant Editor Natanya Herzstein Kashrut Editor Rabbi Dr. Eliyahu Safran Contributing Editors Rabbi Yitzchok Adlerstein Dr. Judith Bleich Rabbi Emanuel Feldman Rabbi Hillel Goldberg Rabbi Joseph Grunblatt Daisy Maryles Rabbi Sol Roth Rabbi Jacob J. Schacter Rabbi Berel Wein Media Sales Director Barry Mase 212.613.8176 fax: 212.613.0772 maseb@ou.org Israel Advertising Representative Lisa Rubin 972.2.54.721.1968 Subscriptions Eva Holczer 212.613.8137 Design KZ Creative ORTHODOX UNION President Stephen J. Savitsky Chairman, Board of Directors Harvey Blitz Vice Chairmen, Board of Directors Seymour J. Abrams Morry Weiss Chairman, Board of Governors Martin Nachimson Vice Chairman, Board of Governors Jay L. Schottenstein Publications Commission Gerald M. Schreck, Chairman Joel M. Schreiber, Chairman Emeritus Executive Vice President Rabbi Dr. Tzvi Hersh Weinreb National Director of Planning and Communications David Olivestone Copyright 2007 by the Orthodox Union. Eleven Broadway, New York, NY 10004. Telephone (212) 563-4000 www.ou.org Periodicals Postage Paid, New York, NY and at additional mailing offices. Printed in Canada

gedolim who outright prohibit smoking. Of course, no one who smokes should take comfort from my letter. Though Rav Moshe did not declare smoking to be an issur, prohibited, in his responsum to Dr. Rosner, Rav Moshe strongly urged people not to smoke and to ensure that their children not smoke either. Rav Moshe s 1981 admonition certainly remains shayach today. Regardless of the RCA ban, people certainly should act upon Rav Moshe s strong advice, if not their own common sense, to refrain from smoking. Yitzchak Kasdan Silver Spring, Maryland Congratulations to the RCA for finally taking a stand and issuing a ban against smoking. However, shame on it for taking so long to do this. Smoking has been a proven health risk for many years and countless young students have started smoking because they have seen their teachers and rebbeim smoke and incorrectly assumed that if it s okay for them, it s okay for me. Imagine how many lives could have been saved had this ban been issued earlier not just those of young people who would not have started smoking, but also those of the victims of second-hand smoke. Francine Rosen Brooklyn, New York The RCA Responds The RCA and its Va ad Halacha have been gratified by the positive response to our responsum on smoking, issued in June 2006. Numerous rabbis and educators have conveyed to us how useful it has proven to be in responding to the question many young people have long been asking: If it really is forbidden, how come the rabbis don t come out and say so? Indeed, to further strengthen the impact of the responsum, the membership of the RCA passed a resolution at its past national convention intended to facilitate the implementation of the pesak in Jewish communal life. While the word ban and its equivalents are commonly used in some quarters, this is not our way. The Va ad Halacha issued a detailed responsum explaining that smoking is indeed prohibited in halachah, and thus has no place in our community. In light of the conclusions reached in the responsum, it is our hope that the responsum will become an educational tool in our yeshivot and day schools, as the overwhelming majority of new smokers are teens. The word ban was used in the title of an accompanying public statement; if this word was somewhat misleading, the text itself removes any question that this was not a ban but a responsum in the classical sense. The role of the rulings of Rabbi Moshe Feinstein seems to have been misunderstood. In no manner is the pesak of the RCA s Va ad Halacha directly based upon anything Rav Moshe either said or would have said. Nevertheless, it was necessary to address his 1964 (5724) responsum, as it serves as the fig leaf for many who want to pretend that smoking remains an acceptable activity in the eyes of halachah. In Rav Moshe s role as the leading posek of the previous generation, it is only natural and proper that his words should carry great weight; but like all rabbinic rulings, they are only as valid as the information they are based on. Mr. Kasdan points out that our responsum did not quote from Iggerot Moshe, Choshen Mishpat, vol. 2, where as late as 1981 Rav Moshe still wrote that smoking could only be discouraged but was not forbidden. While we did not quote this piece, it was alluded to in footnote 28, where it was noted that the acceptance of the grave risks of smoking had been a slow process in some rabbinic circles. Even a cursory reading of Rav Moshe s 1981 responsum reveals this same situation, as he states and that is because in all of these matters which were singled out it would not be possible to really prohibit them since most are matters that bring pleasure and the overwhelming majority of people are not harmed at all [emphasis added] and there are many who cannot restrain themselves and smoking is similar to these matters. This is only one small quote, but on several other occasions in that same responsum Rav Moshe clearly writes that his ruling is 4 JEWISH ACTION Fall 5768/2007

predicated on the fact that the risks of smoking are quite minimal, affecting only a small minority of smokers. Rav Moshe s refusal or reluctance to pronounce smoking as prohibited is based on the-then common assumption that only a small percentage of smokers would be harmed, a claim that no one would make today. We should not shy away from reading Rav Moshe s words correctly and applying the knowledge of today that may not have been available to him then. Today, when we know just how dangerous it is for the overwhelming majority of smokers, the halachic conclusion should be obvious to all it is certainly clear to us. Rabbi Asher Bush Chairman, Va ad Halacha Rabbinical Council of America Correction: Unfortunately, the concluding paragraph of Friday Night Lights by Bayla Sheva Brenner (summer 2007) was omitted: As Rabbi Stephen Berger brings his adept kiruv skills to the NCSY Northwest Region, he proudly passes the FNL baton to Rabbi Aryeh Lightstone, the current acting regional director for the NCSY Long Island Region. And the North Bellmore community counts the days to FNL s monthly Shabbat visits the Shabbat that lights up all their Shabbatot. We join together and sing songs Shlomo Carlebach songs, NCSY songs, and in between, divrei Torah and stories, laughing and singing, says Sigal. We have kids going home telling their parents they want to live differently on Shabbat. We are not only feeding the body; we are feeding the soul. The benefits are immeasurable. 6 JEWISH ACTION Fall 5768/2007

Fall 5768/2007 JEWISH ACTION 7