8 Jan 12:01
Aruch Hashulchan Yomi
From: Dovi Jacobs <dovijacobs <at> yahoo.com>
Subject: Aruch Hashulchan Yomi
Newsgroups: gmane.culture.religion.jewish.avodah
Date: 2009-01-08 11:01:56 GMT
Subject: Aruch Hashulchan Yomi
Newsgroups: gmane.culture.religion.jewish.avodah
Date: 2009-01-08 11:01:56 GMT
According to the AishDas calendar, the current cycle for daily learning of the Aruch Hashulchan will end on 11 Sivan 5769 (June 3, 2009): <http://www.aishdas.org/luach/?year=2009&month=6> It is not scheduled to begin again until November of that year: <http://www.aishdas.org/luach/?year=2009&month=11> I have no idea what the reason for the gap from June to November is, but perhaps it is for the best for reasons I will explain below. In this post I would like to describe how I view daily study of the Arukh Hashulchan (AHS), and offer some suggestions for re-thinking the daily study program. [It's a simple programming error, but since RDJ's proposals are worthy of discussion I took the time to fix his email (it was sent with technical gliches) and bounce it to the list. -micha] What the AHS is to me: For most of my life I have been aware of the Aruch Hashulchan, and I always admired it, but only studied small parts of it sporadically. It is only in the past few years (since Shavuos 5766) that I started to work on it continually as a form of personal "kovea itim latorah" in the area of practical halachah. Since then I have managed to cover large, significant portions of Orach Chaim and Yoreh Deah, and learned a tremendous amount. I admit with some shame that throughout countless years of formal yeshivah study (which included halakhah & Shulchan Arukh), and personal Torah study thereafter, there were still significant parts of Yoreh Deah and even Orach Chaim I had never completely gone through siman-by-siman before this (and even some large parts I had hardly looked at). Not to mention Even Haezer and Choshen Mishpat... When I began to do continuous study of the AHS in 5766, I think I was aware that AishDas had an "Aruch Hashulchan Yomi" schedule, but it didn't meet my needs at the time. First of all, since I had decided to contribute the text I learned to the public (at Hebrew Wikisource), and editing was more demanding than just reading, I found one siman per day to be far too much. Secondly, I had some definite ideas about which areas I wanted to learn and in what order, so instead I focused on those areas. Nevertheless, I realize the value and power in a daily schedule that that encourages many people to learn the same things at the same time together. Why did I pick davka the AHS for learning Orach Chaim and Yoreh Deah? The answer begins with my belief that Orach Chaim, Yoreh Deah, Even Haezer, and Choshen Mishpat are not books per se, but rather areas of knowledge. Each of them, and every siman within each of them, covers a specific set of sugyos in a certain order, and certain shitos of the poskim derived from those sugyos. The scope of each siman was first defined by the author of the Tur, along with the scope and order of topics in each of the four larger areas of knowledge. But ever since the Beis Yosef, the very idea of "Orach Chaim" or "Yoreh Deah" (or any particular siman within them) has traveled far beyond the text of the Tur itself. Rather than remaining a specific text, each of them has instead become a defined area of knowledge based on specific sugyos organized in a particular fashion, and has been addressed as such by countless poskim. But this is exactly what makes them so hard to learn! Because what, in the final analysis, should one read? Reading the Tur by itself is not overly demanding, but it is not nearly enough. Learning the Tur along with the Beis Yosef and the important acharonim is optimal, but it remains beyond the reach of those who cannot invest many hours every day in such a program (which is why such learning is usually left to semichah students and candidates for dayanus). As for reading the Shulchan Arukh itself (such as in the "Halachah Yomis" program), on a personal level I find it to be extremely unsatisfying. Remember that the SA/Rema were written as review notes for the Beis Yosef and Darkei Moshe. As such they are an extremely poor pedagogical tool for someone who is learning halachah on a more basic level, and in fact they were never meant to be used as such. As terse summaries, they are also simply not enjoyable to read. It was the Aruch Hashulchan that filled this void perfectly for me. Writing about complex topics clearly and understandably, the author of the AHS manages at once to summarize all of the basic dinim in the SA & Rema, to present them in the context of the major shitos of the Rishonim (usually also dealing with the fundamental sugyos in Shas that gave rise to those shitos), and to summarize the major points of the acharonim (nosei kelim on the SA). Beyond this, there are several special features of the AHS that appealed to me because of my own personal interests: 1. Special focus on the Rambam, who is usually cited verbatum for each relevant sugya and dealt with at length in relation to other rishonim. 2. Special focus on shitos of the Yerushalmi where relevant. 3. Interesting chiddushim. Sometimes these are very convincing and sometimes much less so, but they usually get right to the heart of the sugya at hand (which makes them very worth reading). The personality of the author is also very important in my opinion. First of all, the author was an excellent writer and apparently (from his writing) also an excellent teacher. This makes learning fruitful, because when you read you feel like your rav is teaching the relevant siman to you. Secondly, the author was a first-rate posek. This is important because it means that the decisions one learns are authoritative ones, positions that may be taken into account and relied upon (depending of course on the situation and the approach of the posek who is dealing with it). I highly doubt that anyone who learns the AHS daily becomes an "AHS chasid" who thinks of the AHS as "the last word in pesak halachah" (unlike the many thousands who view the Mishnah Berurah in exactly that way). And I believe that this lack of chasidus is a very healthy thing. More than a century has passed since the AHS was first published, and we have our own contemporary poskim in a vastly changed reality. But it is still important to know that the psak one reads when learning is authoritative and may be taken into account, even if the practical psak in your actual life doesn't always exactly match you learned in the AHS. The spirit of the AHS fits this approach well. The author always comes across as a Rav, never as an Admor. On occasion he states his personal psak in uncompromising terms, but in the vast majority of cases he offers his opinion as exactly that: his opinion. It is an authoritative and informed opinion, but no more and no less than that. The phrases "nirah li" and "lefi aniyus daati" occur many times in nearly every siman of the AHS, and this too is something that has endeared the book to me as a tool for learning halachah. Furthermore, the author's particular approach to pesak, which endeavors to support popular practice and common mihagim whenever possible, and applies kocha de-hetera whenever possible, is something that I think we need more of today. To conclude, I personally chose to learn the AHS because it is an excellent tool to help me cover material in Orach Chaim, Yoreh Deah, Even Haezer, and Choshen Mishpat. It was also, for other reasons, a viable text to contribute to the public at Hebrew Wikisource. I believe that those digital contributions will make the AHS an even more effective tool for those who use it in the future, as the publicly available digital text becomes fuller over time, and ever more readable and accurate, with tens of thousands of direct links are added to Shas and poskim. Rethinking the daily program: In terms of re-thinking the daily study program for AHS, my starting point is the idea expressed above that for those who learn it, it is first and foremost a tool for learning four major areas of Torah knowledge: Orach Chaim, Yoreh Deah, Even Haezer, and Choshen Mishpat. This concept leads me to three conclusions: 1. A daily study program should cover the entire Shulchan Aruch. There are three major sections missing in the printed versions of the AHS. Two are in Yoreh Deah (Hilkhos Aku"m and Hilchos Nedarim) and one in Even Haezer (Hilchos Kesubos). We know with certainty that the author wrote them all, but none of them were ever published until R. Simcha Fishbane published Hilchos Nedarim in 1992 from the author's own manuscript. The rest are still missing, however, and even Hilchos Nedarim is only available to someone who buys a full new set of AHS from a specific publisher. In addition, the author of AHS purposely skipped Hilchos Terumus and Maseros in Yoreh Deah because he planned to deal with them at length elsewhere (as indeed he later did in Aruch Hashulchan He'asid). Not surprisingly, the current study program skips the missing parts. That is the simplest thing to do, and if I had planned such a program initially I probably would have done the very same thing. Such skipping is reflected, for instance, in the following calendar: <http://www.aishdas.org/luach/?year=2007&month=5> However, if one views the AHS primarily as a tool for learning Yoreh Deah, i.e. Yoreh Deah itself is the primary subject matter and not the AHS, then skipping large parts of YD is not an adequate solution. "Use the best tool you can to do the job" is always good advice, and the AHS is an excellent tool. But when it is unavailable there still may be other good tools to use. My personal suggestion for these cases is to learn the Levush. The Levush is very similar to the AHS in many ways, both of them being restatements of the individual simanim in clear language. They both had similar goals, and indeed the author of the AHS wrote that the Levush was one of his primary models. Perhaps "me-az yatza masok" if the missing parts of the AHS can serve as an impetus for people who study halachah to become familiar with the beauty of the Levush. To move this idea forward I have uploaded scans of the Levush on the missing portions of the AHS at either of the following links (in either PDF of DjVu format): <http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Mordecai_Yoffe> <http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Yechiel_Michel_Epstein> These can be easily downloaded and printed. They include a scan of Levush Hilchos Nedarim for those who do not have convenient access to Rabbi Fishbane's special AHS edition. (I further intend to use the non-copyrighted Levush as a suggested supplement at the online version of the AHS.) They also include a scan of the Levush on Terumos and Maseros because the AHS Ha'asid is not easily available to all, and also because there is value in seeing the topic as it is presented the context of Yoreh Deah. 2. A daily study program should be of reasonable daily quantity. Some daily Torah-study programs are meant to be very short: The Mishnah Yomis is two mishnayos per day, the Halachah Yomis is three seifim a day (from Orach Chaim with supplements from the Kitzur in other areas). These two programs take 6 years and 3-4 years respectively for a full cycle. A cycle of Halachah Yomis covers Orach Chaim, plus material from other parts of the SA as summarized in the Kitzur SA. Other daily Torah-study programs require a very serious investment in time, Daf Yomi being the primary example. The alternative Halakhah Yomis that does a daf-per-day in the Mishnah Berurah is also for someone who wants to commit in advance to more than just a few minutes a day. Chabad offers its Rambam Yomi in two formats (one perek-per-day or three) precisely because not everyone can make the same kind of commitment (time or energy), but even the single-perek option is more than just minimal work if one reads the Rambam seriously. It seems to me that an AHS Yomi program would be a middle-ground one. Not something that requires at least an hour to do meaningfully like the Daf Yomi, and not something concise like the Mishnah Yomis. It is most similar to the daf-per-day of Mishnah Berurah, not just in terms of what is being studied but also in terms of the level of commitment that the study of such material implies. The current AHS study cycle is based on the simple idea of one siman-per-day. The problem with this is quantity: Since simanim can be extremely long or extremely short, and you often have several huge ones or several tiny ones in a row, they do not provide a viable base for dividing the material into units for daily study. No daily study program in perfect in this respect. Daf Yomi sometimes covers extremely long or difficult dapim, sometimes easier or shorter ones. But in the final analysis the unit of a *page* means that there is some limit to the variations. You won't find a series of long and hard dapim each of which takes 20 times as long to teach in a Daf Yomi shiur than does a less demanding daf. But this happens all the time in the SA and works based on it. Therefore, I recommend daily units based on more even quantity. Very short simanim can be combined, and very long simanim should be divided. Creating a schedule of this type will obviously take more work than a simple "one-siman-per-day" formula, but I see no other way to create a realistic program. In general, I suggest that the daily units should usually be roughly a daily "blatt" of the AHS, i.e. about 12-14 seifim, and never more than about 20 seifim. Such a schedule can be worked out without too much trouble based on the convenient Tables of Contents at the Hebrew Wikisource: * <http://he.wikisource.org/wiki/AHS:OH> * <http://he.wikisource.org/wiki/AHS:YD> * <http://he.wikisource.org/wiki/AHS:EE> * <http://he.wikisource.org/wiki/AHS:HM> 3. Flexible topics. The current AHS Yomi program is based on the simple idea of learning the AHS "straight" from start to finish, from the very beginning of Orach Chaim to the very end of Choshen Mishpat. I would like to suggest a more flexible alternative. It is important to begin with the axiom that not everyone is interested in learning the same things, or even capable of doing so. Orach Chaim is probably the most directly relevant part of the AHS for most people and the most popular part to learn. Yoreh Deah is far less popular, although it contains many areas that are extremely relevant to the average Jew who learns halachah. In general, over the past few years I have become ever less convinced that "hora'ah" is an adequate explanation for which material is contained in Yoreh Deah. Are Hilchos Sefer Torah & Mezuzah areas that require "hora'ah" more than Hilchos Tefillin in Orach Chaim? Do Hilchos Kibbud Av va-Em require rabbinic hora'ah more than Hilchos Berachos? Despite the classic image of bringing the chicken to a rabbi for a psak, I am not even sure that the first chelek of Yoreh Deah is truly less relevant to the average person's practical halachah than many parts of Orach Chaim, nor that it is meant primarily for rabbis. On the other hand, the bulk of material in Even ha-Ezer and Choshen Mishpat is truly meant for dayyanim (except for the first part of EE that is relevant to mesadrei kiddushin). There are obviously some halachos in EE and CHM that are highly relevant to all, but not the vast majority of topics. Therefore, I think we can identify three different basic areas of interest to people within a daily study cycle: (1) Orach Chaim; (2) Yoreh Deah; (3) Even ha-Ezer and Choshen Mishpat. Is is possible to build a more flexible cycle that would let people choose which area they want to study each year? I think it is. Orach Chaim: OCH has three clear parts: (A) Seder ha-Yom, (B) Shabbos & Eruvim, (C) Moadim. On a practical level the Moadim should be studied before the relevant moed each year, and there is a mitzvah to do so. Therefore, I suggest the following basic approach for a study cycle: Moadim are studied for a total of 4-5 months each year at the relevant times of year. On a practical level this means studying the last part of Orach Chaim during Adar-Nisan and Elul-Tishrei, plus a bit more during other times of the year. Elul-Tishrei: Hilchos Rosh Hashanah, Yom Hakippurim, Sukkah, Lulav, Chol Hamoed, Rosh Chodesh (120 simanim or 94 dapim in the AHS) in about two months. Adar-Nisan: Hilchos Megillah, Pesach & Chodesh Nisan, Yom Tov (113 simanim or 114 dapim in the AHS) in about two months. Summer: Tisha be-Av & Taanis = 32 simanim or 25 dapim in the AHS (about two weeks of study). Winter: Chanukkah =16 simanim or 12 dapim in the AHS (about a week of study). This leaves more than seven months per year (more than eight in leap years) for one of the other two parts of Orach Chaim: Seder ha-Yom or Shabbos. Seder ha-Yom is 241 simanim or 219 dapim in the AHS, to be completed in about seven months or 210 days, for an average of a little more than a daf-per-day. Shabbos & Eruvin is 175 simanim or 265 dapim, for a similar average of a little more than a daf=per-day in seven months. Thus, Orach Chaim is completed in a two-year cycle, where each year one learns the relevant moadim at the appropriate times, plus *either* Seder ha-Yom *or* Shabbos. The moadim are somewhat heavier in terms of daily quantity (closer to two dapim-per-day) but are also reviewed more frequently. Plus, they are already fully available in digital form, edited and formatted for easier study: * <http://he.wikisource.org/wiki/AHS:OH> A similar schedule could be worked out to complete Yoreh Deah (403 simanim) in about two years along with the moadim. The combined Even ha-Ezer and Choshen Mishpat could be completed in perhaps three years (178+427=605 simanim), maybe four. To conclude, the AHS Yomi cycle would allow a person to decide whether he wants to learn Orach Chaim that year (choosing either Seder ha-Yom or Shabbos), or Yoreh Deah. Or alternatively to choose a multi-year cycle for Even ha-Ezer and Choshen Mishpat. There is a further advantage to this: Not everyone who wants to learn halachah according to the seder of the SA wants to study davka the AHS. But the simanim in the AHS are the same as the SA, and very similar in terms of their length (i.e. a long siman in the SA is long in the AHS, etc.). So no matter what a person wants to study each day, whether it is SA/Rema, Tur/BY, Mishnah Berurah, Levush, AHS, or anything else that fits the seder of the SA, he could be accommodated by the above study cycle. Why not make its appeal as wide as possible? It could be the "Shulchan Aruch" study cycle, but with special emphasis on the AHS. Online version: At this point the online version is available for most of Orach Chaim: All of the moadim, most of Shabbos & Eruvin (about 3/4 complete), and the beginning of Seder ha-Yom. Some significant parts of Yoreh Deah are also done. I believe that the online version will make the AHS a far easier book to read and study. It will also make it more widely available, now that it is accessible to all and can be used and distributed free for any purpose, as well as continually corrected and improved. When the current AHS Yomi cycle ends after this coming Shavuos, Orach Chaim will be closer to completion IYH (I hope to finish Hilchos Tefillah sometime around Pesach, and Shabbos may be already be close to done by then by my co-contributer). By November, when the next cycle is scheduled to start, all of Orach Chaim may be complete. This would give people the chance to do daily study (regardless of how cycle is arranged) with the digital version, and hopefully also improve it along the way while they learn. Any ideas to make it more useful could also be implemented as they cover Orach Chaim. Everything I've written is, when all is said and done, impressions and ideas. It would be great to get further ideas on Avodah about how to give a push forward to the comprehensive study of halachah in general, and the AHS in particular. Any and all ideas are welcome. Dovi _______________________________________________ Avodah mailing list Avodah <at> lists.aishdas.org http://lists.aishdas.org/listinfo.cgi/avodah-aishdas.org
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