[Avodah] potatos on Pesach
Zev Sero via Avodah
avodah at lists.aishdas.org
Mon Apr 3 14:30:34 PDT 2017
On 03/04/17 16:17, Eli Turkel via Avodah wrote:
>> This claim comes up regularly, but as far as I can tell it's not
>> true. If anyone has actually seen this inside the Chayei (or
>> Nishmas or whatever) Adam, please correct me by citing the
>> location
> Nishmas/ /Adam/, /Hilchos/ /Pesach/, Question 20 (from the article
> on Potatos)
Yes, I'm obviously aware of this reference, which *does not say* what so
many people cite it as saying, because they saw it cited to that effect
somewhere else, and have not bothered looking it up. This is frankly
getting up my nose, which is why I specified that I am not interested in
citations that the poster has not looked up himself and verified that
they actually say what they are represented as saying.
> mentions retzke that are called tatarka which are used to
> make flour are kitniyot My yiddish is very limited I saw one place
> that translated this as corn while another used buckwheat
Retchke, or Gretchke, means normal buckwheat (Fagopyrum esculentum).
Tatarke means Tartary buckwheat (Fagopyrum tataricum).
> later on the Nishmas Adam talks about bulbus which is called
> erdeffel which I saw a translation as potatos.
Yes, bulbes are potatoes. as in the famous song "Zuntik bulbes, Montik
bulbes".
> If this translation is
> accurate then the Nishmas Adam is quoting a bet din in Germany that
> allowed potatos on Pesach in case of a major famine.
He reports having heard that in 1771-72 there was a famine and the
community of Frth convened a beis din which permitted potatoes and
kitniyos, but not buckwheat. His purpose in citing this is simply to
demonstrate that buckwheat is worse than kitniyos, since even in this
extreme case they refused to permit it. Of course this immediately
causes the reader to wonder why they'd need a heter for potatoes, so he
throws in the explanation that in Germany they don't eat them on Pesach.
Of course anyone who sees this can see immediately that (a) he reports
this practise neutrally, without expressing any support for it, and (b)
he doesn't claim first hand knowledge that it even exists, but merely
repeat a rumour he'd heard about some other place. Somehow, in the
hands of irresponsible people, this seems to have transformed into the
received wisdom that he forbade potatoes, or wanted to forbid them, or
thought they ought to be forbidden, etc, none of which has the slightest
tinge of truth, and it's perpetuated by lazy and dishonest people who
repeat it as fact, complete with a fake citation which they have not
bothered to verify. This, in turn, by exaggerating the extent of
gezeras kitniyos, is used to make it seem ridiculous, onerous,
impractical, and ripe for reform.
On 03/04/17 16:43, Micha Berger via Avodah wrote:
> The Nishmas Adam merely reported that the ruling / custom exists.
and did so merely as a rumour.
--
Zev Sero May 2017, with its *nine* days of Chanukah,
zev at sero.name be a brilliant year for us all
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