[Avodah] Women and Torah Learning
Prof. L. Levine
llevine at stevens.edu
Tue Feb 16 09:58:46 PST 2021
[Email #1. -micha]
The following is from Rav Schwab on Chumash, page 274
Learning for the sake of learning, just to occupy one's mind with
the intricacies of the Torah, even if the practical application of
the law is already known, is limited to men.
A woman who learns Torah does not become greater in yiras Shamayim
because of it. True, she may become very learned in Torah, but this is
not the object of talmud Torah. A woman may become a great philosopher
or scientist, but Torah is not philosophy or science. Torah is the
way Hakadosh Baruch Hu communicates with us.
Only because talmud Torah is a mitzvah, a positive commandment for
man, can it be a means to connect to Hashem and thereby increase
his yiras Shamayim. Because a woman has no specific mitzvah of
talmud Torah, she cannot utilize it as a means to increase her many
ways of connection to Hashem. If a man is a great talmud chacham,
having learned the entire Talmud, and has not become a greater yerei
Shamayim this learning has not achieved its purpose. If a woman were
to learn and know Gemara just as well as a man, it still would not
make her one iota better than she is. It would have no influence
on her relationship with Hakadosh Baruch Hu. she'asani kirtzono -
He has made me according to his will, means that a woman does not
need talmud Torah to come close to Hakadosh Baruch Hu. A woman can
even have prophecy-the closest possible relationship to Hakadosh
Baruch Hu-without learning Torah.
[Email #2. -micha]
The following is from Rav Schwab on Chumash, pages 274-275.
Women are also obligated to say Biros Ha Torah. While patur (exempt)
from talmud Torah purely for the sake of learning, women are,
nevertheless, obligated to learn the halachos of the mitzvos so they
can properly fulfil them. With the exception of the few time-bound
mitzvos, women have the same obligation as men to know and keep the
vast majority of the mitzvos of the Torah. It is therefore incumbent
upon women to learn the details of these mitzvos in order to observe
them properly. How can women keep Shabbos or Yom Tov properly without
knowing the applicable halachos?
How can a woman conduct a business if she is not familiar with the
dinim (laws) of ribbis (interest), ona'ah (misrepresentation or
price fraud), or gezel (outright theft)? The difference is only in
the goal of the learning. For a man, in addition to the need to know
the practical halachos in order to apply them, it is also a mitzvah
to occupy himself with talmud Torah as a form of avodas Hashem,
serving Hashem. This is so even if there is no immediate need for this
knowledge in practice, either because he already knows the dinim, or
because his immediate circumstances do not require the application
of what he is learning. However, for a woman, the purpose of the
learning is to gain the knowledge in order to put it into practice.
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