<br><font size=2 face="sans-serif">seen online---<br>
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<br><font size=3 face="Georgia">Here is a common misunderstanding ... Many
frum Jews insist on eating meat at every holiday meal. They do this because
the Talmud tells us there can be no happiness without meat and wine, and
"happiness" is required on the holiday*. But, those fools who
unreflectivly stuff themselves with meat have forgotten that "happiness"
is a subjective quality. It can't be prescribed. I can't demand that you
enjoy a particular food or drink will make you happy. Everyone is
different. Some people don't like meat. Others like fish and meat equally
well. The idea that someone who enjoys fish can't use it to fulfill a
requirement to be happy is absurd. If it makes him happy, it makes him
happy. And the people who will eat a fish meal with great gusto but insist
on having a small, undesired piece of meat at the end "just to fulfil
the requirement" are missing the point. The obligation isn't to eat
meat. The obligation is to be happy. And if eating fish makes you happy,
eat fish and make no apologies*<br>
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(PS:The Shaagas Aryeh and Rav Moshe Feinstein agree. Both write that whenever you
make yourself happy on Yom Tov, you have fulfilled the mitzvah.
I throw this in both because its true, and because I expect many
of you won't accept the basic truth of my argument unless someone with
a long beard said it previously.)<br>
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* Other authorities, notably the Rambam, rule that eating meat
on Yom Tov is a biblical requirement. There are two ways to understand
this: (1) They don't connect the meat eating to happiness, but to the no
longer extant practice of eating sacrificial meat on Yom Tov; or (2) They
were unable to imagine a man who didn't enjoy meat. I am not sure how a
biblical law can be based on a failure of imagination, but there it is</font><font size=3>
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<br><font size=2 face="sans-serif">--- are there communities outside
of MO who are not makpid to eat fleishig on shavuot?<br>
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