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{
"title": "Bartenura on Mishnah Beitzah",
"language": "en",
"versionTitle": "merged",
"versionSource": "https://www.sefaria.org/Bartenura_on_Mishnah_Beitzah",
"text": [
[
[
"ืืืฆื ืฉื ืืืื ืืื\"ื โ [on Yom Tov] which is after Shabbat is what we are dealing with. And the reason of the School of Hillel which states โit may not be eaten,โ because an egg laid today was fully developed yesterday (Talmud Betzah 2b), and it results that Shabbat would prepare for Yom Tov, and the Torah states (Exodus 16:5): โBut on the sixth day, when they apportion [what they have brought in, it shall prove to be double the amount they gather each day],โ for a regular Friday is a weekday, on a weekday one prepares for Shabbat, and on a weekday one prepares for a Yom Tov/Festival, for a Festival is also called Shabbat, one does not prepare on a Yom Tov for Shabbat nor does one prepare on Shabbat for a Yom Tov. And preparation like this of the egg, even though it is in the hands of heaven, it is called preparation. However, Shabbat and Yom Tov are important, as they require that their meals have preparation/designation on a weekday, and on one of them, one can prepare for its fellow, even with preparation at the hands of heaven, but the meal of a weekday is not considered important nor does it require preparation. Therefore, on a mere Sunday which is not a Holy Day, we donโt forbid an egg that was laid on that day because it was completed on Shabbat, but the meal of a weekday, the all-Merciful does not require preparation while it is still daylight. But they (i.e., the Rabbis) an egg that was laid on any Holy Day/Yom Tov, and even though it is not after the Shabbat, as a decree because of a Holy Day that comes after the Sabbath. And similarly, they forbade an egg that was laid on every Sabbath to quaff/swallow a living animal, as a decree because of a Shabbat that comes after a Yom Tov. For a Sabbath and a Holy Day that are juxtaposed one to the other, an egg that is laid on this one is forbidden [to be eaten] on that one. And similarly, the two days Holy Days of Rosh Hashanah, but the second Holy Days of the Diaspora that whatever be your opinion one of them is a weekday, and an egg that is laid on this one is permitted on that one.",
"ืฉืืืจ ืืืืืช โ as regarding eating, everyone does not dispute that both this (leaven) and that (leavened bread) are [forbidden] with an oliveโs bulk, for since the Biblical verse begins with ืฉืืืจ/leaven and concludes with ืืืฅ/leavened bread. โNo leaven shall be found in your houses [for seven days]. For whoever eats what is leavened, [that person shall be cut off from the community of Israel],โ to tell you that this is โleavenโ and that is which is leavened, as is the case with the one is also the case with the other. But they (i.e., the Schools of Hillel and Shammai) argue regarding removal, as the School of Shammai holds that since the All-Merciful has written for both leaven and that which is leavened, and to write [the word] Hametz/leavened product, for its that which is a strong leavening agent (see Talmud Betzah 7b), and despite this, one is obligated to remove it, and it is an a fortiori for leaven which is a strong leavening agent, but we learn from this that the measurement for the one is not like the measurement of the other, and we donโt derive removal [of Hametz] from eating. But the School of Hillel holds that both (i.e. ืฉืืืจ ืืืืฅ) [are forbidden] by an oliveโs bulk, as we derive removal from eating. But because that these three things are of the liberal opinions of the School of Shammai and the of the stringencies of the School of Hillel regarding the Yom Tov, they are taught together.",
"ืืืืชืืช โ date palm."
],
[
"ืืฉืืื ืืื ืืขืืฃ โ he who comes to slaughters a wild beast or fowl and consults with the Jewish court how he should do it.",
"ื\"ืฉ ืืืืจืื โ the Jewish court teaches him that ab initio, he should slaughter it with a mattock (i.e., a pronged tool) stuck in the ground that he prepared while it is still day (i.e., before the start of the Festival โ see Talmud Betzah 7b) that is he should uproot it from the place where it is stuck into the ground and bring up dirt and cover it. For we are speaking that it is inserted in crushed/loose earth (see Talmud Betzah 8a) that is appropriate for covering, that is not lacking pounding/crushing.",
"ืืงืจ โ a peg that we stick in the ground, and the language of the peg is (Numbers 25:8): โstabbed both of them.โ",
"ืฉืืคืจ ืืืจื ืืืื ืืื โ they do not refer to the words/matter of the School of Shammai and the School of Hillel, but it is an entirely separate matter, and this is how it should be understood โ that the ashes of the oven should be made ready and that they do not need preparation/designation for a particular purpose that is mind is upon it, and they did not teach other than that which had been heated from the eve of the Festival, but that which was heated on the Festival is prohibited, for one cannot say that his thoughts were upon it from yesterday. For if it was appropriate to roast on it an egg, for it was yet hot ashes/embers, even though it was kindled on the Festival, it is permissible to cover it, for it is worthy of roast on it an egg, they take it also and cover [the blood] with it."
],
[
"ืืื ืืืืืืื ืืช ืกืืื ืืฉืืื ืืฉืืื โ regarding the ladder of an upper story no one disagrees that it is forbidden and regarding a ladder of a dovecote also, when he brings it in the public domain, the School of Hillel admits that it is forbidden, for a person who sees it would say that he is fixing his roof, he is bringing it and doing work on the Festival, but they (i.e., the Schools of Shammai and Hillel) disagree when he brings it in the private domain and there arenโt people who see him. The School of Shammai holds that they should not bring it, for any thing that the Sages prohibit in order to avoid the semblance of wrong-doing for appearance sake (Talmud Betzah 9a), even in the remotest recesses (i.e., the strictest secrecy) is prohibited, but the School of Hillel permits it, and even though that generally, this is the law, here it is permitted because of the joy of the Festivals.",
"ืืืืื ืืืืื โ in the same dovecote itself, for it is the manner of each dovecote to have [many compartments] a nest for each and every pair, and a window for each and every nest.",
"ืื ืืื ืื ื ื ืืื โ This is a dispute between the School of Shammai and the School of Hillel specificially in the first brood of the year (see Talmud Betzah 10a), for it is the practice of those who raise doves to always leave the first brood which are the first two pigeons, for their mothers console them so that they do not fly off. But the School of Shammai holds that that mere words are not enough, lest they take them on the morrow, and they determine to protect them and would engage in carrying that is not necessary , but when he shakes and uses them while it is still daytime for slaughter, and does not protect them, furthermore, we donโt suspect that he is protecting them. But the School of Hillel does not decree lest he has compassion on them, and even if they are the first brood."
],
[
"ืืืื ืฉืืืจืื ืืืฆื ืืื ืื โ this matter is simple and it was not necessary to teach it. But this is how it should be understood โ that if he designated black and white ones and found black ones in the place of white ones and white ones in the place of black ones. And this is the explanation of our Mishnah โ that he designated black ones in this nest and found white ones there, [or] he designated in the second [nest] white ones and found it black ones, you might think they had been reversed, but it comes to teach us that this is not the case.",
"ืฉื ืื ืืืฆื ื' โ and he doesnโt recognize the ones that are ready, all of them are forbidden.",
"ืฉืืฉื ืืืฆื ืฉื ืื ืืืชืจืื โ and one went off, and he two remained. And we donโt say that just as the one went off, so all the others went off and these are the others.",
"ืืืื ืืชืื ืืงื ืืืฆื ืืคื ื ืืงื โ but within the nest he did not find all of them, they are forbidden.",
"ืืื ืืื ืืืืชื ืฉืืื ืืื ืื ืืจื ืืื ืืืชืจืื โ and even though there is another dovecote near it within fifty cubits, if that dovecote is not in the row of this dovecote equivalently other than in the corner-piece, we donโt say that from that dovecote that is closest to it. For the pigeons all the while that they are not flying but are stretching their legs, they are not equally stretching other opposite their own nest, for if they see their nests when they turn around to their backs they stretch, and if not they do not stretch."
],
[
"ืืขืื โ the handle of a very large piece of wood where they pound/crush grits and similar things. But because of its heaviness and size, for it is not considered a utensil.",
"ืืงืฆื โ to cut/sever.",
"ืื\"ื ืืชืืจืื โ because of the joy of the Festival, and even though it is not considered as utensil.",
"ืืคื ื ืืืช ืืืจืืกื โ that people will tread upon it, in order that he will not lose it.",
"ืืื ืืืืืื ื โ to carry it after flaying it.",
"ืื\"ื ืืชืืจืื โ for if he did not permit it, he would not slaughter it in order not to lose the hide, and be prevented from the rejoicing of the Festival.",
"ืชืจืืกืื โ those who sell spices have stores that are made like chests which stand in the market and are not attached to the ground. And these shutters are doors that close the openings of these chests, and sometimes these shutters are removed from the opening of the chest and they spread upon them, the dyes/ingredients of frankincense that are in the store.",
"ืืชืืจืื ืขืฃ ืืืืืืจ โ with these shutters that lack a hinge from the side, no one disagrees that it is forbidden to lock with them even the doors of the stores, for this is comparable to building. But they do dispute regarding shutters that have a hinge in the middle like something protruding and they insert it in the hole that is in the middle wall, at the opening of the store. The School of Shammai holds that we make a decree that a hinge in the middle is on account of the hinge from the side. But the School of Hillel holds that we do not make a decree concerning the shutters of the stores, and it is permitted ot return them, because it is necessary to remove spices and if we donโt permit him to return them, he would not open it and would be prevented from the joy of the Festival.",
"ืื ืืช ืืงืื โ nor whatever it may be that is not for the needs of eating.",
"ืื\"ื ืืชืืจืื โ who say that since it was permitted to remove something for the needs of eating, it is also permitted for something that is not for the needs of eating, and there would be a need for a Mitzvah such as these that are considered in our Mishnah, or for the need of something enjoyable such as from the opening of his house and similar things, to exclude the removal of stones and similar things, for on those, the School of Hillel admits that it is prohibited."
],
[
"ืืืื ืืืืืืื ืืื โ on the Festival Day. Even though it is permitted to separate it, they did not permit him to bring it, but the repair of the dough they permitted to him, and nothing more.",
"ืืชื ืืช โ the shoulder, the cheeks and the stomach (see Deuteronomy 18:3).",
"ืืืจื ืฉืื โ not specifically, for all of it is, was decreed by the Rabbis because of a decree that we donโt raise up the priestโs due and the tithes on the Festival. But it is similar to an analogy.",
"ืืชื ื ืืืื โ from the twenty-four priestly gifts.",
"ืืฉื ืฉืืื ืืืืืืื ืืช ืืชืจืืื ืืื' โ this Mishnah is superseded in the Gemara (Tractate Betzah 12b) for the Schools of Shammai and Hillel did not dispute that they bring up the hallah offering and priestly gifts. For they did not dispute other than in bringing up the Priestโs due/the Sacred gift for the Priest/Terumah, as the School of Shammai state that we donโt bring it up but the School of Hillel states that we do bring it up. The School of Hillel said to the School of Shammai that the Hallah/dough offering and priestly gifts are for the Kohen, and the Priestโs Due is a gift for the Kohen, and just as they bring up the [other gifts] they also bring up the Terumah. Bet Shammai responded to them that this is not the case, for if you said concerning the Hallah and priestly gifts that they are deserving of separating their priestly gifts, the Sages gave the strength and the permission for their being set apart for a sacred purpose, for since their obligation comes on the Festival day, since we knead and slaughter on the Festival day, and since they were permitted on the Festival day, we permit to bring them up even those that were made from the eve of the Festival day, shall we say that the Priestโs due which is not worthy in being brought up that it is impossible that the obligation for Terumah should come to the pile on the Festival Day, since there is no obligation for Terumah other than from the time of smoothing out the pile and we donโt smooth out the pile on the Festive Day, therefore, we donโt bring up the Terumah on the Festival Day."
],
[
"ืืืืื ืฉื ืขืฅ โ but not in one (i.e., a pestle) made of stone. But however, with a wooden pestle, they are crushed in their manner and there is no need for a change, since they lose their taste if they are crushed from the day before.",
"ืืืืื ืืคื โ [a cruse] of earthenware he crushes it.",
"ืื ืืขืฅ ืคืจืืจ โ it is the spoon that one stirs the pot with, for the salt requires a change, for he had to crush it from the day before so that it doesnโt lose its taste. And the Halakha is that one who comes to crush salt on the Festival Day, turns the mortar on its side and crushes in a changed manner. But the spices are crushed in the regular manner and they do not require a change."
],
[
"ืืืจืจ ืืืื ืืืื โ he collects food one piece at a time from the refuse.",
"ืืืจืจ ืืืจืื ืืืืงื โ and as long as it wonโt be a painstaking preparation separating the large amount of refuse. But if it the painstaking preparation involved in separating the refuse is greater than the trouble involved to separate the food, such as the case where the refuse is exceptionally thin, even though the food is greater in its measure than the refuse, the School of Hillel agrees that one separates the food and sets aside the refuse, to exclude where the trouble involved is preferable.",
"ืืฃ ืืืื ืืฉืืื โ that he brings a utensil filled with pulse and puts water upon it and the refuse floats on top of the water and he removes it with his hand. The word ืฉืืื /โdraw it outโ is like (Exodus 3: 5 ) โRemove your sandals [from your feet, for the place on which you stand is holy ground].โ But the Halakha is not according to Rabban Gamaliel."
],
[
"ืืื ืืฉืืืื ืืืื ืืื โ gift of a person to his friend.",
"ืืื ืื ืืช โ something prepared that is not made to be left over until the morrow, such as pieces of meat and/or fish.",
"ืื\"ื ืืืืจืื ืื' โ The School of Hillel did not permit other than to send via one or two people. But three or more people who carry the present is forbidden, as it the matter is too large and appears like one is bringing [things] to sell in the marketplace.",
"ืืื ืื ืชืืืื โ which is not appropriate for eating, for it requires grinding and we do not grind on the Festival Day.",
"ืืจ' ืฉืืขืื ืืชืืจ ืืชืืืื โ for one is able to crush it in a small mortar and cook it through the use of a pot. But the Halakha is not according to Rabbi Shimon."
],
[
"ืืฉืืืื ืืืื ืชืคืืจืื โ that are appropriate for clothing, and which are not sewn are appropriate for covering.",
"ืืืืื โ when they are hard and they donโt make warm, it is permissible to lie on them.",
"ืกื ืื ืืกืืืจ โ of wood covered with nails. For the Sages decreed concerning it that one should not wear it on the Sabbath and the Festival Day, because of an event that occurred where those killed by the [Roman] Kingdom were killed by it, as it is explained in Tractate Shabbat 60a โ in the chapter โHow a woman goes outโ (chapter 6).",
"ืืื ืื ืขื ืฉืืื ื ืชืคืืจ โ and one that was attached by pegs made of wood and similar kinds of things.",
"ืืฃ ืื ืื ืขื ืืื โ in the place of Rabbi Yehuda, they would not wear white shoes until they blacken it.",
"ืฉืฆืจืื ืืืื โ to blacken it.",
"ืื ืฉื ืืืชืื โ this is how it should be understood: All that is permitted to be used on weekdays like it is and does not require other work [done to it], even though they are not permitted to be used on Festival Days, such as Tefillin, which on weekdays one wears as they are and on Festival Days, one does not wear them, we send them on the Festival Day (see Talmud Betzah 15a)."
]
],
[
[
"ืืื ืืื ืฉืื ืืืืืช ืขืจื ืฉืืช ืื ืืืฉื ืืชืืืื โ that is to say that the beginning of his cooking and its essence should not be for the Sabbath, but rather for the sake of Yom Tov/the Festival Day should be the beginning of his cooking and what remains should be for the Sabbath.",
"ืืขืืฉื ืชืืฉืื ืืขืจื ืืื ืืื โ for the sake of the โjoining of cooked foodsโ/Eruv Tavshilin (preparing meals for the Sabbath on a Holy Day occurring on a Friday: a person prepares a dish on Thursday and lets it lie over until the end of the Sabbath which he does on the Holy Day โ Friday โ is merely a continuation of the preparation begun on Thursday). There are those who say that the reason that this dish from the eve of the Festival day/Yom Tov, is because of the honor of the Sabbath, for since from the eve of the Festival day he remembers the Sabbath, he will choose a nice portion for the Sabath, and not forget the Sabbath because of the preoccupation with the Festival Day. And there are those wohose say that is because of the honor of the Festival day, in order that they should see that they donโt bake from the Festival day for the Sabbath other than if he had begun while it was still daylight, for on the Festival day, he does nothing other than complete it, a fortiori (i.e., all the more so), from the Festival day to a weekday entirely, we do not back nor cook. And we make the blessing on Eruv Tavshilin/โjoining of cooked foodsโ in the manner that we make the blessing on the Eruv in reference to the โjoining of courtyardsโ/Eruv Hatzerot. But it is necessary to make assignment through another for all who wish afterwards to rely upon his Eruv/โjoining,โ and even without his knowledge, for one acts in a personโs interest in his absence.",
"ืืืื ืื ืฉืืื โ that same dish that he cooked, from the eve of the Sabbath.",
"ืกืืื ืขืืื โ to cook his dish on the Festival day for the needs of the Sabbath, But, from the outset, his โjoining of dishesโ/Eruv Tavshilin is not less than an oliveโs bulk, whether for one [person] or for one hundred [people]. But if he began with his dough and his Eruv became lost, he completes it with what he has begun with."
],
[
"ืืืืืืื ืืช ืืื โ for a person is obligated to ritually purify himself on the Festival. And everything that requires ritual immersion, whether a person or utensils, we ritually immerse prior to the Sabbath.",
"ืืืื ืืืคื ื ืืฉืืช โ for since they are worthy after ritual immersion for things that they were not worthy for prior to the immersion, if one immerses them on Shabbat or on Yom Tov/the Festival day, it would be like repairing a matter an that is forbidden. And Shabbat was used here to inform you of the power of the School of Hillel, that even on the Sabbath, they permitted the ritual immersion of a person, because it appears like holding him dear and become cols cold and bathes for pleasure and not for the sake of ritual immersion."
],
[
"ืืฉืืื ืฉืืฉืงืื ืืช ืืืื ืืืื ืืื โ whomever has fine water for drinking that became ritually impure, one fills from them a stone utensil that is not susceptible to receive ritual impurity and place them in a Mikveh of salty or turbid waters until the waters come into close contact with each other, resulting that these which were sown and connected to the waters of the Mikveh/ritual bath were cancelled out on account of this and made ritually pure, but the purification in the Mikveh is not for any foodstuffs and liquids but only for water alone, and not for the law of ritual immersion, but for the law of sowing.",
"ืืื ืื ืืืืืืื โ we donโt put them (i.e., the waters) in a ritually impure wooden utensil that requires ritual immersion for the vessel, to cause contact [by dipping a vessel, filled with unclean liquid, so as to make its surface level with the surface of the water into which it is dipped, which is a ceremony of levital purification], in order to raise the ritual immersion to the utensil along with the contact with the water.",
"ืืืืืืืื ืืื ืืื โ a person who immersed utensils with the intention that he would tread olives upon them in the building containing the tank [and all the implements] for the pressing of common (i.e., non-holy) olives, and he reconsidered to press in them grapes in the vat for wine pressing of Terumah, he mus immerse them a second time for the purpose of Terumah. And similarly, if he had immersed utensils for the sake of Terumah and reconsidered to make them holy, he requires a second ritual immersion for the sake of making it holy. And that ritual immersion can be done on the Festival day/Yom Tov, for there is no repair of the utensil for this ritual immersion is not for elevating them from ritual defilement, but rather for an additional purity.",
"ืืืืืืจื ืืืืืจื โ if he immersed utensils in order to eat his Passover offering with one association/group and he reconsidered to be reckoned with another association and he came to ritually immerse his utensils a second time, this ritual immersion is permitted to be done on Yom Tov/the Festival day."
],
[
"ืืืืืื ืฉืืืื โ on Yom Tov/the Festival day, holiday peace-offerings, because thereโre is through them the need for consumption by a person.",
"ืืืื ืกืืืืื ืขืืืื โ for laying of hands upon them is prohibited because of the rabbinic decree to enhance the character of the day as a day of rest, for he would lay his hands with all of his strength and he would be making use of animals, for he lays his hands on them on the Eve of the Festival day, for the School of Shammai does not hold by the rule that immediately after the lay of hands comes the slaughtering [of the animal] (see Mishnah Menahot, Chapter 9, Mishnah 8 at the conclusion).",
"ืืื ืื ืขืืืืช โ outside of the daily whole-offerings and Musaf/additional offerings which are a community sacrifice at a fixed time. But one should not bring an individual whole burnt-offering which cannot be consumed by a commoner (i.e., non-Kohen). But even the burnt-offerings for appearing [during the Festival in the Temple]are offered on the other days of the Festival, but not on the Festival day/Yom Tov, for the All-Merciful stated (Numbers 29:35): โ[On the eight day] you shall hold a solemn gathering,โ for you, but not for Most-High.",
"ืื\"ื ืืืืจืื โ one brings festival peace offerings and whole burnt offerings for appearance [in the Temple], as it is written (Deuteronomy 16:8): โ[After eating unleavened bread for six days,] you shall hold a solemn gathering for the LORD] your God on the seventh dayโฆ,โ everything is for God. But vows and free-will donations, according to everyone are not offered on the Festival, neither whole burnt-offerings or peace-offerings."
],
[
"ืื ืืื ืืื ืืืื ืืจืืืื โ The Torah permitted the preparation of food [on Yom Tov, for that day], but not to start a fire for bathing.",
"ืื\"ื ืืชืืจืื โ for such it [i.e., the Torah] permitted kindling a fire for the needs of eating, it permitted it also for things which are not for the needs of eating, when there is a need for some sort of benefit. And the Halakhic decision is that hot water that was warmed on the Festival day, a person can wash his face, hands and feet in it but not his entire body, for they decreed that the Festival day/Yom Tov is like Shabbat. But hot water that was warmed from the eve of the Festival, one can wash all of oneโs body in it on Yom Tov."
],
[
"ืืื ืืืื ืื ืืช ืืืืื ืืื\"ื ืืฉืืช โ for the School of Shammai holds that one does not bake other than if one made an Eruv with bread, and we donโt cook other than if he made an Eruv on the cooked dish, and we donโt put warm dishes in the chafing stove other than if he had warm dishes placed there from the eve of the Festival day. But the School of Hillel holds that we bake and cook and keep dishes warm for the Sabbath on the Eruv of the cooked dish alone. However, in the Gemara (Talmud Betzah 22a), it is proven that the School of Hillel also requires bread and meat and that is the Halakha.",
"ืืืื ืืืงืคืื ืื ืืจื โ [ put together a candlestick] when its pieces can be taken apart, and we donโt restore them for that is similar to [the prohibition of] โbuilding,โ for there is building for utensils. But the School of Hillel holds that there is no building with utensils.",
"ืืจืืฆืื โ thick loaves",
"ืืื ืจืงืืงืื โ thin loaves, for the School of Shammai holds that one does make a great deal of bread on the Festival Day because of the effort involved. But the School of Hillel holds that we bake a great deal of bread on the Festival day, for at the time that the bread is plentiful, it bakes well.",
"ืืืจื โ a large piece of dough that is baked upon coals, because it requires a large flame where the coals are continuously dimming/quenching, and there is great effort. But the Halakha is not according to Rabban Gamaliel where he is stringent like the words of the School of Shammai."
],
[
"ืืืืืื ืืช ืืืืืช โ when the eat there (they sweep between the couches). For they normally recline to eat on top of beds and because it is such a small place, they are not suspect lest it make indentations, as we would fear regarding a large house and it is impossible that there wouldnโt be an indentation/hole.",
"ืืืืืจ โ frankincense on top of the coals to smell it, but to perfume the utensils, it is the words of everyone that it is prohibited.",
"ืืงืืืก โ its legs, and its innards are hanging outside of it [on its side] when they are roasting it, and they do this in memory of the Passover sacrifice, as it is written concerning it (Exodus 12:9): โ[Do not eat any of it raw, or cooked in any way with water, but roasted-] head, legs and entrails โ over the fire.โ [The word] ืืงืืืก/an animal roasted in its entrails and legs on the head โ is like this hero whose weaponry was with him (a reference to Goliath in I Samuel 17:5 who had a โbronze helmet/ืืืืข ื ืืฉืช ) and the Aramaic translation of โbronze helmetโ is a bronze helmet (see also Rashi to Zebahim 88b). But Maimonides explained the word ืืงืืืก as meaning honorable, in the manner of praise.",
"ืืืืืื ืืืกืจืื โ [The Sages forbid] all three. Sweeping because it makes indentations, and the spices put upon the coals/perfume because it is not necessary for every person, for it is not other than for those spoiled and those who indulge themselves in pleasures and to one who has a bad odor. The spices placed upon the coals โ because it appears like one who is eating Holy objects outside [the Temple]. And the Halakha is according to the Sages."
],
[
"ืคืจืชื ืืืฆืื ืืจืฆืืขื ืฉืืื ืงืจื ืื โ for beauty/adornment. And the Sages stated that it is a burden and is not a decoration for it. And it was not the cow of Rabbi Eleazar ben Azariah but that of his neighbor, and since they did not protest, it was called as associated with him.",
"ืืืงืจืืื ืืื\"ื โ like a small bronze saw whose teeth are thin and which rubs and scratches the animal, and even though it makes a wound.",
"ืืจืืื ืฉืืื โ small which are made for this.",
"ืืงืจืฆืคืื โ with a wooden saw whose teeth are thick. But they donโt make a wound.",
"ืืฃ ืื ืืงืจืฆืคืื โ for we decree that currying with a strigil leads to scratching (which causes a wound). But the Halakah is not according to Rabbi Eleazar ben Azariah in these three matters, but rather, we scrape/curry the animal only, because in this we confirm the approach of Rabbi Shimon who said that a thing in which we donโt have an intention is permitted, and we hold according to him. But the Sages dispute this as they hold like Rabbi Yehuda who stated that a thing which was not intended is prohibited, but this is not the Halakha."
],
[
"ืืฉืื ืฉืืฉื ืืืื โ for if he separated one of them they are not shards of utensils but rather all of them are considered a utensil of its own and is impure, even while they are still attached in the millstone and appear as one utensil.",
"ืืฉืื ืืื ืงืืื โ the bottom one that receives dust from the pounding of the peppers through the holes of the basket used as a sieve is ritually impure because it is a receptacle, for it is a wooden utensil that has a receptacle.",
"ืืืฉื ืืื ืืชืืืช โ the upper one where we pound and grind in it the peppers, is ritually impure because it is a metal utensil, and because a wooden utensil cannot be made impure, for its flat surfaces are ritually pure, but because its lower covering is made of metal.",
"ืืืฉืื ืืื ืืืจื โ its middle which surround the basket used as a sieve. Because of the wood utensil it is not defiled and its receptacle is not a receptacle, but the Sages decreed defilement upon the basket used as a sieve because it is a woven utensil, and even if the metal basket used as a sieve does not defile because it is the utensil of the basket used as a sieve."
],
[
"ืขืืื โ made for a child to play with, and it is special for him to sit upon it.",
"ืืืื ืืืจืก โ if the small child had a flux, the wagon becomes a primary source of ritual impurity.",
"ืื ืืืช ืืฉืืช โ because it has the status of a utensil upon it.",
"ืืืื ื ื ืืจืจืช โ [but may not be dragged] on the Sabbath.",
"ืืื ืข\"ื ืืืื โ on top of clothing, because it makes a ditch in the ground and someone who furrows is liable because of [the prohibition of] plowing.",
"ืจืื ืืืืื ืืืืจ ืื' โ there are two Tannaim and according to Rabbi Yehuda, for the first Tanna is also Rabbi Yehuda who said that something that is not intended is prohibited, and this other Tanna comes and states that Rabbi Yehuda did not prohibit a childโs wagon because it does not make a ditch while walking through the digging, but presses upon the earth and threshes underneath it and makes its dirt lower but does not move the dirt from its place. But already, the law has been decided according to Rabbi Shimon who stated that a person may drag a bed, chair and a bench, so long as he doesnโt intend to make a ditch."
]
],
[
[
"ืืื ืฆืืื ืืืื โ even though slaughtering and baking and cooking are from the primary forms of [prohibited] work, they are permitted for the needs of the Festival day/Yom Tov, hunting is similar to reaping and reaping is not permitted on the Festival day. Vivarium of fish are pools of water where fish are raised there. Vivarium of wild beasts, enclosures (especially, an enclosed space outside for a settlement) surrounded by a fence all about and they bring there wild animals who give birth and who are raised there.",
"ืืืื ื ืืชื ืื โ [they do not place] before the fish food, for it is possible for them [to survive] without food, and their feeding is not upon you.",
"ืืื ืฆืืื ืืื ืืขืืฃ โ who are ready from yesterday.",
"ืื ืืืืืจืื โ the small vivarium, which do not lack some phase of the process of hunting. And Rabban Shimon ben Gamaliel does not to argue against the first Tanna [of our Mishnah], but rather to explain [his reasoning].",
"ืื ืืืืืกืจ ืฆืืื โ that one needs to request a company of intriguers to catch him, and all the runners after it and reach it at once when the wild beast is not lacking some phase of the hunting process, and if not, it is lacking some phase of the hunting process."
],
[
"ืืืขืฉื ืื ืืจื โ The Mishnah is deficient and should be read as follows: If it was doubtfully ready, it is prohibited, but Rabban Gamaliel permits it, and there was a story about one heathen, etc. But the Halakha is not according to Rabban Gamaliel, but rather, fruit and fish that were brought on Yom Tov/The Festival day, which was a doubt if they had been collected today or yesterday, [or] there was a doubt if they had been hunted today or yesterday, they are forbidden. And whatever is forbidden to eat is forbidden to carry. But if their form proves about them such as withered fruit that it is impossible that they were gathered today, and similarly, fish that were brought from a distant place that it is impossible that they had been hunted today, are permitted. And something that is prepared/ready that comes from outside the [Sabbath] limits (i.e., the marked off area around a town or place within which it is permitted to move on the Sabbath two-thousand cubits in every direction) for an Israelite, it is forbidden for that Israelite to be brought for him and for his household, but it is permitted for another Israelite. But fruit that had been plucked and fish that had been hunted on the first day of the Festival, are permitted for the evening of the Second Day of the Festival in order that they are made, except for the two days of the holiday of Rosh Hashanah in which they are prohibited until the conclusion of the Second Day of the Holiday in order that they are made. And the explanation of [the term] in order that they are made, in order that the fruit can be plucked/detached from the place where they are detached and are brought from the place that they are brought from. But a cities whose doors are locked at night must wait until they are made.",
"ืืื ืฉืืื ืจืฆืื ื ืืงืื ืืื ื โ that I hate him."
],
[
"ืืืื ืืกืืื ืช โ which he is afraid lest it might die. And he has not need for it for he has already eaten his meal.",
"ืื ืืฉืืื โ unless he knows that there is a delay during to day to eat an oliveโs bulk roasted from it.",
"ืืืืช ืืืืืชื โ which is ready at hand and stripped from its hide and standing. But the Halakha is not according to Rabbi Akiba.",
"ืื ืืืืื ื ืืืื ืืืืื โ by two people, because the matter is noisy and disregards the honor of the Festival day."
],
[
"ืืืืจ ืฉื ืคื ืืืืจ โ a firstling with a blemish, which had not been shown to a Sage from the eve of the Festival day while it is still daylight to [potentially] permit it, and it fell into a pit on the Festival day, and he is afraid that it might die there.",
"ืืจื ืืืืื โ who is a specialist to distinguish between a fixed blemish and a passing blemish.",
"ืืืจืื โ a blemish that it had [acquired] yesterday, if it is a fixed blemish.",
"ืืขืื ืืืฉืื โ because there is no prohibition for use or handling [on Yom Tov] (or set aside in a shed for a sacrifice), and from yesterday, his mind was upon it.",
"ืืื ืืื ืื ืืฉืืื โ this is how it should be understood, and if not, that this blemish that was upon it from the eve of the Festival was not a fixed [blemish] but rather on that day, it became a fixed blemish, even if it had passed and he brought it up, he should not slaughter it. And we donโt say that from yesterday, his mind was upon it and since it now has a fixed blemish, letโs slaughter it, for since yesterdayโs blemish was not fixed, it is set aside in consequence of its being ritually forbidden.",
"ืืื ืื ืื ืืืืื โ not because it was forbidden for use or handling did he prohibit it, for Rabbi Shimon does not have [the concept of] Muktzeh/something set aside, but because he permits its use on the Festival day, it is like he repairs it, and it appears that he made a legal decision that was decreed upon it because of it is forbidden by the Rabbis as being out of harmony with the celebration of the day. And this is how it should be state: His making it permissible is not a permit, and it is not prepared to be acceptable."
],
[
"ืืืื ืฉืืชื โ we are speaking of the Holy Animals [for use in the Temple], as it is taught regarding it and on the Hallah that was defiled. For the Holy Animals that died it is forbidden to derive benefit from it and it requires burial, therefore, one should not move it from its place. But a secular/non-holy animal, we cut it up before the dogs. And these words [apply] when it was in danger from yesterday, when his mind was upon it, but if it was not endangered from yesterday, even a non-holy/secular animal, he should not move it from its place.",
"ืืืื ืฉื ืืืืช โ which is not appropriate for the Kohen on the Festival day, even to burn it or to give it to his dog, we donโt remove out of existence holy things form the world on Yom Tov, and even through animals eating it, as it is the decree of a Biblical verse that we do not remove ritually impure Holy Things from the world on Yom Tov."
],
[
"ืืื ื ืื ืื โ fix a price so that two or three people would say that this animal is for three Zuzim, one per person.",
"ืืฉืืืืื ืืืืืงืื ืืื ืืื โ at one half, one third or one-fourth, and for one does not mention the fixing of the price.",
"ืฉืืงื ืืื ืืฉืจ โ even though it is prohibited to weigh a pound, for it is the activity of a weekday, it is permissible to weigh meat in the place with a utensil in the balance with a chopper, and on the next day, they will see the chopper and the utensil as to their [combined] weight.",
"ืืื\"ื ืืื ืืฉืืืืื โ do not investigate.",
"ืืืฃ ืืืื ืื ืื ืขืืงืจ โ even to preserve the meat from the mice, it is prohibited to place them on the weighing scale. And the Halakha is according to the Sages."
],
[
"ืืื ืืฉืืืืื ืืช ืืกืืื โ with a millstone or with a whetting implement (of stone or wood)",
"ืืื ืืฉืืื ืขื ืืื ืืืจืชื โ as he makes a change from the manner of the weekday."
],
[
"ืืื ืื ืืืื โ a designated/special utensil for measuring that he measures and sells [produce] with it. But if it is not designated for this, even though it stands for the measurement, when this one that he measures with breaks, the other stands in its place, and he is permitted to fill with it.",
"ืื ืืื ืืื ืฉื ืืื โ even though it has yet been designated for this purpose, he should not fill it up. But the Halakha is not according to Rabbi Yehuda.",
"ืืืื ืืืืชืื ืืขืื\"ื โ for we donโt measure on the Festival day.",
"ืืฃ ืืืื ืืืืขื ืขืืฉื ืื โ because of being idle from being in the House of Study, for many people would come to ask of him during the Intermediate Days when they are not busy with work and he would fill his measures at night which is not the time of study in the House of Study in order that he can be free during the daytime.",
"ืืคื ื ืืฆืื ืืืืืช โ when he would sell oil, he had many measurements, and the purchasers would bring their utensils and he would measure for each and every person with his own measuring utensil, and they would empty out everything into their utensils all night long, in order that there would be no remaining oil attached to the sides of the measuring device or on its walls and as a result he would be stealing from the purchasers."
]
],
[
[
"ืืืื. ืืืงืื ืืืงืื โ within the [Sabbath] boundary limits.",
"ืื ืืืืื ืืื' โ to place three or four jugs within a basket or a hamper and carry them, because it appears like a weekday activity to carry burdens. But if it is impossible to make a change, it is permissible.",
"ืืื ืืืื ืืื ืขื ืืชืคื โ one or two for it proves that it is for the needs of the Festival day.",
"ืื ืืคื ืื โ in his hand.",
"ืืื ืืืืืื ืืช ืืชืื โ for burning or for the cattle.",
"ืื ืืคืฉืื ืงืืคื ืืืืืจืื โ for it appears like a weekday activity.",
"ืืืชืืืืื ืืขืจืืช ืืชืื โ even though he had not ordered it while it is was still daytime (before the start of the holiday) and he was not accustomed to burn with it, for this Tanna does not have the concept of Muktzeh/storage hut.",
"ืืื ืื ืืขืฆืื [ืฉืืืืงืฆื] โ something wide at the back of the homes is called Muktzeh (a space back of the dwelling containing stored up wood, cattle in sheds, etc.), on account that it is set aside in back and one does not go in and come out of there frequently. And this wood that we are speaking of here, are large beams of cedar set aside for construction, and regarded as an item set aside due to monetary loss, as they are expensive. For in this case, even Rabbi Shimon, who is not of the opinion that there is a prohibition of muktze, concedes."
],
[
"ืืื ื ืืืืื ืขืฆืื ืืื ืืกืืื โ even from a booth that is not of the Mitzvah (i.e., an ordinary booth on the property โ not necessarily for Sukkot) such as on Passover or Atzeret/Shavuot, we donโt take from it wood on the Festival day (see Talmud Betzah 31a) because of the tearing down/destruction of the tent.",
"ืืื ืื ืืกืืื ืื โ such as reeds that are standing near the walls that are not woven with the wall and are not abolished by the wall, therefore, we may take from them on the Festival day.",
"ืืืืืื ืขืฆืื โ detached [wood] pieces",
"ืื ืืฉืื โ that are within the [Sabbath] limit from what is stored up/brought in.",
"ืืื ืืงืจืคืฃ ืืคืืื ืื ืืืคืืืจ โ Our Mishnah represents the opinion of a singular authority and is not Halakha. But rather, the Halakha is that one does not bring in wood other than from the that which is gathered/collected in the enclosure (especially, an enclosed space outside of a settlement). But he should not bring it in from field at all, and even from that which is collected, for his mind is not upon it, since they are not guarded there. But from the enclosure which is guarded and surrounded about, when they are brought in his mind is upon them.",
"ืื ืฉืกืืื ืืขืืจ โ in actuality, and that it has an opening, a key and is guarded, for Rabbi Yehuda requires two things โ near the city and has a key/lock. But because he holds that mere enclosures have keys, because of this, he is not anxious to mention it.",
"ืจ\"ื ืืืืจ ืื ืฉื ืื ืกืื ืื ืืคืืชืืช, ืืืคืืื ืืชืื ืชืืื ืฉืืช โ since he has key, he doesnโt require it to be close by, but even if it is far until it is close to the end of the Sabbath limit boundary. And if it is nearby, we donโt require a key/lock. For something nearby without a key or a key without it being nearby is permissible. And the Halakha is according to Rabbi Yosi."
],
[
"ืืื ืืืงืขืื ืขืฆืื ืื ืืงืืจืืช โ that are set up in the Land, in order that they do not curve, and stand for building.",
"ืืื ืื ืืงืืจื ืฉื ืฉืืจื ืืื\"ื โ and even though that now they exist for burning, at eventide, they donโt exist for this.",
"ืืืื ืืืงืขืื ืื ืืงืจืืื โ Our Mishnah is deficient and should be read as follows, but they chop firewood from the beam that was broken on the eve of the Festival day, and when they chop it, they should not do so with an ax.",
"ืืื ืืืืจื โ a sort of long knife filled with notches and cuts with it thick wood, for it is the utensil of an artisan.",
"ืืื โ this also is the tool of an artisan, and appears like [one] wanting to do work.",
"ืืื ืืงืืคืืฅ โ a mere hatchet (i.e., curved cutting tool) is a knife of butchers and is not the utensil of an artisan. And there are among them those which have two heads, one head is wide and is called the broadside of a double tool (see Talmud Betzah 31b), and the other head is narrow and is called the thin and pointed side of a double tool, and we donโt chop with it other than where its head is narrow and is the thin and pointed side of the double tool.",
"ืื ืืื ืืืงืื ืืคืืช โ and we donโt say that they are in consequence of a ritual prohibition, for he is not able to make a breach/hollow it out on Yom Tov and his mind is upon them, for the hut/house that is taught In our Mishnah speaks of that which is not built with plaster and lime, but is an arrangement of stones one on top of another without plaster, and not that its breach is not forbidden according to the Torah, therefore they are not forbidden for use or handling [on Shabbat and Festivals], and since we have said regarding eatables forbidden pending the separation of sacred gifts are not forbidden for use and handing and if he transgressed and repaired it, it is made legally fit by giving priestly dues.",
"ืืฃ ืคืืืช ืืืชืืื โ for since there is no plaster there but only bricks stacked on top of the other, he does not tear them down and iit is permitted to make a breach ab initio. But the Halakha is not according to Rabbi Meir."
],
[
"ืืื ืคืืืชืื ืืช ืื ืจ โ to take one of the lumps of the artisan of earthenware and to insert his fist into it to engrave a lamp, because he is making a utensil.",
"ืืืื ืขืืฉืื ืคืืืื โ for these are also a utensil for the refinement/smelting of gold, and the wick also is a utensil for kindling, which requires making and repair.",
"ืืืื ืืชืืื ืืืชื ืืฉื ืื โ because [in the process] he is repairing a utensil, but to crush it/rub it with his hand is permitted.",
"ืืืชืื ืืืืจ โ he places the two ends of the wick in the mouth of two candles that he needs to kindle at once and kindles in the middle, but now that he does not prove that he was repairing something with intention, but merely just to kindle. And the Halakha is according to Rabbi Yehuda."
],
[
"ืืื ืืืชืืื ืืช ืื ืืืจ โ that they place on it oil, and it stands in the midst of the fire, all o fthis when the oil is within it and it doesnโt burn.",
"",
"ืืื ืืืจืคืื ืชื ืืจ ืืืืจืื โ if there fell into them (i.e., the oven and/or the stove) from the paste of the oven and from the plaster , they donโt remove the ashes and coal from the oven for it is like repairing a thing, and it comes like the Rabbis who say that acts that are preliminary to the preparation (as grinding the slaughtering knife) are forbidden.",
"ืืืืฉืื โ lie on the dust and dirt in order that it would be smooth, for if it is impossible for him to bake other than if he removes the ashes and coal form the oven, it is permitted.",
"ืืงืืคืื โ bring them close to each other, like we donโt bring close a creation.",
"ืืฉืคืืช โ to arrange and to place upon them a pot and the flame is between the two pots but he forbid it because it is similar to โbuilding.โ",
"[ืืืื ืกืืืืื] ืืช ืืงืืจื ืืืงืขื โ and they do not place wood other than for burning, and chips, wood that been split.",
"ืืื ืืืืช โ they do not support it on chips, for wood is forbidden for use and handling on the Festival regarding all usage outside of burning.",
"ืืืื ืื ืืืืื ืืช ืืืืื ืืืงื โ because it appears like he leads it (i.e, the animal) to be sold in the marketplace."
],
[
"ืืฉืืคื ืื โ from what is in front of him in the house.",
"ืืืฆืืช ืื ืฉื ืื โ to take the meat which protrudes between his teeth, and that it is in front of him, is not specifically, for according to Rabbi Eliezer, it is permissible to take it even from the courtyard, as it states that whatever is in the courtyard is ready. But the fact that he (i.e., Rabbi Eliezer) used the term, โin front of him,โ because the Rabbis who disagree with him state that even what is in front of him, he can kindle with it, but not to pick at his teeth, for they hold that wood is not used other than for burning.",
"ืืืืืื ืืืืจืื ืืืื ืืฉืืคื ืื ืืืืืืง โ but not from the courtyard, for since they are thin chips and it is a burden to gather the wood and to sweep/rake them up, for from yesterday, they di dnot exist. But when the Mishnah stated that a person takes a chip of wood to pick at his teeth, we hold that even that which is in front of him he should not take other than to kindle, for wood is not given other than for burning. And in two things they disagree. But the Halakha is according to the Sages. And it is not permissible to take a wood chip to pick at his teeth other the manger of the animal, for anything that is fit for the food of an animal is permitted to cut whether on Yom Tov or on Shabbat, and there is nothing regarding them concerning the repair of a utensil."
],
[
"ืืื ืืืฆืืืื ืืช ืืืืจ โ because it is like โgiving birthโ and similar to [prohibited] work, for one creates this fire on the Festival day.",
"ืื ืืขืคืจ โ there is ground that when one digs it up, one produces fire from the place of its digging.",
"ืืื ืื ืืืื โ one puts water in a white glass utensil and places it in the sun and when the sun is very hot and the glass produces a flame, and brings scraps/chips and they reach the glass and it burns.",
"ืจืขืคืื โ a hollowed out earthenware utensil in its middle when they cover with them the gardens.",
"ืืื ืืืื ืื โ with a flame.",
"ืืช ืืจืขืคืื โ and specifically with new flints because they are similar to a think that is burned, and they are glazed and strengthened by the flame.",
"ืืขืื ืืืจ ืจ\"ื โ because the Tanna taught one for a leniency regarding that which is not permitted for use on the Sabbath/Festival day (i.e., Muktzeh) and afterwards he taught another thing, and it says, โand furthermore.โ",
"ืขืืื ืืื ืขื ืืืืงืฆื โ that requires designation of an object for use [on the coming Holy Day], and the designation is beneficial for it.",
"ืขืจื ืฉืืช ืืฉืืืขืืช โ when the tithe does not apply on it, and is not missing anything other than a designation. But the same law applies by that which is tithed in and in the rest of the years of the seven-year cycle. But he took something that is usual, for something merely set aside is not tithed, for dried figs and raisins are merely things that are stored away and it is not customary to tithe them prior to the completion of the work.",
"ืืืื ืื ื ื ืืื ืืืืจ โ and is enough with these when there is choice.",
"ืขื ืฉืืจืฉืื โ with a sign/symbol, for there is no choice. But the Halakha is according to the Sages."
]
],
[
[
"ืืฉืืืื ืคืืจืืช ืืจื ืืจืืื โ whomever has fruit or produce spread out on his roof to dry out, and he saw rain coming slowly, they permitted him to go to the trouble and to cast them through an aperture in the roof, and they fall to the ground, for there is no excess trouble, and specifically an aperture, for every aperture is from above to below [in the ceiling of the roof] but a window, such as a roof that is surrounded by partitions and window I in the wall, and one must raise it up to the window to cast it, all of this the Rabbis did not permit and to be painstaking.",
"ืืืืกืื ืืช ืืคืืจืืช โ but we donโt say that it is toil that is not for the needs of the Festival day, but because of the loss of money, the Rabbis permitted it.",
"ืืืฃ โ rain that drips from the roof.",
"ืืื ืืื ืืื ืืืื ืฉืื โ that cover them because of the drippings [from the roof].",
"ืชืืช ืืืืฃ โ to receive the water so that it should not soil the house. But if the utensil became filled, he pours it out and repeats it and is not prevented [from doing so]."
],
[
"ืื ืฉืืืืืื ืขืืื โ that the Sages forbade to do on Shabbat because of Rabbinic decrees to enhance the character of the Shabbat/Festivals as a day of rest.",
"ืื ืืฉืื ืจืฉืืช โ that there is in a bit of a Mitzvah, but not a large Mitzvah, but it is near to being an optional act, but there is within it a prohibition from the words of the Scribes.",
"ืื ืืฉืื ืืฆืื โ or there is within an actual Mitzvah/commandment, and the Sages prohibited doing it on the Sabbath.",
"ืืืืืืื ืขืืื โ not to do it on the Festival.",
"ืืืื ืื ืืฉืื ืฉืืืช โ that the Sages placed upon him to abstain from doing but there isnโt in their performance any kind of Mitzvah.",
"ืื ืขืืืื ืืืืื โ a decree lest he tear off [a branch].",
"ืืื ืจืืืืื ืขื ืืื ืืืื โ a decree lest he cut a vine-shoot to drive the animal.",
"ืืื ืฉืืื ืขื ืคื ื ืืืื โ a decree lest he make a swimmerโs bottle (see Tractate Kelim, Chapter 2, Mishnah 3 โ used for practicing).",
"ืืื ืืืคืืื โ hand upon hand.",
"ืืื ืืกืคืงืื โ hand upon the leg.",
"ืืื ืืจืงืืื โ on the Festival, and all of them are a decree lest he repair a musical instrument.",
"ืืืื ืื ืืฉืื ืจืฉืืช โ because oof those of the ending section of the Mishnah which are a complete Mitzvah, regarding them we call these โoptional.โ",
"ืื ืื ืื โ a judgement, and sometimes it is optional, such as when there is a larger city than this one, and it is not upon him to judge.",
"ืืื ืืงืืฉืื โ the betrothal of a woman. For sometimes, it is not a complete commandment but rather optional, such as when he has a wife and children.",
"ืืื ืืืืฆืื ืืื ืืืืืื โ also at the time when he has an older brother than him, it is option, but it is a great Mitzvah to perform a levirate marriage and the reason for all of them is lest he write [documents].",
"ืืื ืืขืจืืืื โ the value of this thing is upon me, and he gives according to the years, as it is written in the portion of valuations (Leviticus 27:1-8).",
"ืืื ืืืจืืืื โ behold this animal is devoted to God. And a mere devotion of an animal is for the treasury of the Temple. And all of them, the Rabbis forbad because they are similar to business transactions where one removes it from his domain to the domain of the Sanctified.",
"ืืื ืืืืืืื ืชืจืืืืช ืืืขืฉืจืืช โ and even in order to give them to the Kohen on the same day that is appropriate, for because of the Rejoicing on the Festival that the Kohen who needs them, he separates them (i.e., the tithes), and nevertheless, it is prohibited, for it is considered like repairing. And these words concerning produce that yesterday were eatables forbidden prior to the separation of sacred gifts, that currently such as dough one has to separate Hallah from, we separate it on the Festival and give them to the Kohen.",
"ืืื ืืื ืื\"ื ืืฉืืช ืืื ืืืื ื ืคืฉ ืืืื (this part of the Mishnah is also found in Tractate Megillah, Chapter 1, Mishnah 5) โ this anonymous teaching is according to the School of Shammai which states that we do not take out the minor nor the Lulav nor a Torah scroll into the public domain, for taking out was only permitted for the purpose of the preparation of food. But we hold like the School of Hillel which states that since removal was permitted for the purposes of the preparation of food, it is also permitted for that which is not needed [for food preparation]. And there are those who state that we let down pieces of fruit through an aperture in the roof looking to the ground floor at the beginning of our Chapter (Mishnah 1), that it is prohibited on the Sabbath, but that is permitted on the Festival."
],
[
"ืืจืืื ืืืขืืื โ a person cannot bring it on the Festival other than where its owners are able to go.",
"ืื ืืจืืขื ืืจื ืืื ืืจืืื ืืืขืืื โ Our Mishnah when there is in the city two shepherds, and we do not know which of them it would be [according to] the will of the owners, they are like status of the owner, if it was not with the shepherd while it was still day [prior to the start of the Festival]. But when the city lacks all but one shepherd, all the people of the city place their cattle in his domain and in having a Sabbath center, it would be like the status of the shepherd.",
"ืืฉืืื ื ืืืืืืื โ [not designated] to one of them, but rather to all of them.",
"ืืจื ืืื ืืืงืื ืฉืืืืืื โ to the place where all of them are able to go, it is permissible to bring the utensils, but if one of them made an Eruv at the end of two-thousand [cubits] to the north and the others did not make an Eruv, he delays them from being able to walk to the south even one step because of his portion, and they prevent him from going to the north, other than to the two-thousand cubits that are permitted to them."
],
[
"ืืจืืื ืืฉืืื โ for he acquired his Sabbath center with him at twilight, for twilight is the entrance of the day where one acquires his Sabbath center, and even though it did not come into the hand of the borrower other than on Yom Tov/the Festival day, for it was not established in his possession at twilight, it is in the status of the person who borrows it (i.e., the utensil). And if he borrowed it on Yom Tov once it became dark, it is in the possession of the one who is lending it out, because he has acquired the Sabbath center with its owners. And even if he was accustomed to lend it out on every Holy Day.",
"ืืืฉื ืฉืฉืืื ืืืืจืชื ืชืืืื โ for her pot.",
"ืืืื ืืืื โ for her dough.",
"ืืจื ืืื โ her pot and her dough.",
"ืืจืืื ืฉืชืืื โ they do not bring them other than in a place where both of them are able to go, for since she borrowed it on the Festival day, they acquired the Sabbath center for the spices or the water and the salt with their respective owners.",
"ืฉืืื ืืื ืืืฉ โ they are not recognized, neither the pot, nor the dough, such as the case where the cooked dish is thick and the water is not recognized in it. Therefore, it does not delay their going. And regarding the salt, Rabbi Yehuda does not dispute when speaking of dough that was kneaded in salt which is large and thick, which is recognizable and has substance. But the Halakah is not according to Rabbi Yehuda."
],
[
"ืืฉืืืืช โ such as the case where he kindled his candle with his friendโs flame, it does not indispensable in the prohibition of [Sabbath/Yom Tov] boundaries.",
"ืืืขืืื ืื โ a person who benefits from it (i.e., the burning coal), brings a guilt-offering of sacrilege.",
"ืืฉืืืืช ืื ื ืื ืื โ ab initio according to the Rabbis.. But if they derived benefit, they do not commit an act of sacrilege, and they are not liable for a sacrifice of sacrilege for there isnโt anything of substance. And similarly, a person who takes out a burning coal to the public domain on the Sabbath is liable, but the flame that pushed his hand from the private domain to the public domain is exempt.",
"ืืจืืื ืืืืื โ we donโt bring water other than according to the status of the owner of the well.",
"ืืจืืื ืืืชื ืืขืืจ โ two-thousand cubits in all directions outside of its extension of the city limits/outskirts of the city.",
"ืืฉื ืขืืื ืืื โ that is made for those who passers-by in the middle of the path, and they made them members of the Diaspora to cause them to drink while they are coming up [from Babylonia].",
"ืืจืืื ืืืืื โ because it is ownerless and something ownerless is acquired through lifting. But if a person comes and asks him for water, he does not lead them other than according to his status, for this Tanna/teacher holds that there is a choice to be stringent, for from yesterday, the matter was clear that it belonged to this person and it stood in his domain. But not according to Rabbi Yohanan ben Nuri who stated that ownerless objects acquire their Sabbath center for themselves in their place (see Tractate Eruvin, Chapter 4, Mishnah 5)."
],
[
"ืื ืืืืื ืื โ from his produce, for since he had not made an Eruv there, that his produce is like him."
],
[
"ืื ืฉืืืื ืืฆืื ืืืจืืื โ from another town and they would come to him via the Eruv.",
"ืื ืืืืืื โ after the meal [they should not bring] portions in their hands to their homes.",
"ืื\"ื ืืืื ืืื โ at the hand of another [he gave them possession of those foodstuffs].",
"[ืื ืืชืืื ืืขืจื ืืื ืืืื ืฉ] โ that the owner of the house distributed them to another person through โpullingโ on the eve of the Festival day, and said to him: have so-and-so and so-and-so acquire these portions, for one acts in a personโs interest in his absence (see Tractate Eruvin, Chapter 7, Mishnah 11)."
]
]
],
"versions": [
[
"Bartenura on Mishnah, trans. by Rabbi Robert Alpert, 2020",
"http://sefaria.org"
]
],
"heTitle": "ืืจืื ืืจื ืขื ืืฉื ื ืืืฆื",
"categories": [
"Mishnah",
"Rishonim on Mishnah",
"Bartenura",
"Seder Moed"
],
"sectionNames": [
"Chapter",
"Mishnah",
"Comment"
]
} |