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Judaism

Why the Talmud can’t be left to the yeshivah

The Talmud must be ‘reclaimed for the people’, argues Rabbi Dr Norman Solomon.

June 4, 2009 11:04

By

Anonymous,

Anonymous

3 min read

Never, in the history of British Jewry, has so much Talmud been studied by so many people with such enthusiasm. It is studied in the yeshivot, it is studied in the universities, it is studied on buses and trains. I once got in a lift in a hotel in Warsaw and by the time I reached the first floor, a brief glance revealed that the man standing next to me had his eyes glued on the daf yomi, the daily page (available online, with commentary) for those who read Talmud on a roughly seven-year cycle; a friendly greeting, and I picked up his Mancunian accent.

Is this just a ritual, or do people understand what they’re doing? No one will claim Talmud is an easy read, and I have been astonished by some of the brilliant expositions I have heard at shiurim in the Orthodox synagogues of north west London (no doubt Manchester can match them). I have been equally amazed by some of the extraordinary expositions I have heard at university seminars. The trouble is, it was difficult to recognise that the same book was being read in both places.

In the synagogue (as in the yeshivah) I was introduced to a self-contained world in which the words of the rabbis articulated a holy tradition from Moses at Sinai were free from error, and were entirely consistent; disagreements there were, but “elu va-elu”, both were the words of the living God (Eruvin 13b). The rabbis themselves, in the Land of Israel or in Babylonia, controlled a devout and harmonious Jewish world cocooned, spiritually and intellectually, from the evil and contamination of the surrounding civilisation. All knowledge — at least, all that mattered — was to be found in Torah tradition.

At the university I found a different world, the world of “late Antiquity”, of “Greco-Roman” and Sasanian (Middle Iranian) civilisation, within which rabbis were actively creating an essentially new form of Jewish expression, one of many models of Judaism at that time. Far from being intellectually or socially isolated, they were part and parcel of that civilisation; they spoke the same languages, lived in the same towns, obeyed the same rulers, faced the same economic and political problems and were influenced by the same currents of thought.

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