Ask The Rabbi
25 November 1995
Issue #84
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This Issue Contains:
1.  Prophet Organizations
2.  Royal Snails
3.  Answer to Yiddle Riddle
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Yechezkel Goldberg from <ygoldberg1@netmedia.co.il wrote:

>If a product is known to be owned by a group that would be considered
>halachically as "Idol Worship", is it forbidden to use this product even
>if it has a hechsher (kosher certification)?  Case in point: (name
>witheld) health food which is said to be owned by Scientology; (name
>witheld) tea which is said to be owned by the Moonies?

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

Dear Yechezkel,

The Torah does not prohibit using a product simply because it was produced
by an idol-worshiper.

However, if you know that the profits go exclusively for `sacramental'
purposes, it then beomes a question of `lifnei eaver' -- `putting a
stumbling block before the blind.'  Just as it is forbidden to give shrimp
cocktail to a Jew, so it is forbidden to give `idol-worship parephenalia'
(sacramental wine, statues, etc.) to an idol-worshipper.  The question is:
Is giving someone money which will be used to buy a statue the same as
giving him the statue itself?  Or, since money is one step removed -- that
is, they don't use the money directly in the worship -- is it therefore
permitted?

In any case, it is a mitzva not to support `cult' activities.  Therefore,
if you are absolutely certain that they are owned wholly or greatly by one
of these groups, it would be a good idea to discourage people from buying
these products.

A word of caution: If it is not absolutely certain that they are owned by
these groups, a vary grave sin of harming someone's livelihood could
result.

Speaking of cults:  At an introductory session of the `Reincarnated Society
of Born-Yesterday Cenobites' a certain Mrs. Finklefarb sits in the back
knitting.  After the meeting, however, she volunteers for the next level of
training.  She continues from level to level until she's finally allowed to
travel to Tibet, meet the Grand Cenobite, and say three words to him.
While waiting in the long line, she patiently knits.  Finally she is
brought before the leader, looks him in the eye and says "Moishe! Come
home!"

Sources:
o  Talmud Avoda Zorah 2a (Tosafot); and 6a.
o  Shulchan Aruch Yoreh De'ah 148:12.

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Paul Goldstein <JX12%UTEP.bitnet@vms.huji.ac.il> wrote:

>Do you know the source of the dye that was used to dye the techeilat of
>the tztisit the color blue.  I thought it was from the snail "Chilazon"
>but my daughter told me that her Hebrew School teacher said it was from a
>fish.

* * * * * * * * * * * *

Dear Paul,

You're both right!  The commentators call the Chilazon a `fish' since it
lives in the water.  It appears, though, that the Chilazon is not a normal
`fish,' but has a shell and is actually a type of snail.  It ascends to the
land very rarely, only once every 70 years.

Over time, the exact identity of Chilazon became obscure for various
reasons:  One reason was its extreme rarity.  Because of this, its cost was
prohibitive -- 10 to 20 times its weight in gold.  Another reason:  In the
4th century Rome decreed that only `blue-blooded' royalty could wear
Techelet.  Although some modern-day Torah scholars maintain that they have
re-discovered the Chilazon, their opinion is not universally accepted.

Sources:
o  Rabbi Y.M. Tuchashinski, "The Holy City & Temple" 5:5-6.
o  Rabbi Y.H. Hertzog, `Royal Purple & Biblical Blue' ch.11.

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Answer to Yiddle Riddle

Last week we asked:  "B'yomo titen scharo" -- "pay him on that day" -- is
the Torah command to pay your worker on time (Deut. 24:15).  Is this one of
the "time bound" mitzvot -- like Sukka and Tefillin -- from which women are
exempt?  If not, why not?

Paying a worker on time is not considered a "time-bound" mitzvah.  Here are
2 explanations:

1.  Sukka and Tefillin are `mitzvot asei sh'hazman gramma' -- `positive
    mitzvot which the time initiates':  You go into the Sukka because it's
    the 15th of Tishrei; you put on Tefillin because it's daytime.  The
    mitzvah to pay your worker, on the other hand, is not time-initiated.'
    Rather, you chose when to hire the worker, an act independent of any
    time frame.  (First sent in by Yoel Polsky <POLSKY@hagiga.jct.ac.il>)
2.  True, each time the mitzvah is performed, it is performed during a
    specific 12-hour period.  But the mitzvah in general applies any time
    of day or night. (Rabbi Mordecai Isbee, shlita)
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