cellio: (moon-shadow)
[personal profile] cellio
I drew the "leprosy" portion this week (Tazria-Metzora). Everyone is going to be talking about lashon hara (gossip, approximately), because that's the apparent cause of the affliction (midrash, and one data point in Torah). "Everyone" includes my rabbi tomorrow night (he mentioned it tonight). I'd like to say something Saturday morning that they haven't already heard a zillion times and one of them within the previous 14 hours. I wonder if inspiration will strike. (I suppose there's always the haftarah as a source of material, though we have a fairly strong convention of talking about the Torah portion.)

(no subject)

Date: 2004-04-23 09:28 am (UTC)
sethg: picture of me with a fedora and a "PRESS: Daily Planet" card in the hat band (Default)
From: [personal profile] sethg
About the house never having happened: some commentaries argue that you got the house first, then the clothes, and only then the skin affliction
I thought it was the other way around: first skin, then clothes, then house. Maybe I should take a Mikraot Gedolot to work, too....

Housing

Date: 2004-04-23 10:36 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] patsmor.livejournal.com
There was probably lots of mud and straw available.

(no subject)

Date: 2004-04-23 10:39 am (UTC)
sethg: picture of me with a fedora and a "PRESS: Daily Planet" card in the hat band (Default)
From: [personal profile] sethg
If my demonstrably shaky memory serves, the leprous-house law only applied to a stone house. So even if you had to tear the whole house down, you could just rebuild it with more rock and mortar. Without such modern conveniences as indoor plumbing, HVAC, etc., this would not take a lot of skilled labor. Clothes, on the other hand, were much much more labor-intensive before the Industrial Revolution. According to this page (I found it on Google, so it must be accurate :-), a typical worker in 3rd-4th century Palestine earned between 0.5 and 2 denarii per day and a cloak cost 12-30 denarii.

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