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Monica ([personal profile] cellio) wrote2004-11-21 11:47 pm
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Vayeitze

I chanted torah Saturday morning and it went pretty well -- despite my forgetting to do my "lucky" read-through right before leaving for services. I can't believe I forgot to chant it once at home on Shabbat morning; that's the first time I've failed to do that final sanity check. So I was a little nervous, but it went ok. Made a couple mistakes, but that's what the checker is for and Bruce is a very good checker. (There is an art to delivering a correction without throwing the reader.)

When I got there someone had already rolled the scroll, but it wasn't in the right place. He got the aliya starting point from Hertz. I made a similar mistake a month or so ago, and assumed that I had somehow misread the chumash. Once I was willing to attribute to human error; twice makes me suspicious. So far Eitz Chayim, Trope Trainer, and the K'tav tikkun all seem to agree on where the aliyot begin, and the couple of times we've consulted Hertz we've gone wrong. I conclude that Hertz is using a different system, though I don't know what. I'll warn the other readers to steer clear until we find out what's going on.

We're reading the third aliya this year. This is the part of Vayeitze where Lavan tricks Yaakov into marrying Leah instead of Rachel, and then gets an extra seven years of work out of him for Rachel as well. Lavan cheated Yaakov -- that's the way we usually talk about this. But really, Lavan damaged more people than just Yaakov. For one, he damaged Rachel, who ended up being relegated to a secondary position while competing with her sister for the rest of her life. But the greatest damage, I think, is the wrong Lavan did to Leah.

Think about the message he sent her: you cannot succeed on your own; the only way you'll get married is to be deceptive. What a horrible thing for a parent to say to a child -- that the child is some sort of loser. And Leah obviously agreed with the assessment, because she went along with the deception.

But Lavan wasn't doing her any favors. She, too, ended up in a lifetime of competition with her sister. After each child she had she said "maybe now Yaakov will love me"; this clearly was not a happy marriage for her. So by violating the marriage contract, Lavan condemned Leah to an unhappy life.

Lavan had an obligation to help his daughter, and presumably he thought he was doing that. But as we see, his method of helping wasn't correct.

We all have the obligation to help those around us who are less fortunate -- in our families, in our local communities, and in the world at large. This is what tikkun olam is all about. But as we learn from Lavan, methods matter at least as much as intentions.

It's sometimes tempting to compensate for a deficiency rather than addressing it directly. Instead of dealing with the issues that made Leah unattractive as a wife, Lavan duped someone into marrying her. Sometimes we find it easier to give a financial hand-out than to train someone for a job with which to earn a living. When we have a slow learner, sometimes we lower the standards to let the student pass through anyway. We can all think of other examples, I'm sure.

The desire to help, while of course commendable, isn't enough. We also need to find ways of helping that lift people up with dignity instead of destroying their self-esteem and keeping them down.

goljerp: Photo of the moon Callisto (Default)

[personal profile] goljerp 2004-11-22 01:52 pm (UTC)(link)
When I got there someone had already rolled the scroll, but it wasn't in the right place. He got the aliya starting point from Hertz.[...] So far Eitz Chayim, Trope Trainer, and the K'tav tikkun all seem to agree on where the aliyot begin, and the couple of times we've consulted Hertz we've gone wrong. I conclude that Hertz is using a different system, though I don't know what.

I've never rolled the Torah by myself; the times when I've been with people who haven't been able to eyeball the scroll and know where they are, they've tended to do things like take a Tikkun and say, "OK, we're starting 15 columns after the beginning of Vayikra" and then roll from there. Having said that, I was under the impression that the "normal" (i.e. non-triennial) aliyot breaks[1] are pretty standardized, at least among Ashkenazim and Sephardim (Hertz cites both; I think Eitz Chayim gives just Ashkenazic aliyot). Even the A/S differences are uncommon, I think.

That's a very good drash... I'm D'var Torah coordinator for my Minyan now... wanna give a talk when we meet in February or March? :-)

[1] The Triennial cycle is actually older than the cycle which I called "normal" above, but fell out of use for a while. Although, actually, it's complicated. I could get into the details, but I think it's sufficient to say that at the present time, the Conservative, Reconstructionist, and Reform movements all have congregations which read a third of the parsha every week, and a different third every year. However, I know that the Reconstructionist and the Conservative "official" divisions are different; I suspect the Reform movement's "official" division may be different from both of those.

[identity profile] estherchaya.livejournal.com 2004-11-22 02:45 pm (UTC)(link)
The original triennial cycle was different than it is today in reform, conservative, and reconstructionist synagogues. It used to take 3 years (give or take...seriously) to read the torah. But it was read straight through. Not the first third of each parsha one year, second third the second year and so on.
goljerp: Photo of the moon Callisto (Default)

[personal profile] goljerp 2004-11-22 07:16 pm (UTC)(link)
Yes, exactly. It doesn't seem as complicated the way you put it :-)

I don't think I'd like it if there was Simchat Torah only once every three years...

[identity profile] estherchaya.livejournal.com 2004-11-22 07:24 pm (UTC)(link)
My understanding (based on my rabbi's shiur on ST) is that Simchas Torah was still celebrated every year.

[identity profile] sanpaku.livejournal.com 2004-11-22 09:38 pm (UTC)(link)
Simchas Torah was a late, diaspora holiday. It came into being long after the triennial cycle (in Eretz Yisrael) fell out of use.
goljerp: Photo of the moon Callisto (Default)

[personal profile] goljerp 2004-11-23 12:53 am (UTC)(link)
I don't know; how does your minyan feel about speaker-phones on Shabbat?

We love speaker phones, whether it's Shabbat or otherwise. Giving a d'var torah via speaker phone, however, won't fly.

So far as I know the Reform movement follows the same parsha and aliya divisions as everyone else.

I'm sorry, I wasn't clear. What I meant was this: if you're doing a triennial cycle, Reform as well as Reconstructionist and Conservative would be reading from the same parsha. And the divisions of the parsha into seven aliyot is pretty standard, too (less the occasional Ashkenasic/Sephardic difference of opinion). But how do you divide 7 "traditional" aliyot into 21 "triennial" aliyot? Especially since there are rules (which Reconstructionist and Reform may feel less strongly about following) about the minimum number of verses allowable in an aliya, and about how an aliya can end (not on a down note). That's where I was thinking the Reform movement's "official" division may differ from the other movements. As far as your septenial reading, I think that I'd have to agree... but doesn't it mean that on some years the Torah reading is really rather short? I mean, some of the "normal" aliyot are pretty short; I don't see how you can divide that into sevenths. Or maybe you do fewer than 7 aliyot, but I can just imagine how well that goes over at bar/batmizvahs...
goljerp: Photo of the moon Callisto (Default)

[personal profile] goljerp 2004-11-23 12:28 pm (UTC)(link)
Reform doesn't have an "official" division so far as I know.
I don't know how official the division actually is in any movement, thus the quotes. I know there's a listing of a triennial cycle in the latest Reconstructionist siddur; I don't know how widely it's actually used. As far as the Conservative movement goes, someone at JTS once produced a large list of the triennial readings, and I've seen photocopies of this list in different hands over the years. I don't know how universally that's followed, either.

Making a triennial schedule gets hairy if one considers what to do with all the 'double parshas' dropped in the schedule. This year we don't have any, but that's the exception rather than the rule.

sometimes nice to have two chumashim

[identity profile] sanpaku.livejournal.com 2004-11-22 02:45 pm (UTC)(link)
I just checked Hertz vs. Etz Hayim -- actually they both have the same starting point for shlishi of Vayetze -- BUT it's confusing because the marginal note "shlishi" in Hertz corresponds to an asterisk at the end of a line on the end of a page. So it looks like Hertz is starting it at v. 17 when it's really starting at v. 18. If you look at v. 18 you'll see the asterisk at the start of that line and "iii" there as well. So they agree, it's just laid out confusingly.

In general, yes, there should not be any discrepancy between sources for the aliyot within a typical annual sedrah.
goljerp: Photo of the moon Callisto (Default)

Re: sometimes nice to have two chumashim

[personal profile] goljerp 2004-11-23 12:19 pm (UTC)(link)
Hertz marks both Ashkenazi and Sephardi divisions; maybe I read the wrong one? (I didn't know they were different. Can they differ by 20 verses?)

Hertz marks them with little "a" or "s" next to the roman numerals, if they're different. Usually they're the same. When there are differences, usually you get something like this:

 Ash  1.......2...3....4........5....6...7...
 Sep  1...2...3...4....5........6........7...


so the Ashkenazic 4th Aliyah is the same as the Sephardic 5th Aliyah.

[identity profile] hopeness.livejournal.com 2004-11-22 04:16 pm (UTC)(link)
I liked your D'var Torah... I had my first aliyah this weekend so I'm sort of in the mindset that it's "my" portion, like when you're a Bar/Bat Mitzvah...

[identity profile] aliza250.livejournal.com 2004-11-24 09:26 pm (UTC)(link)
I had my first aliyah this weekend so I'm sort of in the mindset that it's "my" portion, like when you're a Bar/Bat Mitzvah...

My niece didn't think she'd be ready for her Bat Mitzva on time, so she put it off for a few months, and it turned out to be on my father's Bar Mitzva sidra. The aliyah I had that day was my first in a "real" shul (as opposed to a camp or USY service); does that make it my Bat Mitzva portion too?

It was also my first time putting on a tallit (required of all adults leading any part of the service in that shul), which was an odd experience...