Entry tags:
daf bit: Sotah 26
The torah tells us what happens if the sotah (the woman accused of
adultery) goes through the trial and is guilty, but what happens
if she is innocent? Rabbi Akiva says that if she is barren, she
will now bear children. Rabbi Yishmael counters that, in that
case, a barren woman is motivated to give her husband reason to
accuse her, so that she will be found innocent, and the woman
ethical enough to not do this will lose out. Rather, he says,
her pain in childbirth will be reduced and she will get children
who are preferable in various ways. Rabbi Yishmael's preferences
are clear: tall rather than short, fair rather than dark, and
boys rather than girls. (This short, darker woman doesn't agree
with his criteria, needless to say.) (26a)
The question of consequences for the innocent came up with last week's daf, so I was happy to see an answer here.
Can anyone reading this share the source of the midrash that Channah used the sotah ritual in this way to solve her infertility? (The plain meaning of the account is that it was her prayers that did it.)

no subject
And a little bit of google-fu later, the midrash appears on Berachot 31b. It is apparently based on a line in Hannah's prayer rather than on her rebuke from her husband.
no subject