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daf bit: Zevachim 113
On today's daf the rabbis expound upon the Flood. Did all creatures
on earth die? Some say no, the fish were spared, for it says "all that
were on dry land died". Some disagree but hold that Noach brought fish
into the ark. Even the re'em, a giant sea animal? Its head was in the
ark. No, its head was too big; its nose was in the ark. (Questions of
ark integrity are not addressed.) Others say no, its horns were tied to
the ark and that was sufficient to spare it.
There is a dispute about whether the flood happened in Eretz Yisrael. Reish Lakish says that even if it did, none of the dead were deposited there. Reish Lakish says the dead destined for Eretz Yisrael were deposited in Babylon, while R. Yochanan says in Shinar. Either way, both agree that Eretz Yisrael was not defiled with the corpses from the flood. (113b)
(We got here from the ritual impurity caused by contact with a corpse, in case you're wondering.)
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So what do Jewish police officers have to do?
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If you are a kohein (priest, passed through male descendants), then the rabbis would counsel you to not go into that line of work so long as there are non-kohanim available to do so. The public good would trump that, if that situation were to arise.
Otherwise, you would become ritually impure and have to go to the mikvah and wait a period of time. (Kohanim too; it's just that they are especially enjoined against this kind of ritual impurity.)
I am not sure how the red heifer factors into all this. Only ashes from a pure red heifer, offered on the altar in Jerusalem, can fully remove ritual impurity, so at some level we're all ritually impure anyway. However, the distinctions still seem to matter; kohanim today do not enter cemeteries except to bury close relatives, for example. I don't know how this works exactly; perhaps the reasoning is that you should still do what you can to not make it worse. I'm not sure.
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Kohanim, despite already being ritually impure are barred from activities which would make them impure again.
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It's been translated as/speculated to be a "unicorn", "rhinoceros", "aurochs", "Arabian Oryx", "triceratops", and various other things. But in this context, it's just being used as an example of some sort of mythological monster.
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Said R. Jannai: They took the young [of the re'em] into the Ark. But surely Rabbah b. Bar Hanah said: I saw a sea re'em, one day old, which was as big as Mount Tabor. And how big is Mount Tabor? Forty parasangs.
So re'em seem to be land or sea, not just sea, but the case under discussion here was the sea creature.
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