DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
"Delivered to Over 6000 Registered Recipients Each Day"

      
(File size: 620 KB)
Is It Proper To Refer To Rabbis As Colleagues

A man once entered a Beit Midrash and inquired of a student as to the whereabouts of his Rabbi. The student replied, "He went to a Berit Mila with his colleagues." The visitor then asked the student to identify these colleagues, and it turned out that these "colleagues" were actually the Rabbis of that student's Rabbi. The student had referred to them as his Rabbi's "colleagues" out of respect for his Rabbi, but the visitor berated the student for speaking disrespectfully about his Rabbi's Rabbis.

The Ben Ish Chai (Rabbi Yosef Chayim of Baghdad, 1833-1909), in his work "Torah Li'Shma," addresses the question of whether the student had indeed infringed upon the Rabbis' honor by speaking of them as his Rabbi's "colleagues." He proves that this is permissible from an incident recorded in Masechet Beitza (5). Rabbi Eliezer mentioned a certain Halacha to his students, and they responded, "Your colleagues have already repealed this Halacha." The Gemara clarifies that it was Rabban Yochanan Ben Zakai who had overruled the Halacha in question. We know from other sources that Rabban Yochanan Ben Zakai was Rabbi Eliezer's mentor, and yet Rabbi Eliezer's students referred to him as Rabbi Eliezer's "colleague" out of respect for their Rabbi.

Thus, the Ben Ish Chai concludes, it is permissible for a student to refer to his Rabbi's Rabbi as his "colleague" as an expression of respect.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Putting a Liquid or Solid Food into a Keli Sheni on Shabbat
Is It Permissible to Put Baked Bread on a Blech to Make Toast?
Is It Permissible to Place Raw Food in a Keli Sheni on Shabbat?
Pouring Water on to Hot Food on Shabbat
Heating a Partially Cooked Food on Shabbat
Pouring Water Heated by the Sun on Foods on Shabbat
If One Turned On Hot Water on Shabbat
May a Non-Jewish Stockbroker Execute Transactions for a Jew on Shabbat or Yom Tob?
Instructing a Non-Jew to Perform a Melacha for the Sake of a Fulfilling a Misva After Shabbat
Instructing a Non-Jew to Prevent Major Financial Loss on Shabbat
Mukse-May a Jew Instruct a Non-Jew To Move A Lit Candle on Shabbat
Asking a Non-Jew to Open an Electronic Lock in a Hotel on Shabbat
Asking a Non-Jew on Shabbat: Buying and Selling
Amira L’Akum: Instructing a Non-Jew to Perform a Rabbinic Transgression
Amira L'Akum: Instructing a Non-Jew to Draw Hot Water
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found