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The Israel Koschitzky Virtual Beit
Midrash
Understanding Aggada Yeshivat Har Etzion
Shiur #28b: The Business of Yeshiva
By Rav Yitzchak Blau
Hillel used to earn a trepik a day, half of which he
gave to the guard at the house of study and half he used to support himself and
his family. One day he earned nothing and the guard would not let him in. He
climbed up and sat on the skylight so that he could hear the words of the living
God from Shemayah and Avtalyon. It happened that it was a Friday in the winter
and the snow from the sky fell upon him. At the break of dawn, Shemaya said to
Avtalyon: "My brother. Usually it is light but today it is dark. Perhaps the day
is cloudy." They looked up and saw the shape of a man against the window, and
they found three cubits of snow upon him. They took off the snow, washed him,
anointed him and put him by the fire. They said: "He is worthy for
shabbat to be profaned for his sake." (Yoma 35b)
Why did they charge money for entry into the beit
medrash? Maharsha raises two possibilities. The study halls in
talmudic times were often out in the country and not in the heart of
civilization. Out in the wild, one needs a guard and someone has to fund the
salary of that guard. Alternatively, some study halls only let certain quality
student in (see Berakhot 28a) and someone needed to pay for those
individuals who would administer this policy. We might also suggest that the
money went to pay for teacher salaries, buying seforim, cleaning and
general maintenance.
Beyond the specifics of the yeshiva's budget, Maharsha's
explanations raise a significant point. Yeshivot, shuls and other Jewish
institutions do have financial needs and to some degree, they need to function
like a business. At the same time, if they functions only like a business,
things have gone very wrong. When a student of the dedication of Hillel is
locked out because of one time that he could not pay, the business side of the
yeshiva has become too dominant. An overemphasis on the business angle may be
reflected in the cost of entry. Professor Yonah Frankel points out that the fact
that the entrance fee equaled the amount needed to support Hillel's family
indicates that the price was too high. Professor Frankel also argues that
Shemaya's comment about Hillel blocking the skylight has symbolic import. The
study hall is normally a great source of spiritual illumination. When small
mindedness forces a Hillel to endanger himself in order to hear a shiur,
it is indeed a dark day in the beit medrash.
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