Pesak from the Gaon Rav Yosef Shalom
Elyashev zt”l in a Divorce
Rabbi Dovid Eidensohn
Some years back I was training to
be a posek. I would go to various rabbis, dayanim and Gittin experts to learn
from them. Once I came to a GET and I walked into the room with those getting
divorced. A woman was crying bitterly and next to her sat a woman who looked at
me with hate. Of course, she thought I was part of the Beth Din. But I was just
a visitor who knew nothing of the people involved in the GET.
The head of the Beth Din was a
friend of mine who explained that the man and women had a son. They were
secular Israelis and then the husband became religious. The wife was madly in
love with her husband. But although she tried her best, she could not tolerate
being religious. Finally, advisors told the man to divorce his wife. The wife
was crying terribly, because she loved her husband.
I was very disturbed by the
decision of the advisors of the husband to counsel him to divorce his wife. Who
gave the husband the right to give his son away to his wife who was not
religious and would probably raise the son to be irreligious? But I said nothing then.
Not long after this, I was visiting
my rebbe in Israel, the Gaon Rav Yosef Shalom Elyashev zt”l, one of the
greatest Torah authorities. I told him how disturbed I was that the husband
gave away his son. (I didn’t tell him what I thought about the advisors who
couldn’t make a compromise with the husband and wife. If the wife is madly in
love with her husband, but she can’t be the supper fanatic that he became, let
him behave in a way that her love will tolerate. But I knew nothing about the
husband and wife and why should I talk about such things? So I told him what I
did know and awaited his response.)
Rav Elyashev told me: “If the wife
would tolerate yaharas hamishpocho (go to the mikva regularly), he would not
advise a divorce.” That is a tremendous ruling, something only the greatest
sage can utter! It meant that the wife won’t keep Shabbos and maybe not
kashruse and who knows what else. But if she keeps taharas hamishpocho the
marriage continues. It means that the wife will be the mother of all of his
children, and all of them will be raised by a woman who is not Orthodox.
I wonder what the Rov would rule if
the woman did not love her husband madly. Maybe that was critical. Maybe he
believed that her love would continue if he did not divorce her, and she would
very slowly but surely become more and more religious. If she truly loves her
husband, and the husband could be encouraged not to be a cruel fanatic, maybe
that could improve things? But I did not ask that question. Maybe it was too
late to ask questions.
One thing comes out from this sad
story. When somebody is faced with such a problem, ask only the greatest
authority. There is a postscript to this story that has nothing to do with
divorces. I used to speak regularly to the Posek HaDor Rav Moshe Feinstein
zt”l. Furthermore, I only asked him questions that if he did not tell me the
answer, I would probably never find an answer for them.
I once asked him if a person is
hopelessly ill and there is no cure. He is in agony and wants to die. Is it
necessary to keep him alive even if he wants to die? I am not referring to
mercy killing. I am talking about basic “keep him alive” care. Reb Moshe told
me that in such a case the person may be allowed to die. I later discovered that
his pesak is two open gemoras, Gittin 70 and Avoda Zoro 12. A dying person
should be kept alive long enough to arrange his financial affairs with his
children so they don’t fight over the inheritance. Perhaps we assume that he is
willing to suffer that long, but longer is not necessary.
I once told this to the Gaon Rav
Shmuel HaLevi Wosner zt”l and he replied, “Poshut azoy” that is obvious. I
wondered why he answered that way and then I realized that since Reb Moshe was
the Gadol HaDor in paskening Rav Wosner felt that to say he agrees would not be
appropriate, so he just said, “poshut azoy.”
I once heard from the Gaon Rav Moshe Feinstein zt"l that with a serious medical problem we may need three doctors.
Today there are many children who are not successful in schools and begin to take drugs. In Monsey two children overdosed and are buried in the Orthodox cemetery.
For children like this, how many doctors do we need?
I once heard from the Gaon Rav Moshe Feinstein zt"l that with a serious medical problem we may need three doctors.
Today there are many children who are not successful in schools and begin to take drugs. In Monsey two children overdosed and are buried in the Orthodox cemetery.
For children like this, how many doctors do we need?