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Moed Katan 6 - January 18, 16 Shvat

Moed Katan 6 - January 18, 16 Shvat

FromDaf Yomi for Women - Hadran


Moed Katan 6 - January 18, 16 Shvat

FromDaf Yomi for Women - Hadran

ratings:
Length:
46 minutes
Released:
Jan 18, 2022
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

Study Guide Moed Katan 6 Pictures Today’s daf is sponsored by Sara Berelowitz in honor of her son Tani Sterman who passed the bar exam!  Today’s daf is sponsored by Shira Hannah Fischer in honor of Rabbanit Michelle Farber and all the amazing women learning every day. Today’s daf is sponsored by Debbie Aschheim & Robert Weiss (NYC) For a refuah shleima for Jackie Bitensky - Yaacova Ariella Bat Fruma. “Jackie: Your very recent FB posts embody what Rabbi Abbahu taught on yesterday’s (Tu b’Shevat) daf (Moed Katan 5a/Michelle Farber at 27:30 minutes) and provide an opportunity for the public to pray for mercy and healing on your behalf. May the prayers of multitudes, including those of the Hadran family, result in your speedy and complete recovery. Refuah shlema.” Rabbi Yehuda says that one doesn’t assume a field had a body buried there that was plowed unless an elder or a Torah scholar says so. What do we learn from this about Torah scholars? If graves were marked by rocks and limestone, what can one learn from the particular formation about where the graves are located? The Mishna states that chol hamoed was a time when they would send messengers from the court to uproot diverse kinds that were growing in people’s fields that they themselves did not uproot. The Mishna in Shekalim says it was done on the 15th of Adar. What is each one referring to? Why specifically was this done on chol hamoed? What is the measurement for a diverse kind that needs to be uprooted? When the representative of the court come, what do they do? How did this change over time and why? The Mishna discusses debates between Rabbi Eliezer ben Yaakov and the rabbis regarding certain watering issues - one can make a channel from one tree to another but not in a way that the whole field (a field that is usually sustained by rainwater) will get watered or is this also permitted? If a field is not used to being watered, does that mean that one cannot water is on chol hamoed as this may be defined as no financial loss? Rav Yehuda holds that even if one cannot water the whole field, if the field was moist but dried up, one can water it as it will be a loss. Can one sprinkle water on a field on chol hamoed? In the shmita year? Is it permissible to trap moles and mice so they don’t ruin the fields? On what does it depend? 
Released:
Jan 18, 2022
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

Daf Yomi for Women