Pe'ah 013
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BET MIDRASH VIRTUALI
of the Rabbinical Assembly in Israel
RABIN MISHNAH STUDY GROUP
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וְאֵלּוּ מַפְסִיקִין לַפֵּאָה: הַנַּחַל, וְהַשְּׁלוּלִית, וְדֶרֶךְ הַיָּחִיד, וְדֶרֶךְ הָרַבִּים, וּשְׁבִיל הָרַבִּים, וּשְׁבִיל הַיָּחִיד הַקָּבוּעַ בִּימוֹת הַחַמָּה וּבִימוֹת הַגְּשָׁמִים, וְהַבּוּר, וְהַנִּיר, וְזֶרַע אַחֵר. וְהַקּוֹצֵר לְשַׁחַת מַפְסִיק – דִּבְרֵי רַבִּי מֵאִיר; וַחֲכָמִים אוֹמְרִים: אֵינוֹ מַפְסִיק, אֶלָּא אִם כֵּן חָרָשׁ:
The following delineate for Pe'ah: a wadi, a pond, a private road, a public road, a public path, a private path that is [usable] both in summertime and in the rainy season, fallow land, ploughed land, and other seed; Rabbi Me'ir says [that the list also includes] someone who reaps for hay, but the [rest of the] sages say that it does not delineate unless it was ploughed first.
EXPLANATIONS:
1:
Chapter 2 is much more technical than Chapter 1 and will afford us a glimpse into the "bureaucracy" within which the farmer worked. For example: what is a field? – at least for the purposes of Pe'ah and the other rights of the poor and duties of the farmer. 2:
When you reap the harvest of your land, you shall not wholly reap the corners of your field…
what does it mean by the term 'your field'? How may land which may be in one person's possession be divided up into 'fields'? However, I suspect that there were also economic considerations at play here, and that once again the sages 'understood' the Torah in a manner that benefited the poor rather than the farmer.
3: 4: 5: To be continued. DISCUSSION:
I wrote [Pe'ah 008]: This is why the farmer does not – may not – do the work for the poor person: just as the farmer must labour to reap his part of the field's yield so must the poverty-stricken labour to reap their part of the harvest.
Reuven Boxman writes: Harvesting is but a small part of the labor required to produce a crop. What about tilling, sowing, weeding, cultivating, watering etc.? Was there any mechanism or custom by which the non-landed class shared in these activities? I respond: I believe that in the periods relevant to our discussions most agricultural work was done as a family business; at the very most a clan business. While, obviously, there must have been large estates, I think we must bear in mind always the average person who would have a small plot of land just outside the town or village in which he and his family lived. Almost invariably this plot of land was an inheritance. While there would be nothing in law to prevent the peasant farmer hiring hands as did his much richer rural counterpart, I think that the rule of custom would have demanded that most of the work on his land be done by himself, his children, his servants and his other dependents. Furthermore, recall that Ruth did not seek remunerative work in the fields of Boaz, even as someone very distantly related to him, but sought to exercise her rights as an indigent person. Yet more of your queries and comments next time. |