Avot172
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BET MIDRASH VIRTUALI
of the Rabbinical Assembly in Israel
RABIN MISHNAH STUDY GROUP
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TRACTATE AVOT, CHAPTER THREE, MISHNAH NINE (recap):
Rabbi Shim'on says: anyone who is walking down a road repeating [his learning in his head] and says, "What a beautiful tree!" [or] "What a beautiful furrow!" is considered by scripture as having put his life in jeopardy. Rabbi Dostai, the son of Rabbi Yannai, quotes Rabbi Me'ir as saying: Anyone who forgets [even just] one part of his learning is considered by scripture as having put his life in jeopardy; for it says, "But take utmost care and watch yourselves scrupulously, so that you do not forget the things that you saw with your own eyes…" [Since] this could be [interpreted as referring to someone] who had a momentary blackout, the Torah adds "so that they do not fade from your mind as long as you live" – thus a person has not put his life in jeopardy until he sits down and [deliberately] removes them from his mind.
EXPLANATIONS (continued):
15:
However, the decision of Rabbi Yehudah, the President of the Sanhedrin, to commit the oral Torah [Torah she-b'al-peh] to writing was taken more than a generation after Rabbi Shim'on ben-Yoĥai. In his generation the Unwritten Torah was still unwritten and had to be learned and remembered by rote. This involved constant repetition of an enormous amount of material. The sages of this period have the Aramaic designation of Tanna, which quite simply means someone who repeats and repeats his learning, conserving his learning by constant repetition. 16: 17:
Rabbi Yehoshu'a ben-Korĥah says: anyone who studies Torah and does not repeat it [regularly] is like a person who sows but does not reap. Rabbi Yehoshu'a [ben-Ĥanayah] says: anyone who studies Torah and forgets it is like a woman who gives birth and buries [her newborn]. Rabbi Akiva used to say [to his students], "Sing every day, sing every day!"
This last encouragement of Rabbi Akiva suggests that the material was learned and repeated in a kind of sing-song manner, which certainly would assist memory.
18: 19:
Take utmost care and watch yourselves scrupulously, so that you do not forget the things that you saw with your own eyes…
However, he emphasizes the continuation of the verse in order to soften the judgement:
…so that they are not removed from your mind as long as you live.
Someone who has suffered a momentary memory blackout has certainly not put his life in jeopardy. Only when someone actually "sits down and [deliberately] removes [his Torah learning] from his mind" has he forfeited his life in the eyes of Heaven.
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