Hillel
& Shammai
In the first century BCE,
Babylonian born Hillel (later known as Hillel the Elder) migrated to
Palestine to study and worked as a woodcutter, eventually becoming the
most influential force in Jewish life. Hillel is said to have lived in
such great poverty that he was sometimes unable to pay the admission fee
to study Torah, and because of him that fee was abolished. He was known
for his kindness, gentleness, concern for humanity. One of his most
famous sayings, recorded in Pirkei Avot (Ethics of the Fathers, a
tractate of the Mishnah), is "If I am not for myself, then who will be
for me? And if I am only for myself, then what am I? And if not now,
when?" The Hillel organization, a network of Jewish college student
organizations, is named for him. Hillel and his descendants established
academies of learning and were the leaders of Palestinean Jewry for
several centuries. The Hillel dynasty ended with the death of Hillel II
in 365 CE.
Hillel the Elder's friendly adversary was Palestinean born Shammai,
about whom little is known except that he was a builder, known for the
strictness of his views. He was reputed to be dour, quick-tempered and
impatient. Both lived during the reign of King Herod (37-4 BCE), an
oppressive period in Jewish history because of the Roman occupation of
Palestine. Shammai was concerned that if Jews had too much contact with
the Romans, the Jewish community would be weakened, and this attitude
was reflected in his strict interpretation of Jewish law. Hillel did not
share Shammai's fear and therefore was more liberal in his view of law.
Hillel was the more popular of the two scholars, and he was chosen by
the Sanhedrin, the supreme Jewish court, to serve as its president.
While Hillel and Shammai themselves did not differ on a great many basic
issues of Jewish law, their disciples were often in conflict. The Talmud
records over 300 differences of opinion between Beit Hillel (the House
of Hillel) and Beit Shammai (the House of Shammai). The Rabbis of the
Talmud generally sided with the rulings of the School of Hillel,
although the Sages believed that both views were valid.
Sixteenth-century kabbalist Rabbi Isaac Luria (the “Ari”) said that not
only are both the words of the House of Shammai and the House of Hillel
enduring on the conceptual level, but each has its time and place on the
pragmatic level as well. In our present world, we follow the rulings of
the House of Hillel, but in the era of Messiah, the majority opinion
will shift in favor of the House of Shammai, and their rulings will then
be implemented. The Ari believed that in our present reality, where
divine commandments must be imposed upon an imperfect world, the rulings
of the House of Hillel represent the ultimate in conformity to the
divine will, while the rulings of the House of Shammai represent an
ideal that is too lofty for our present state (which is why we perceive
them as “stricter” and more confining), and can only be realized on the
conceptual level. In the era of Messiah, the situation will be reversed:
a perfected world will embrace the more exacting application of Torah
law expressed by the House of Shammai, while the Hillelian school of
interpretation will endure only conceptually.
Hillel's rulings were often based on concern for the welfare of the
individual. For example with regard to the remarriage of an aguna, whose
husband is not known with certainty to be alive or dead, the view of
Hillel (and most of his colleagues) was that she can remarry even on the
basis of indirect evidence of the husband's death. Bet Shammai required
that witnesses come forth with direct testimony before she was permitted
to remarry. Another example of his leniency as compared with Shammai
involves converts; Hillel favored the admission of proselytes into
Judaism even when they made unreasonable demands, such as one did by
demanding that the whole Torah be taught to him quickly "while standing
on one foot." Hillel accepted this person as eligible for conversion,
whereas Shammai dismissed him as not serious about Judaism.
From:
http://www.jewfaq.org/
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