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    Why Forgive?

    A seemingly lopsided dispute between leading Mussar thinkers may be more even than initially appears,
    finding basis in an oddly placed Medieval polemic. When Rav Yisrael Meir Kagan brought his Chafetz
    Chaim before publication to Rav Yisrael Salanter, seeking an approbation, the elderly founder of the
    Mussar Movement declined. Chafetz Chaim, the book that would become a classic work on the laws of
    forbidden speech and lend its name to its author, contained a single ruling that Rav Yisrael Salanter found
    so objectionable that he could not approve the manuscript.
    In part 1 (4:12), the book requires someone who spread lashon ha-ra about another to seek forgiveness,
    without exception. Rav Yisrael Salanter reportedly objected, arguing that this will only spread bad will. If
    you do not know that I badmouthed you, you will certainly react negatively when I approach you with
    this information and ask for your forgiveness (see Rav Daniel Z. Feldman, The Right and the Good, p.
    153 n. 66, 154 n. 76). However, the man who would soon become known as the Chafetz Chaim refused to
    change this ruling. After all, he responded, Rabbenu Yonah records this obligation explicitly in
    his Sha’arei Teshuvah (3:207). Who are they to object to this clear Medieval ruling? And so he published
    the book without the approbation of the founder of the Mussar Movement.
    I. Two Approaches to Forgiveness
    Perhaps we can find support for Rav Yisrael Salanter’s position in Rav Yitzchak of Corbeil’s Semak.
    First, let us discuss the underlying reason for seeking forgiveness for an interpersonal sin. One way of
    thinking about this is to compare wrongdoing to monetary damage. Just like you owe money to someone
    you damaged until you repay the debt or he waives it, you also owe someone whom you damaged through
    a sin until you pay for it with punishment or he waives it. Indeed, in English we use the word “forgive” to
    refer to waiving a monetary debt.
    Another approach is that interpersonal sin damages a relationship between the two, the perpetrator and the
    victim. Forgiveness is repairing the relationship, undoing the personal harm, restoring the peace. Rather
    than being a waiver, forgiveness is an act of healing.
    The Semak (no. 8), in discussing the mitzvah to love your fellow as yourself, includes restoring peace
    between fighting parties. Presumably, just as you want to be at peace with others, you must help your
    fellow reach this state. Semak continues by quoting classic Rabbinic statements about the importance of
    peace, including the explanation that the Second Temple was destroyed due to unnecessary hatred. Semak
    then discusses the importance of forgiveness. Even an important person must ask forgiveness from an
    ordinary layman.
    The transition from love and peace to forgiveness is unclear. Isn’t its proper place in a discussion of
    repentance? Part of the teshuvah process is achieving forgiveness, becoming whole again. I have not
    found any other Medieval text that connects forgiveness with peace; they connect it to repentance
    (e.g. Mishneh Torah, Hilchos Teshuvah 2:9). The most likely explanation is that the Semak adopts the
    second explanation of forgiveness we offered above. Forgiveness is an act of restoring peace, healing the
    relationship. Rather than a matter of repayment, it is appeasement.
    II. Practical Implications

    Perhaps this explains the disagreement between Rav Yisrael Salanter and Rav Yisrael Meir Kagan. If
    forgiveness is about repayment, then you must ask for forgiveness even if your victim is unaware of the
    sin. The debt exists and must be remedied, even if the victim is unaware. This is presumably the approach
    of Rabbenu Yonah, which the Chafetz Chaim adopted. However, if forgiveness is about restoring peace
    between, then informing an unaware victim of the verbal sins against him is counterproductive. Rather
    than healing, it harms. Rather than increasing peace, it diminishes it. Rav Yisrael Salanter followed
    the Semak’s approach to forgiveness and therefore could not approve the requirement to inform the
    victim. (Note also that Rav Salanter would not issue an approbation if he disagreed with even one ruling
    in the book!)
    An additional distinction between these two views is whether you may delay requesting forgiveness if
    doing so will allow the victim’s anger to subside. If the goal of forgiveness is appeasement then the delay
    is helpful and permitted. However, if the goal is repayment then the delay serves no purpose and the
    mitzvah must be done immediately. Apparently siding with Rav Yisrael Salanter, the Eshel
    Avraham (Orach Chaim 606:2) permits delaying the request if doing so enhances the appeasement.