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    PARSHAS MISHPATIM: TWO PROMISES YOU CAN BANK ON

    HONESTY IS THE
    TORAH POLICY
    The pasuk states in
    this week’s parsha,
    “From a matter of
    falsehood distance
    yourself.” [Shemos 23:7] This is the Torah’s
    admonition about being truthful and honest.
    The commentaries point out that this is the
    only midah [character trait] from which the
    Torah specifically instructs us to distance
    ourselves (‘Tirchak‘). We are commanded to
    stay as far away as possible from sheker
    [falsehood]. Do not skirt the truth; run away
    from sheker.
    It is well known that if Rav Yaakov
    Kamenetsky exemplified one particular
    midah), it was his pursuit of truth (derishas
    ha’Emes). I once read in a biography that as
    someone whose name was Yaakov, he took it
    upon himself to excel in the attribute of
    pursuing truth in all his dealings as we know
    the Patriarch Yaakov typified the
    characteristic of truth (Titen Emes l’Yakov
    [Micha 7:20]).

    I would like to relate two stories about this
    great Rosh Yeshiva that demonstrate his
    adherence to the midah of Emes [truth].
    A fellow came to Rav Yaakov and asked
    him the following shaylah [question]: He
    wished to take off from his job on the day of
    Purim. Although Purim is only a rabbinic
    holiday and strictly speaking work is not
    prohibited, he wanted to celebrate the day as
    it should be celebrated, not to come home
    late in the afternoon and run through
    perfunctory fulfillment of the day’s rituals.
    Under normal circumstances, his employer
    allowed employees to take a personal leave
    day but his company at that time was
    exceedingly busy and they had made a
    temporary policy that they were not allowing
    personal leave days during this busy period.
    So, he went to Rav Yaakov and asked if he
    might be able to take it as a sick day. He felt
    that he had a couple of justifications for
    requesting such an absence on those grounds.
    First of all, Purim follows Ta’anis Esther
    which is a fast day which leaves a person a
    bit weak and fatigued. Second of all, Purim
    is a time which, due to all the drinking and

    feasting done on that day, leaves
    nobody feeling very good, certainly
    not by later in the day.
    This is bending the truth somewhat
    because he was not really sick and
    strictly speaking, sick days are reserved
    for people who are really sick. How
    did Rav Yaakov answer this Shaylah?
    Did he tell him to take off the day and
    observe Purim as a Jew should observe
    it and bend the truth, or otherwise?
    Rav Yaakov instructed him that Purim is a
    Rabbinic holiday and “You shall distance
    yourself from falsehood” is a Biblical
    command. It is a no brainer. Go to work and
    fulfill the obligations of Purim before or
    after work to the best of your ability. Work
    on Purim rather than say something that is
    not true.
    When I told over this incident in one of my
    speaking engagements, a person from the
    audience came over to me and told me
    another story about Rav Yaakov:
    When Rav Yaakov was rav in Toronto, the
    shul presented him with a silver platter as a
    Purim present for Purim. A few days
    after Purim, one of the shul members
    saw Rav Kamenetsky in a Toronto
    Pawn Shop with this very same silver
    platter. The member thought it highly
    inappropriate. The shul gave their
    rabbi a gift and he went to pawn it!
    The member was shocked. He went
    back and told other members of the
    shul and the Board of Directors. The
    Baale Batim, being Baale Batim, came
    to Rav Yaakov and asked him “What
    kind of business is this – you went to
    pawn our gift in a pawn shop?”
    In olden times a Rav did not get a
    salary. He got “Rabbonishe Gelt“.
    What’s “Rabbonishe Gelt“? When you
    go to the Rav to sell your Chometz,
    you slip him a little gift. For funerals,
    weddings, and other special occasions,
    members gave their Rav money. Rav
    Yaakov told the “Committee of
    Inquiry” that part of “Rabbonishe
    Gelt” is when the congregation gives
    their rabbi a gift before Purim. That
    being the case, he told them, this was
    part of his salary. If it is part of his
    salary, he felt, he needed to declare it
    on his Income Tax form as earned
    income. “I need to know how much
    the silver platter is worth so I know
    how much to declare.” So, he took it
    into the pawn shop to assess the fair
    market value of the platter so that he
    could accurately record it as part of his
    income tax declaration.

    This is another example of the honesty of
    Rav Yaakov Kamenetsky. When I told over
    this second story about honesty of Gedolei
    Yisrael, another person from the audience
    came up to me and told me a third such story
    – this one about Rav Aharon Soloveitchik,
    z”l.
    Rav Aharon Soloveitchik for many years
    commuted from Chicago to New York. After
    his brother Rav Yosef Baer Soloveitchik,
    stopped giving the shiur in Yeshivas
    Rabbeinu Yitzchak Elchanon, Rav Aharon
    used to give the shiur there. He was also the
    Rav haMachshir for Streits’ Matzah. In
    short, he commuted on a weekly basis
    between his home in Chicago and New York
    City.
    One time he came to the airport with his
    mother-in-law, who was travelling with him
    that day and he came up to the ticket counter
    and ordered two tickets. The agent behind
    the counter said “Rabbi, you are in luck! We
    are having a special – Spouses Fly for Free
    – today!” Rav Aharon responded, “This is
    not my wife, this is my mother-in-law.” The
    agent told him, “Do not worry. We do not
    check marriage licenses.” He questioned the
    clerk – “Do you have permission to do that?”
    She hemmed and hawed. Rav Soloveitchik
    then asked to see her supervisor. The
    supervisor also told him, “Do not worry. We
    never check. You are a male and she is a
    female. Take the special.” Rav Aharon then
    again questioned the supervisor: Do you
    have permission from the company to do
    that? She could not tell him definitively that
    she had permission from the company to
    knowingly give the Spouses Fly Free special
    to a couple that were not husband and wife
    so Rav Aharon he refused to accept the
    discounted tickets.
    This is Eirlichkeit [honesty]. This is
    fulfillment of “M’Dvar Sheker Tirchak.”
    I am not paskening whether or not we are
    strictly obligated to turn down such an offer
    if we are travelling with our daughters or
    mothers-in-law rather than our wives, but it
    is certainly an Eirlichkeit. Certainly, when it
    is an out and out falsehood, when it is clearly
    bending the truth, we indeed need to distance
    ourselves.