Have Questions or Comments?
Leave us some feedback and we'll reply back!

    Your Name (required)

    Your Email (required)

    Phone Number)

    In Reference to

    Your Message


    WHEN TO INVADE RAFAH

    I. A Time for War
    Koheles
    (3:6) notwithstanding,
    there is never a good time
    for war. We hope and pray
    for a time when there will
    be no war. But when war
    is necessary, presumably
    there should be no time
    constraints to it. However, the halachah is
    otherwise, as we will see. If the Israeli Defense
    Forces were run completely according to
    halachah, which they currently are not, when
    would be the right time to begin a battle?
    As of the time of this writing, Israeli forces
    are preparing to enter the Gaza city of Rafah
    in order to subdue Hamas troops and free
    hostages. At the same time, negotiations for
    a truce are ongoing. We will discuss here the
    halachic considerations for an IDF invasion of
    Rafah, even though it may not happen or may
    have already happened.
    II. Three Days Before Shabbos
    The Gemara (Shabbos 19a) quotes a baraisa
    which says: “One may not lay siege to the
    gentiles’ cities fewer than three days before
    Shabbos. If they already began, they need
    not stop. And so Shammai would say: ‘[And
    you should build a siege against the city that
    is waging war with you] until it falls’ (Deut.
    20:20), even on Shabbos.” According to this
    view, we may not begin a battle within three
    days before Shabbos. Rashi (Deut. 20:19)
    quotes the Sifrei which says that this rule is

    derived from the preceding verse, “If you
    besiege a city many days to wage war against
    it to capture it….” The plural word “days”
    (yamim) implies two days. The additional word
    “many” (rabim) implies more than two days,
    namely three days. Rav David Segal (known as
    the Taz) explains that you wage war “until it
    falls,” even on Shabbos, only if the war started
    at least three days earlier (Divrei David, ad
    loc.). However, most commentators agree with
    Rav Eliyahu Mizrachi (commentary, ad loc.)
    that this is a rabbinical rule.
    Commentators offer different reasons for this
    rule of starting a battle only three or more days
    before Shabbos. Rav Yitzchak Alfasi (Rif,
    Shabbos 7b) explains that it takes three days to
    calm down from an attack and enjoy Shabbos.
    Rav Zerachiah Ha-Levi (Ha-Ma’or Ha-Katan,
    ad loc., 7a) explains that if within three days
    before Shabbos you put yourself in a position
    in which you will have to violate Shabbos, it
    is as if you are intentionally violating Shabbos.
    Later commentators accept one or the other
    explanations. However, the first approach
    requires more elaboration. It assumes that
    a battle will take only one day and then the
    soldiers rest and calm down until Shabbos. Is
    that always, or even usually, the case? We will
    return to this question below.
    Rambam seems to contradict himself about this
    three-day-before-Shabbos rule. In two places in
    Mishneh Torah (Hilchos Shabbos 2:25, 30:13),
    Rambam writes that we may not lay siege to
    a city within three days before Shabbos. He

    explicitly adopts Rav Alfasi’s explanation, that
    this rule is to allow soldiers to call down in time
    for Shabbos (30:13). Rambam distinguishes
    between laying a siege and fighting a battle.
    You may not lay a siege within three days
    before Shabbos but you may fight a battle any
    day of the week. However, elsewhere Rambam
    omits the three-days-before-Shabbos rule:
    ”One may lay siege to the gentiles’ cities and
    one may engage in battle with them every
    day, even on Shabbos, as it says, ‘until it falls’
    (Deut. 20:20), even on Shabbos. This applies
    to both a mitzvah war and a permissible war.”
    (Mishneh Torah, Hilchos Melachim 6:11)
    III. Two Approaches
    Why doesn’t Rambam mention the limitation
    of three days before Shabbos in Hilchos
    Melachim? There are two main approaches
    to answering this question. Rav Yosef Karo
    (16th cen., Israel) asserts that the text must be
    mistaken and therefore he amends it to: “One
    may lay siege to the gentiles’ cities three days
    before Shabbos” (Kessef Mishneh, Hilchos
    Shabbos 2:25). Later commentators explain that
    according to this approach, the key distinction is
    whether the army is laying a siege or engaging
    in battle. A siege requires an initial effort to
    surround a city and then a lengthy period of
    waiting and holding the siege. An army should
    lay a siege at least three days before Shabbos
    so that the siege will be complete and soldiers
    will have time to calm down by Shabbos. In
    contrast, a battle lasts a long time. Therefore, it
    does not matter on which day it begins. Only a
    siege has the three-day-before-Shabbos rule.
    Rav Moshe Lifschitz (16th cen., Russia)
    takes a different approach (Lechem Mishneh,
    Hilchos Melachim 6:11). He argues that

    Rambam mentions the three-day-before-
    Shabbos rule in Hilkos Shabbos and therefore

    does not need to repeat it. The key distinction
    for Rambam is between a mitzvah war
    (milchemes mitzvah) and a permissible
    war (milchemes reshus). A permissible war,
    whether a siege or a battle, must be started
    at least three days before Shabbos. A mitzvah
    war may begin on any day of the week, even
    Shabbos.
    Rav Yitzchak Ben Sheishes Prefet (Rivash,
    15th cen., Spain-Algeria) seems to follow
    an approach similar to Rav Lifschitz’s
    explanation of Rambam’s view. He applies
    the three-day-before-Shabbos rule only to
    a permissible war (Responsa Rivash, no.
    101). Rav Ya’akov Ben Asher (14th cen.,
    Spain) writes likewise (Tur, Orach Chaim
    249). In contrast, Rav David Ibn Zimra
    (Radbaz, 16th cen., Egypt) seems to take an
    approach similar to Rav Karo’s explanation
    of Rambam’s view. He does not distinguish
    between a mitzvah war and a permissible war
    (Responsa Radbaz, vol. 4, no. 77). However,
    rather than amending Rambam’s text, Radbaz
    suggests that Rambam is discussing holding
    a siege, not laying it. You may hold the siege
    any day of the week, even Shabbos. But you
    only lay the siege at least three days before
    Shabbos.
    Rav Shlomo Goren (20th cen., Israel) follows
    Rav Yosef Karo’s approach, that a siege must
    be laid at least three days before Shabbos

    but a war may be started any day of the week
    (Meishiv Milchamah, vol. 1, part 1, no. 2). Rav
    Eliezer Waldenburg takes this approach, as well
    (20th cen., Israel; Hilchos Medinah, vol. 2, part
    10, ch. 3, par. 11). Rav Nachum Rabinovitch
    does also (Melumedei Milchamah, no. 36).
    According to these authorities, you may begin
    a battle any day of the week. Since the entry

    into Rafah is a battle and not a siege, the three-
    days-before-Shabbos rule does not apply.

    However, Rav Rabinovitch’s colleague, Rav
    Yitzchak Shilat, adopts the approach of Rav
    Lifschitz and not Rav Karo. Rav Shilat has
    not only retranslated and published many
    of Rambam’s writings, he also published
    an edition of Mishneh Torah titled Rambam
    Meduyak (Jerusalem, 2021), which is based
    on the best Egyptian, Syrian and Israeli
    manuscripts. In his recently published
    Medinah, Halachah Ve-Kavanos Ha-Torah
    (Jerusalem, 2023), Rav Shilat says that there
    is no textual basis for Rav Yosef Karo’s
    emendation (pp. 300-305). Instead, he accepts
    the distinction between a mitzvah war and a
    permissible war. Rav Yitzchak Herzog (20th
    cen., Israel) rules likewise (Heichal Yitzchak,
    Orach Chaim 37:3). The question then becomes
    whether invading Rafah is a mitzvah war or a
    permissible war.
    IV. Practical Applications
    It is notable that, as mentioned above, Rav
    Ya’akov Ben Asher includes this law in his
    Tur even though he usually omits laws with no
    practical implications in his day. Why does he
    include a law of war when there was no Jewish
    state or Jewish army in 14th century Spain?
    Rav Yoel Sirkes (17th cen., Poland) suggests
    that this rule was practical even in Medieval
    times if Jews were captured by bandits — other
    Jews can go, together with gentiles, as a group
    to fight to free those captives, even on Shabbos
    (Bach, Orach Chaim 249). This seem to apply
    directly to the proposed invasion of Rafah,
    where many hostages are believed to be held.
    Rav Goren (ibid., pp. 86-87) also discusses a
    prolonged war with multiple starts and stops
    to the battles. Does each new battle (or rather,
    siege) require beginning at least three days
    before Shabbos because it is a new start or is it
    a continuation of an existing war? Rav Goren
    suggests that any battle of a similar nature
    against the same army constitutes the same war,
    even if they take place over decades. The battle
    in Rafah would be part of the war against the
    PLO and Hamas, which has been ongoing for
    decades, and therefore would be a continuation

    which does not fall under the three-days-before-
    Shabbos rule. Additionally, Rav Herzog (ibid.)

    rules that once we are attacked, any military
    response constitutes a mitzvah war. Since the
    entry into Rafah is part of the response to the
    October 7 invasion, it constitutes a milchemes
    mitzvah that can be done any day of the week.