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    TESHUVAH AND REPAYMENT

    Teshuvah, repentance,
    is about returning to G-d
    after sin. However, it is
    not enough to change
    yourself. You also have
    to attempt to undo your
    sin, to fix what you broke.
    “And he shall return what
    he stole” (Lev. 5:23) is a general rule that
    you must restore your victim to wholeness.
    Rambam asks, “And what is this teshuvah?”
    after which he explains it at length (Mishneh
    Torah, Hilchos Teshuvah 2:2). But then
    Rambam adds that the teshuvah process he
    describes only refers to sins between man
    and G-d. When the sin is toward another
    person, you are not forgiven until you give to
    that person what you owe him and apologize
    (ibid., 9). But do you actually have to pay him
    in order to repent?
    I. Commitment to Repay
    Rav Ya’akov Emden (18th cen., Germany)
    was asked about a man who ran away with
    another man’s wife and money. The victim
    of this crime was left a broken man and
    eventually died. The new couple eventually
    wanted to settle in a Jewish community. The
    question, in part, was what this man has to do
    in order to return to the status of a community
    member in good standing. Rav Moshe Chagiz
    was asked this question and he sent it to other
    great rabbis of his time. He published their

    answers in his Responsa Shtei Ha-Lechem
    (no. 31). Rav Ya’akov Emden sent the longest
    response, also published in his She’eilas
    Ya’abetz (vol. 1, no. 79). Among other things,
    Rav Emden requires the sinner to apologize
    to the deceased’s family and at his grave,
    and to return to the family the money he
    stole. However, Rav Emden acknowledges
    that this might not be possible due to lack
    of funds. He argues that as long as the man
    commits to paying back the money to the best
    of his ability, he has fulfilled this particular
    requirement for teshuvah.
    Rav Emden offers a proof from the Gemara
    (Kiddushin 49b) that if a man who is known
    to be wicked betroths a woman on condition
    that he is righteous, the betrothal is effective
    (out of doubt) because he might have
    repented in his heart. Commentators ask
    many questions about this. Rav Emden infers
    from this Gemara that even if a man does
    not undo the harm he caused, even if he has
    not yet returned the object he stole, once he
    commits in his heart to do so he is considered
    righteous. Surprisingly, Rav Emden does not
    quote the earlier literature on this subject.
    On the halachah of betrothing a woman on
    condition that one is righteous, Rav Yosef
    Karo (Beis Yosef, Even Ha-Ezer 38) quotes
    Rabbeinu Yerucham who lists two views on
    the subject. Prof. Nachum Rakover (Takanas
    Ha-Shavim, p. 347) later filled in that these

    two views are from Rabbeinu Tam (Sefer Ha-
    Yashar, no. 140) and the Rosh (Sanhedrin,

    ch. 3, no. 10; Responsa, 45:3). According
    to the Rosh (14th cen., Germany-Spain), a
    thief does not become qualified to testify
    as a witness until he repents and pays back
    the money. According to Rabbeinu Tam
    (12th cen., France), as long as he commits to
    repay the money, he can serve as a witness.
    Rabbeinu Yerucham explains that the Rosh
    must read the Gemara as excluding someone
    who committed an interpersonal sin because
    he still has to return the stolen object. In
    contrast, according to Rabbeinu Tam even a
    thief who betroths a woman on condition that
    he is righteous is betrothed because if in his
    heart he repented and committed to repaying
    his theft, that alone suffices. It seems that
    Rav Emden assumes that Rabbeinu Tam is
    correct.
    II. Requirement to Repay
    Rav Meir (Maharam) of Lublin (17th cen.,
    Poland) was asked about a man who served
    as a witness on many divorce documents.
    It was revealed that decades earlier he had
    been caught stealing. Does that invalidate
    every divorce on which he signed (Responsa
    Maharam Lublin, no. 81)? Think of the
    havoc that this would cause. Any woman
    who remarried would have to divorce her
    new husband and any children to whom she
    gave birth would be declared illegitimate.
    Maharam Lublin finds a number of reasons
    for leniency. Among them is the common
    practice for a rabbi arranging a divorce to
    instruct the witnesses to do teshuvah for
    all their sins before signing the document.
    Maharam Lublin quotes the Rosh and others
    that this would not work if a thief has not
    yet returned the stolen object. Additionally,
    it does not necessarily achieve atonement,
    which might require fasting and other
    acts of penance. However, in his case, the
    stolen money had been found and returned
    to the victim. Therefore, when the thief
    presumably repented before signing the
    divorce document, that suffices to qualify
    him as a witness. This was one of Maharam
    Lublin’s considerations in ruling leniently.
    III. Other Prooftexts
    Rav Moshe di Trani (Mabit; 16th cen.,
    Israel) follows Rabbeinu Tam also. In his
    Beis Elokim (Sha’ar Ha-Teshuvah, ch.
    2), Mabit says that a thief is considered
    repentant as long as he decides in his
    heart — before G-d — that he will repay
    the victim. As proof, he quotes the Gemara
    about betrothal mentioned above. He also
    quotes a Gemara (Bava Metzi’a 62a) that if
    a father leaves in his inheritance something
    stolen, the sons must return it to its original
    owner. While technically they do not have
    to do so, they must out of respect for their
    father. But, asks the Gemara, are they really
    obligated to show respect to their sinful
    father? Rather, he must have repented from
    his sin but died before he could return the

    stolen item. Mabit asks that if repentance is
    only effective if you repay the victim, then
    how could the father be considered repentant
    without returning the stolen item? Rather,
    concludes Mabit, a commitment to return
    the stolen object suffices and the father is
    considered righteous and worthy of respect.
    Rav Chaim Yosef David Azulai (Chida; 18th
    cen., Israel) quotes some of the literature on
    the subject and attempts to respond to proofs
    in each direction (Tov Ayin, no. 6). We already
    responded to the proof regarding betrothal —
    that it does not refer to interpersonal sins.
    Chida responds to the stolen inheritance
    proof by arguing that death is different. He
    does not elaborate but we can suggest that a
    sinner must do everything humanly possible
    to correct the damage caused by his sins.
    Wanting to repay, even sincerely committing
    to do so, is not sufficient. Find the money
    and make it happen. However, the finality
    of death removes all options. Death is much
    more than a temporary obstacle. Therefore, a
    repentant father who died before returning a
    stolen object can be considered righteous but
    anyone else must fulfill his commitment to
    repay the victim.
    Chida quotes another potential proof text
    that he saw someone quote. The Gemara
    (Berachos 19a) says that if you see a Torah
    scholar sin during the day, you can assume
    that he repented by nighttime. However, adds
    the Gemara, that does not apply to monetary
    sins because he still has to repay the damage
    he caused. This text seems to imply that
    repentance does not work if you still owe the
    victim money, a proof for the Rosh. Chida
    replies that we are discussing what one can
    assume about a Torah scholar. If he did not
    repay the damage then there is less of a basis
    to assume he has repented. The text makes
    no claim about when repentance is possible
    rather it discusses only what an observer can
    assume.
    When we wrong someone else, we need to
    do more than just teshuvah. Yes, we must
    change ourselves, raise our religious status.
    However, when there is a victim involved,
    we must also restore his loss and apologize
    to him. If we cannot repay him, we must
    commit ourselves to attempting to do so.
    Even then, it is a matter of debate whether
    the commitment is enough. Our actions have
    consequences which, as responsible people,
    we must accept and address.