06 Sep PARASHAT KI TESEH: THE MESSAGE OF YIBUM
Towards the end of Parashat
Ki-Teseh, the Torah
presents the Misva of
Yibum, which applies when
a married man dies without
children. His brother is required to marry the
widow, and the child born from this marriage
will be considered, in some sense, the
offspring of the deceased. If the brother
refuses to marry the widow, then he must
perform a special ceremony called “Halisa,”
whereby he wears a special shoe which the
widow removes from his foot. (Although it is
clear from the Torah that Yibum is preferred
over Halisa, nowadays, Halisa is performed
when this unfortunate situation arises, for
reasons which lie beyond the scope of our
discussion.) Various different approaches
have been suggested to explain the meaning
and significance of Yibum and Halisa.
Rabbenu Bahya (Spain, 1255-1340)
suggested, quite simply, that the Torah
commands the brother to marry the widow in
order to keep the deceased’s wealth in the
family. Since the deceased had no children, his
only inheritor is his wife, and if she would then
marry somebody else, all his wealth would
end up in a different family. As people
generally wish for their wealth to remain in
their family, the Torah commanded the
brother to marry the widow. In explaining the
significance of Halisa, Rabbenu Bahya writes
that Yibum has the effect of bringing the
deceased back to life, in some sense. As the
Torah writes, the child produced by the
brother’s marriage to the widow “shall be
named after the deceased.” Since the deceased
in effect caused this child to be born, as his
brother was required to marry the widow
because of his death, the deceased – who had
no children – is considered as having a legacy
and presence in this world through the birth of
that child. And so if the brother refuses to
marry the widow, he essentially causes the
brother to “die” again. He consigns the brother
to no longer have any chance of leaving a
legacy in this world. The brother therefore has
his shoe removed – a symbol of mourning,
conveying the message that his refusal is
causing his brother to “die” once again, in that
it denies the brother an opportunity for a
spiritual presence in this world through
offspring. But the removal of a shoe from the
brother’s foot might also send a different
message. The Zohar and other sources speak
at length about a person’s ability to elevate his
father’s soul in the next world. By performing
Misvot in the father’s merit, a person brings
great blessing to the deceased father’s soul. In
fact, a son’s Misvot performed in the father’s
merit have a greater effect upon the father’s
soul than those performed by the greatest
Sadik in the world. The Gemara teaches that
one is required to honor his parents both
during their lifetime and after their passing.
When the parent is alive, the child is to help
him here in this world by caring for him and
respecting him. When the parent passes on,
the child is to help the parent in the next world,
through the performance of Misvot.
Elsewhere, the Gemara comments that a child
is “Kar’a De’abu” – “his father’s leg.” The
commentators explain this to mean that a child
has the ability to enable his parent to “move”
even in the next world. Once a person leaves
this world, he no longer has the ability to
perform Misvot, and so he no longer has the
ability to build himself, to elevate himself, to
grow and develop. The only way this can be
done after death is through one’s offspring,
whose good deeds are attributed, to some
extent, to the parent who produced the
children and trained them to observe the
Torah. The child is the parent’s “leg” in the
sense that he grants his father the ability to
continue “walking” even in the next world, to
be elevated and raised, through the
performance of Misvot. This might be the
meaning of the Halisa ceremony. The shoe is
removed from the brother’s foot to sharply
reprimand him for denying his brother a
“shoe” – a child who would be able to carry his
soul further in the next world. The Torah gave
the brother the opportunity to produce a child
that would be considered the child of the
deceased, and would thus elevate the
deceased’s soul to infinitely greater heights in
the next world, but he chose not to seize this
opportunity. He thus removed his brother’s
“shoe,” his means of achieving greater
elevation. The greatest thing we can do for our
beloved family members who have left this
world is to involve ourselves in the study and
observance of Torah in their merit, through
which we elevate their souls to ever greater
heights for all eternity.