Mischna
Mischna

Kommentar zu Yevamot 4:8

הַחוֹלֵץ לִיבִמְתּוֹ, וְנָשָׂא אָחִיו אֶת אֲחוֹתָהּ, וָמֵת, חוֹלֶצֶת וְלֹא מִתְיַבֶּמֶת. וְכֵן הַמְגָרֵשׁ אֶת אִשְׁתּוֹ, וְנָשָׂא אָחִיו אֶת אֲחוֹתָהּ, וָמֵת, הֲרֵי זוֹ פְּטוּרָה מִן הַחֲלִיצָה וּמִן הַיִּבּוּם:

Wenn man seiner Yevamah Chalitzah gibt und sein Bruder ihre Schwester heiratete und er starb, gibt er ihr Chalitzah und nimmt sie nicht in Yibum. Wenn man sich von seiner Frau scheiden lässt und sein Bruder ihre Schwester heiratet und er stirbt, ist sie ebenfalls von Chalitzah und Yibum befreit. [Die Gemara fragt: "Ebenso?" Sagen Sie lieber: Aber wenn man sich von seiner Frau scheiden lässt usw. Denn die Schwester der Scheidung ist durch die Thora verboten, weshalb sie von der Chalitzah und vom Yibum befreit ist, während die Schwester der Chaluzah nur durch die Verordnung der verboten ist Schriftgelehrte, aus diesem Grund erhält sie Chalitzah und wird nicht in Yibum aufgenommen.]

Bartenura on Mishnah Yevamot

וכן המגרש את אשתו וכו' – In the Gemara (Tractate Yevamot 41a), it raises the question and similarly, you might think, but rather, I would say, that a man who divorces his wife, etc., that the sister of the divorced woman from the words of the Torah, and therefore is exempt from Halitzah and from levirate marriage, but the sister of the woman who underwent Halitzah, according to the words of the Scribes/Soferim, so therefore, she engages in Halitzah does not engage in levirate marriage.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy

English Explanation of Mishnah Yevamot

Introduction This mishnah continues to teach that it is forbidden to marry the sister of one’s halutzah.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy

English Explanation of Mishnah Yevamot

If he performed halitzah for his yevamah, and his brother married her sister and died, she must perform halitzah but may not be taken in yibbum. If Reuven performs halitzah for Rachel (who had been married to Shimon) and then Levi marries Leah, Rachel’s sister, and then Levi dies, Leah now falls in front of Reuven for yibbum or halitzah. Since Leah is the sister of his halutzah, Rachel, Reuven cannot have yibbum with her. However, since the prohibition of the sister of one’s halutzah is only of rabbinic origin (derabbanan), she must have halitzah and is not totally exempt.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy

English Explanation of Mishnah Yevamot

Similarly if a man divorces his wife and his brother marries her sister and dies behold she is exempt from halitzah and from yibbum. Similarly, if Reuven divorces Rachel, and Shimon marries Leah and then Shimon dies childless, Leah is exempt from both halitzah and yibbum, since she is the sister of his former wife. Since this is biblically prohibited, Leah does not even need to have halitzah.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Vorheriger VersGanzes KapitelNächster Vers