Y estos son los festivales de las naciones: las calendas (Año Nuevo romano) [ocho días después del décimo solsticio (de invierno)]; las Saturnales [ocho días antes del solsticio. Cuando Adam vio que los días se acortaban, pensó: "¡Ay de mí! ¡Puede ser porque he pecado que el mundo está volviendo al vacío (primordial) y al vacío!"—luego se sentó ocho días en ayuno y en oración. Cuando, con el advenimiento del décimo solsticio, vio que los días se alargaban progresivamente, dijo: "Era (solo) el curso natural de las cosas".—con lo cual celebró un festival de ocho días. Al año siguiente estableció ambos (períodos de ocho días como festivales). Los dedicó al cielo; ellos (los paganos), a la idolatría]; el Kratisis [el día de la investidura del rey, que establecieron como festival]; la Genusia [día de la coronación] de los reyes; el cumpleaños [del rey]; y el día de su muerte. Estas son las palabras de R. Meir. Y los sabios dicen: Cada muerte donde hay ardor [es decir, donde queman sus efectos personales con él, como lo hacen con los reyes], hay un festival [es decir, establecen un festival de idolatría ese día; y así, de año en año, todos los días de su hijo. Y todos los días antes mencionados tienen un significado especial para ellos y están prohibidos (en las actividades antes mencionadas) tres días antes]; y donde no hay quema no hay día de festival. Pero el día del afeitado de su barba, [que no está arreglado para todos, pero que cada uno hace un día festivo], y (el día del corte de) sus mechones [que deja atrás todo el año y que él corta solo de año en año, haciendo un festival en ese día], y el día que sube del mar, [que hace un día festivo por haber sido salvado], y el día en que sale de la cárcel, y el día en que un gentil hace un banquete para su hijo [- En todas estas ocasiones, las actividades antes mencionadas] están prohibidas, solo en ese día [y no antes], y solo para ese hombre (celebrando sus vacaciones) [ porque tienen un significado relativamente menor.]
Bartenura on Mishnah Avodah Zarah
קלנדיא – eight days after the winter solstice [begins].
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English Explanation of Mishnah Avodah Zarah
Introduction
Mishnah three delineates which idolatrous holidays are referred to in the previous two mishnayoth.
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Bartenura on Mishnah Avodah Zarah
סטרנורא – eight days prior to the solstice; since the first man (i.e., Adam) saw that the [length of the] day was gradually getting shorter. He said: Woe is me, lest because I sinned, the world is returning to become “null and void.” He stood and sat for eight days in fasting (and in prayer), since from the time that the solstice occurred, and he (i.e., Adam) saw that the days are gradually lengthening, he said: it is the nature of the world. He stood and made an eight-day festival. In the following year, they made both of them holy days and he established them [in honor of] the heavens, and they were established for idolatrous worship.
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English Explanation of Mishnah Avodah Zarah
These are the festivities of the idolaters: Kalenda, Saturnalia, Kratesis, the anniversary of accession to the throne and birthdays and anniversaries of deaths, according to Rabbi Meir. Kalenda, from which the English word calendar derives, refers to the first day of the month, and especially to the first day of the year. Saturnalia was a popular Roman holiday on the 17th of December, dedicated to the god, Saturn. Kratesis, which was on the first of August, commemorated the day that Augustus conquered Alexandria in Egypt. Note that I have used the names of these holidays as Albeck states that they should be read. Medieval scribes often did not know what these holidays were or what their names were and different forms of the words can be found in other versions of the mishnah. The anniversary of the accession of the king to the throne is also considered to be a day of celebration full of idolatrous practices. The final two days of idolatrous celebration are personal: one’s birthday and the anniversary of the death of a close relative. On these days non-Jews would make idolatrous celebrations. Interestingly, Jews did not traditionally celebrate birthdays because it was seen to be a non-Jewish custom.
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Bartenura on Mishnah Avodah Zarah
קרטסים – the day of taking hold of the kingship, and they established it as a holiday.
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English Explanation of Mishnah Avodah Zarah
But the Sages say: a death at which burning [of articles of the dead] takes place is attended by idolatry, but where there is not such burning there is no idolatry. The opinion in the previous section was that of Rabbi Meir, who held that pagans commemorate the anniversaries of all deaths. The Rabbis disagree with Rabbi Meir and hold that only deaths where the body and clothes were burned on a funeral pyre are celebrated by idolatrous acts. If the body was not burned on the pyre then the day is not accompanied by idolatry and it is therefore permitted to conduct business with the non-Jew three days before.
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Bartenura on Mishnah Avodah Zarah
גינוסיא – the day when they appoint the king.
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English Explanation of Mishnah Avodah Zarah
But the day of shaving ones beard and lock of hair, or the day of landing after a sea voyage, or the day of release from prison, or if an idolater holds a banquet for his son the prohibition only applies to that day and that particular person. As was previously stated it is forbidden to conduct business with non-Jews during the three days before the personal holidays mentioned in section two. In section three the mishnah lists pagan holidays that Jews can conduct business during the three days before and are only forbidden from doing so on the holiday itself. These include the day that the non-Jew shaves his beard and lock of hair, which refers to a lock of hair grown at the back of one’s head and is shaved once a year; the day of return from a long trip by sea; the day that one is released from prison and the day in which one marries off one’s son and makes him a celebratory feast.
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Bartenura on Mishnah Avodah Zarah
יום הלידה – the day on which the king is born
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English Explanation of Mishnah Avodah Zarah
Questions for Further Thought: • What is the difference between the personal holidays mentioned in section two of this mishnah and those mentioned in section three? Why is it forbidden to conduct business for the three days preceding some of them but not others?
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Bartenura on Mishnah Avodah Zarah
שריפה – where they burn the utensils in the manner that they burn them for kings.
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Bartenura on Mishnah Avodah Zarah
יש בה ע"ז – that is to say, that selfsame day they have a idolatrous holiday, and from year to year all the days of his son, and all these we consider until now, they value and it is forbidden [for us to interact with them] three days before [their festivals].
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Bartenura on Mishnah Avodah Zarah
אבל יום תגלחת זקנו – which is not a set time for the group, but each person, when he shaves makes that day a festival.
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Bartenura on Mishnah Avodah Zarah
ובלוריתו – that he places his locks behind him all year long but does not sheer them other than on an annual basis, the day of his sheering he makes a holiday.
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Bartenura on Mishnah Avodah Zarah
ויום שעלה מן הים – And he offers sacrifices to idolatry on account that he was saved. In all of these, it is not prohibited other than on that day and not beforehand, and they do not consider it all that much.