Mishnah
Mishnah

Comentário sobre Sucá 3:1

לוּלָב הַגָּזוּל וְהַיָּבֵשׁ, פָּסוּל. שֶׁל אֲשֵׁרָה וְשֶׁל עִיר הַנִּדַּחַת, פָּסוּל. נִקְטַם רֹאשׁוֹ, נִפְרְצוּ עָלָיו, פָּסוּל. נִפְרְדוּ עָלָיו, כָּשֵׁר. רַבִּי יְהוּדָה אוֹמֵר, יֶאֶגְדֶנּוּ מִלְמָעְלָה. צִנֵּי הַר הַבַּרְזֶל, כְּשֵׁרוֹת. לוּלָב שֶׁיֶּשׁ בּוֹ שְׁלשָׁה טְפָחִים כְּדֵי לְנַעְנֵעַ בּוֹ, כָּשֵׁר:

Um lulav roubado ou um lulav seco é pasul, [(um lulav roubado) que está sendo escrito (Levítico 23:40): "E vocês tomarão para si mesmos" —do que é seu. E depois do yeush (resignação) dos proprietários, embora ele possa adquirir o lulav com este yeush, ainda assim, é uma mitzvá que vem através de uma transgressão (e, portanto, nenhuma mitzvá). (e um lulav seco é pasul), pois todas as (quatro espécies) requerem "hadar" ("bonito"), que não é obtido nesse caso.] Um lulav de uma asheirah [uma árvore que é adorada], ou de uma cidade perdida (depois da idolatria) é pasul, [tendo que ser queimado. Um lulav deve ser de um certo tamanho, que estes, designados para queimar, carecem.] Se sua cabeça foi cortada, [nesse caso, não é hadar] ou se suas folhas foram quebradas [e unidas apenas por serem amarradas], é pasul. Se suas folhas foram separadas, [isto é, se elas foram unidas na espinha, mas inclinadas em diferentes direções no topo, como os galhos de uma árvore], é kasher. R. Yehudah diz: Ele deve amarrá-los por cima. [Se as folhas se separarem, ele deve amarrá-las para que subam junto com a espinha, como outros lulavim. A halachá não está de acordo com R. Yehudah.] As palmeiras de Har Habarzel são kasher. [Existem palmeiras cujas folhas são muito curtas e não crescem ao longo da espinha. Se eles são tão longos que a cabeça de um atinge a base do outro, eles são kasher. Um lulav com três tefachim (largura de mão) de comprimento [ao lado dos hadas e um tefach adicional] para agitá-lo [(um lulav que requer "agitação", como explicado abaixo)) é um kasher. [("para agitar" :) Leia: "E para agitar"; isto é, um tefach além dos três tefachim].

Bartenura on Mishnah Sukkah

לולב הגזול פסול – as it is written (Leviticus 23:40): “[On the first day] you shall take the product of hadar trees….,” that which belongs to you and after the owners despair, let it be his, for he acquires it through despair, nevertheless, it is a commandment/Mitzvah that comes through a transgression.
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English Explanation of Mishnah Sukkah

Introduction The third chapter of Sukkah deals with the four species, which are together called the “Lulav.” These four species are described in Leviticus 23:40, “On the first day you shall take the product of ‘hadar’ trees, branches of palm trees, boughs of leafy trees and willows of the brook, and you shall rejoice before the Lord your God seven days.” The four species are identified by the rabbis as 1) the etrog or citron; 2) the lulav or palm-branch; 3) the hadas or myrtle; 4) the arava or willow. I will refer to them by their Hebrew names. The Torah does not say exactly what one is to do with these four species and this led to different interpretations among ancient groups of Jews. In Nehemiah 8:14-18 we see Israelites using them, or more precisely, something similar to them, to build their sukkot. Other groups of ancient Jews used them strictly in the Temple to walk around the altar. For the rabbis the mitvah of the lulav was incumbent upon every Jew, whether at the Temple or outside of it. The rabbis explain that each Jew must simply pick these four species up once a day on Sukkot and wave them in each direction. This remains our custom to this day. The first seven mishnayot deal with the physical attributes of the four species. To this day, observant Jews are extremely cautious to make sure that the four species look like they are supposed to look, or in Hebrew are “mehudar”, adorned. You can find many interesting pictures and information about the four species by googling them and looking at the images.
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Bartenura on Mishnah Sukkah

והיבש פסול – for all of them require “beauty” and it is missing.
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English Explanation of Mishnah Sukkah

A stolen or a dried up lulav is invalid. There are two potential reasons why a stolen lulav is invalid. First of all, the Torah states, “And you shall take for yourselves (lachem) on the first day…” The extra word “lachem (for yourselves)” is understood to mean that a person’s lulav must be their own and not one that was stolen or even borrowed. Secondly, performing a mitzvah with a stolen item is considered a “commandment that derives from a transgression” and such an act is invalid. A dried up lulav is invalid because it is not “adorned”, meaning it does not look good.
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Bartenura on Mishnah Sukkah

של אשירה – a tree that is worshipped.
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English Explanation of Mishnah Sukkah

One [that came] from an asherah tree or from a condemned city is invalid. An asherah is a tree used for idol worship. Since it is forbidden to use anything from this kind of tree, its palm-branch cannot be used to fulfill the mitvah of lulav. A “condemned city” refers to an idolatrous city which must be utterly destroyed, according to Deuteronomy 13:13-18. Everything in the idolatrous city must be burned. Hence it is impossible to use a lulav that comes from such a city.
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Bartenura on Mishnah Sukkah

ושל עיר הנדחת פסול – for it refers to burning. But a Lulav requires a measurement, and these, since they exist for burning, their measurements are not valid.
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English Explanation of Mishnah Sukkah

If its top was broken off or its leaves were detached, it is invalid. The lulav must not be broken off at its top and its leaves must still be attached to the spine, the middle leaf that goes through all lulavim.
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Bartenura on Mishnah Sukkah

נקטם ראשו פסול – for there is no “beauty.”
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English Explanation of Mishnah Sukkah

If its leaves are spread apart it is valid. Rabbi Judah says he should tie it at the top. If the leaves are still attached but they are spread apart, the lulav is still valid. Rabbi Judah says that if the leaves are still attached one should tie the lulav (just the palm-branch) together at the top. We shall learn more about tying all four species together in mishnah eight.
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Bartenura on Mishnah Sukkah

נפרצו עליו – and they are not attached other than through binding.
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English Explanation of Mishnah Sukkah

The thorny palms of the iron mountain are valid. The “iron mountains” are identified in Josephus, Wars of the Jews 4, 8, 2 as being mountains north of Moab, on the other side of the Jordan river. From our mishnah we see that the palm trees that grew there seem to have been a slightly different type of palm. Their leaves are shorter and do not grow on the whole length of the spine. Nevertheless, they are valid for the mitzvah of lulav.
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Bartenura on Mishnah Sukkah

נפרדו עליו – they are attached at the spine, but above they are separated to this side and that side like the branches of a tree.
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English Explanation of Mishnah Sukkah

A lulav which is three handbreadths in length, long enough to wave, is valid. The lulav must be three handbreadths, long enough so that one can wave it. The Talmud explains that the lulav must actually be three handbreadths long, like the hadas and aravah, and then an additional handbreadth so that it can be waved. We will learn more about waving the lulav and other four species in mishnah nine.
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Bartenura on Mishnah Sukkah

יאגדנו מלמעלה – if the leaves became separated, he should bind them in order that they ascend with the spine like the other Lulavim, but the Halakha is not according to Rabbi Yehuda.
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Bartenura on Mishnah Sukkah

ציני הר הברזל – there are palm-trees where the leaves on their Lulavim/palm branches are very short and do not ascend the length of the spine. If they are so long that the head of one reaches to the side of its root of the other, they are valid.
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Bartenura on Mishnah Sukkah

כל לולב שיש בו שלשה טפחים – corresponding to the length of the myrtle/Hadas and a handbreadth more, in order to wave/shake it, for the Lulav is required for waving/shaking, as we will see further on (see Tractate Sukkah, Chapter 3, Mishnah 9).
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Bartenura on Mishnah Sukkah

כדי לנענע בו – it is taught, and in order to wave/shake it, that is a handbreadth greater than the three handbreadths.
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