Uma mulher cujo filho se confundiu com o de sua nora —Se aqueles que foram misturados cresceram, casaram e morreram, os (conhecidos) filhos da nora dão chalitzah, mas não aceitam yibum, cada mulher possivelmente sendo a esposa de seu irmão ou a esposa do irmão de seu pai. E os filhos da sogra ou dão chalitzah ou aceitam yibum, cada mulher possivelmente sendo a esposa de seu irmão ou a esposa do filho de seu irmão. Se os filhos conhecidos morrem, os filhos confusos dão chalitzah às (esposas) dos filhos da sogra, mas não recebem yibum, cada mulher possivelmente sendo a esposa de seu irmão ou a esposa do irmão de seu pai. E os filhos da nora— um dá chalitzah [primeiro] e [depois] o outro absorve yibum [—em qualquer evento. Se aquele que deu chalitzah é filho da nora, e ele deu chalitzah à esposa de seu irmão, ele a permite assim, e o outro, filho da sogra, pode casar com ela, o esposa do filho de um irmão sendo permitida a ele. E se quem deu chalitzah é filho da sogra e ele deu chalitzah à esposa do filho de seu irmão, é como se ela tivesse recebido chalitzah de um estranho, de modo que quando o filho da filha sogro a leva para yibum, ele o faz corretamente.]
Bartenura on Mishnah Yevamot
מתו כשרים – the certifiable children.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
English Explanation of Mishnah Yevamot
Introduction
This mishnah deals with the complex situation where a mother’s son gets mixed up with her daughter-in-law’s son. Afterwards each woman has another son, such that it is unclear who is whose brother and who is whose father’s brother. I will try to use names to make the situation clearer. Sarah is the mother and Rebekah is the daughter-in-law. They give birth each to one son, Joe and Stanley, but they don’t know whose child is whose. They each also give birth to another son, Sarah to Moshe and Rebekah to Eli. Joe and Stanley might be Eli’s brother or his uncle. Joe and Stanley might be Moshe’s brother or his nephew. Our mishnah deals with cases of potential yibbum involving these four men.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Bartenura on Mishnah Yevamot
אחד חולץ – first [performs Halitzah] and afterwards the other [performs] levirate marriage, for whichever way you turn for if this one who performed Halitzah was the son of the daughter-in-law who performed Halitzah with his brother’s wife, for he is permitted to her through this Halitzah and it is well that the other marries her who is the son of the old lady, for the wife of his brother’s son is permitted to him. But if the one who performed Halitzah is the son of the old lady, and he performed Halitzah with the wife of his brother’s son, it is like she had Halitzah from an outsider/foreigner, so that when the son of the daughter-in-law when he performs levirate marriage, he did well in performing levirate marriage.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
English Explanation of Mishnah Yevamot
If the child of a woman was mixed up with the child of her daughter-in-law and the mixed-up children grew up and married women and then died, the [other] sons of the daughter-in-law perform halitzah but may not contract yibbum, for it is uncertain whether she is the wife of his brother or the wife of his father’s brother. The [other] sons of the older woman either perform halitzah or yibbum, since the only doubt is whether she is the wife of his brother or the wife of his brother’s son. If Joe and Stanley each married a woman and then died without children, their wives become liable for yibbum or halitzah with either Moshe or Eli. Eli, Rebekah’s son, must perform halitzah for each woman for each might be the widow of his brother. He cannot have yibbum with either for either might be his father’s brother’s wife and it is forbidden to have relations with one’s father’s brother’s wife. After Eli has performed halitzah with both women, Moshe, Sarah’s son, may either have halitzah or yibbum with either. He may have yibbum with either for if she is his brother’s wife, then the yibbum is valid. If she is his wife of his brother’s son, he is still permitted to marry her for it is permitted to marry the wife of one’s brother’s son. This mishnah is based on the fact that it is permitted to marry one’s nephew’s wife but not one’s uncle’s wife.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
English Explanation of Mishnah Yevamot
If the not-mixed-up sons died then [with respect to the widows of the sons of the older woman] the mixed-up sons perform halitzah and may not have yibbum, since it is uncertain whether she is the wife of his brother or the wife of his father’s brother; [With respect to the widows] of the sons of the daughter-in-law one performs halitzah and the other [may] have yibbum. In this case, Moshe and Eli die and each woman becomes liable for halitzah to Joe and Stanley. Both Joe and Stanley must perform halitzah for Moshe’s wife, lest she be their dead brother’s wife. They may not have yibbum with her lest she be the wife of their father’s brother. With Eli’s wife one must have halitzah, lest she be his brother’s widow but then the other may have yibbum. Yibbum in this case is permitted because even if she is not his dead brother’s wife she is his brother’s son’s wife and it is permitted, as we learned above, to have relations with one’s brother’s son’s wife. In summary, if there is the possibility that the woman is his father’s brother’s wife, he may not have yibbum with her. If there is a possibility that she is his brother’s son’s wife he may have yibbum since this is permitted.