Um sumo sacerdote pode ocasionalmente desqualificar. Como assim? [Se] a filha de um padre [era casada] com um israelita, e ela lhe deu uma filha, e essa filha foi e se casou com um padre, e lhe deu um filho - ele [esse filho] é elegível para ser um sumo sacerdote, fique e ministre no altar; ele confere o direito de comer [ Terumah ] a sua mãe, mas desqualifica a mãe de sua mãe, que pode muito bem dizer: "Que não seja como meu neto, o Sumo Sacerdote, que me desqualifica de comer Terumah ".
Bartenura on Mishnah Yevamot
ופוסל את אם אמו – for if it we not him, his grandmother would return to eat Terumah of her father’s home after the death of her daughter, and all the while that he lives, she does not return to Terumah , as it is written (Leviticus 22:13): “[but if the priest’s daughter is widowed or divorced] and without offspring, [and is back in her father’s house as in her youth, she may not eat of her father’s food],” examine – upon her or the daughter of her daughter’s daughter, or the son of his son’s son or the daughter of son’s daughter, until the end of all generations.
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English Explanation of Mishnah Yevamot
Introduction
This mishnah introduces the strange case where a woman can have a grandson who is a high priest and that high priest actually disqualifies her from eating terumah.
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Bartenura on Mishnah Yevamot
לא כבני כהן גדול – meaning to say, there should not be man like him in Israel who disqualify me from the Terumah.
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English Explanation of Mishnah Yevamot
A high priest sometimes disqualifies [his mother’s mother] from being able to eat terumah. How is this so? If a priest’s daughter was married to an Israelite and she bore a daughter by him, and the daughter went and married a priest and bore a son by him, such a son is fit to be a high priest, to stand and serve at the altar. He allows his mother to eat terumah but disqualifies his mother’s mother. And she can say, “[May there] not be like my grandson the high priest who disqualified me from eating terumah.” If the daughter of a priest marries an Israelite, she loses the right to eat terumah as long as he is alive or she has a descendent through him. When she has a daughter and the daughter goes and marries a priest and has a son the son is a priest and is eligible to become a high priest. If his father dies, his mother may continue to eat terumah, because she has had a son. If his mother also dies, and his grandmother did not have any other children, she does not return to her father’s home (remember her father was a priest) to eat terumah, because she has a grandson through her marriage to the Israelite. Although her grandson might even be a high priest, he still prevents his grandmother from eating terumah. The mishnah then brings up the strange possible complaint of a grandmother, who has a grandson who is the high priest, and yet he disqualifies her from eating terumah. I imagine that if this was my Bubby, she would have gotten over the loss of terumah and just been proud of her grandson!