Laws and customs of the Land of Israel in Judaism
Laws and customs of the Land of Israel in Judaism are those Jewish laws that apply only to the Land of Israel. These include the commandments dependent on the Land, as well as various customs.
Classification
According to a standard view, 26 of the 613 mitzvot apply only in the Land of Israel. Overall, the laws and customs may be classified as follows:- Laws that were in force at the time of the Temple in Jerusalem and in connection with the Temple service. These relate to the Paschal lamb during the Passover festival, the bringing of the First fruits to Jerusalem, the tri-annual pilgrimage to Jerusalem; the test applied to the wife suspected of faithlessness ; all the sacrifices, and the priestly Levitical services.
- Laws in connection with Jewish civil and military government, as those relating to the king, to covenants with foreign countries, to taking the census, and to military affairs.
- Laws concerning the produce of the land: the heave-offering for the priests; the tithes to the Levites; the poor man's right to the gleanings, the forgotten sheaf, and the unreaped grain in the corners of the field; the use of young trees ; the mixing of different kinds of vegetables ; the Sabbatical year.
- Health laws: the quarantine regulations; the defilement and purification of persons, dwellings, and garments, and their examination by a qualified priest.
- Laws connected with the functions of the Sanhedrin in the Jewish state: Ordination; Sanctification of the New Moon and the arrangement of the calendar; the laws of the Jubilee and the blowing of the shofar on Yom Kippur to announce the Jubilee; the laws of Jewish servants; the right to sell a thief should he fail to make restitution for his theft; the regulations for the cities of refuge; corporal punishments and fines.
Priestly gifts
- Bikkurim
- Separation of dough-portion
- Terumah
- First tithe
- Terumat hamaaser
Poor man's gifts
- Gleanings
- Forgotten sheaves
- Unharvested corners
- Fallen grapes
- Clusters of grapes that are poorly formed
- Poor man's tithe – separated by Israel from produce and given to the poor twice in a seven-year cycle
Sanctity ascribed to the Land of Israel
- Prohibition of diverse kinds
- Prohibition of eating the new grain crop until after the first-day of Passover
- Three-year abstinence from eating fruit of young trees, until tree has entered its fourth year
- Fourth-year tree plantings, fruits of which eaten in Jerusalem, or redeemed before they can be eaten in the Land of Israel
- Second tithe, eaten by Israel within the walls of Jerusalem
- Sabbatical Year, not only includes the cessation of labour in the fields, but laws governing aftergrowths, and biur
- Jubilee
Rabbinical distinctions
Those of the laws of the Land of Israel that were extended after the Exile were originally enacted for the purpose of protecting the judicial administration and economic interests of the Land, and with a view to encourage settlement there. Hence semikhah was still left in the hands of the judiciary, with power to inflict the penalties of lashes and fines, and to announce the day of the new moon on the evidence of witnesses. But the power of the Sanhedrin was of short duration in consequence of incessant persecution, which drove the Talmudists to Babylon. The fixed calendar was then accepted everywhere, yet there still remained the difference between the Land of Israel and the rest of the world as to the observance of the second day of holidays.
If a gentile living in Israel claimed to have been converted to Judaism his claim was valid; but the same claim made by a gentile living abroad was accepted only when corroborated by witnesses.
Similarly, a divorce signed by witnesses in Israel was valid on prima facie evidence; but such a writ abroad was not valid unless verified by the oral testimony of the signing witnesses before the rabbinate, that "it was written and signed in our presence".
Agricultural restrictions
The Rabbis prohibited the exportation of provisions which are necessaries of life, such as fruits, wines, oils, and firewood, and ordered that these provisions should be sold directly to the consumer in order to save to the purchaser the middleman's profit. Another ordinance was directed against the raising of small livestock except in woods or barren territory, in order to preserve the cultivated lands from injury.To secure an adequate supply of slaves, the Mosaic law providing for the freedom of a slave who had fled from his master was made applicable to a slave escaping from other lands, but not to a slave escaping from the land.
Settlement in the Land of Israel
For the benefit of settlers it was decreed that the owner of a town in the Land must leave a public thoroughfare on all four sides of the town, and that a Jew about to purchase real property from a gentile in the Land of Israel may have the contract drawn up on Sabbath to facilitate and bind the bargain, though such a proceeding is prohibited in other lands,Residence in the Land of Israel is regarded as becoming immediately permanent. For example, a rented dwelling outside Israel need not have a mezuzah during the first thirty days, as the tenancy is considered temporary for the first month; but in Israel the posting of the mezuzah is immediately obligatory.
The regulation of migration to and from Israel had in view the object of maintaining the settlement of the Land. One must not emigrate unless the necessaries of life reach the price of a "sela" for a double se'ah-measure of wheat, and unless they are difficult to obtain even then. A person may compel his or her spouse, under pain of divorce, to go with them and settle in Israel, which is not true for any other travel.
Customs
Besides these legal variations there were many differences, especially in the early periods, between Jewish practices in Israel and Babylon. The differences are fifty in number according to one authority, and fifty-five according to another. The most important ones are as follows:- The fast-day after Purim in memory of the persecution of the Jews in Alexandria by the Greek general Nicanor prior to his defeat by the Maccabeans was observed in Israel only.
- The Torah reading cycle, which in Israel was completed in three or three and one-half years, was elsewhere completed in one year, on Simchat Torah.
- In Israel one of the congregation was honored in being permitted to take the scroll from the Ark, and another was similarly honored in being permitted to return it to its place : elsewhere it was considered an honor only to restore the scroll to the Ark.
- In Israel seven persons constituted minyan for kaddish and blessings: elsewhere no less than ten persons were required.
- In Israel the Sabbath was announced every Friday afternoon by three blasts on the shofar: this was not done elsewhere.
- In Israel no one touched money on the Sabbath: elsewhere one might even carry money on that day. Jews who are strictly shomer shabbos will not carry anything except, for this one condition, permitted items for which the eruv allows.
- In Israel the nuptial ceremony was distinguished by the sanctification of the ring given by the groom to the bride. In Babylon the ring "was not in sight".
- In Israel the law that a widow should not be permitted to marry within twenty-four months after her husband's death if when he died she had a nursing child, for fear she might commit infanticide, was enforced even if the child died within that period; in Babylon she was permitted to marry within that time if the child died.
- In Israel mourning was observed for any infant: in Babylon, not unless it was older than thirty days.
- In the Land of Israel a student was permitted to greet his teacher with "Peace to thee, master": in Babylon, only when the pupil was first recognized by his teacher.