Shut: Shomer Negiyah
| Email Exchange January 2001, Benjamin Fleischer
Hello Rabbi Dorff- My name is Benjamin Fleischer. I am a 2000 graduate of the University of Pennsylvania and a current student at the Conservative Yeshiva. A friend has asked me why I am not shomer negiyah if the law as codified from the Rambam through Iggerot Moshe clearly states that a man may not touch a woman in any loving way whether hugging or kissing. It seems to me that the issue of shemirat negiyah has become one the principally debated topics among baalei teshuvah who can find no Conservative source permitting premarital contact with the opposite sex. I have noted that in your Rabbinic Letter you write that hand-holding, hugging, and kissing are natural ways for youths to express affection. I am curious what the history of shemirat negiyyah is and the halakhic reasons we may dismiss with it today. Thank you for your time. RESPONSE: Rabbi Dorff replies Dear Benjamin, COMMENT: The Aish Rabbi Wrote The laws regarding Shomer Nagiah are derived from the verse “Any man shall not approach his close relative to uncover nakedness. I am the Almighty.” (Leviticus 18:6) The Talmud – Shabbos 13a discuss the subject in detail and the Even Ha’ezer 21:7 discusses the laws and implications. And why don’t your friends keep it? I cannot comment for them, since I do not know them. Just as the Torah commands the Nazir who swore off not to even taste raisins or grape skins as an added precaution, the Torah commands us (as one of the 613 Mitzvot) not to have any sort of intimate contact with someone with whom it is forbidden to be sexual. But what is considered intimate contact and who is included in the prohibition? Intimate contact obviously includes hugging and kissing. How about other forms of touch like shaking hands? The general rule is that being Shomer Negiah includes not even shaking hands. Some halachic authorities make exceptions in certain situations such as where someone who hasn’t heard of the concept of being Shomer Negiah has already extended his/her hand and if you reject it they will be tremendously insulted. The best thing to do is to put both hands behind your back and bow graciously with a big “Hello,” pretending you don’t even see their outstretched hand. Touching is permitted between parent and child, and with girls under 3 and boys under 6. Also, for the sake of healing — i.e. doctor and patient. An excellent little book which explains the logic of being Shomer Negiah in a touching way (pardon the pun) is, “The Magic Touch” by Gila Manolson. You can purchase it at your local Jewish book store or http://store.yahoo.com/eichlers/1568711859.html. It is highly recommended. Excerpts at: http://www.heritage.org.il/innernet/archives/touch.htm http://www.heritage.org.il/innernet/archives/superglue.htm It’s what God wants and we get pleasure out of doing what God wants us to do even if we don’t understand it. With blessings from Jerusalem, Rabbi Shraga Simmons RESPONSE: I write to R’ Dorff It had been a while since your last reply so I decided to ask the Aish haTorah Rabbi since I knew those guys are always rip-ready to give an answer. However, I still respect your opinion more than his and am interested in what you think of what I learned. He told me that the basic principles are discussed in the Talmud on page Shabbat 13ab. I carefully read the page (using Steinsaltz as a crutch) and this is my more informed opinion. Maybe it will help if you decide to write a teshuvah. The discussion seems to be only tangentially related to shomer negiyah. The page says you can’t touch your wife while she’s in niddah. This niddah is what makes her a prohibited relation. I have two problems with this. 1) As was clear from the story on the following page, even though that rabbi’s yetzer was active, he was nonetheless able to restrain himself. Why don’t later poskim make the same assumption? 2) Your wife is someone you have sex with. Other girls who are niddah, though nonetheless prohibited to me I am not going to have sex with. In my University, even the most promiscious people set aside times and places for sex. It’s usually at a party or after a date. If my friend wins a scholarship and I give her a hug, and as the gemara discusses, neither of us are willing (different de’ot) to have sex and break a Torah law, what wrong have I done? If I understand the reasons for shomer negiyah, I am offended by the rabbis’ assumption that any girl I touch I will want to have sex with. I have grown up and touched many girls, but haven’t had sex once and won’t till I’m married. However, as I consider the rabbis and try to be fair to them, and as I remember from the Magic Touch (which I enjoyed) perhaps “hergel aveirah” means that if I hug my friend now that might lead to sex later. In any event, that assumption is wrong since I won’t have sex. Do I understand the Talmud properly? My understanding is colored by the Aish rabbi’s answer as the absoluteness of shemirat negiyah. Although I recall Moshe Feinstein rules that the actual prohibition is “derekh hibah” this rabbi said you shouldn’t even shake hands, you should just bow. Peace RESPONSE: R’ Dorff Dear Benjamin, On the merits of the case, I feel as you do. The whole institution of shomer negi’ah presumes that men (and women, for that matter) cannot have morals. That is both insulting and inaccurate. It is also un-Jewish in the broadest of ways: Judaism does not say that we should abstain from sex altogether (with the ideal of becoming a monk or nun), but rather that we should learn how to channel our energies into good purpose. Moreover, as I said in my first letter to you on this subject, the times have indeed changed on this issue because of later marriages and different dating patterns. In any case, I am not going to stop shaking hands with women, hugging them to congratulate them or greet them, or even give them a Shabbat kiss. Isn’t that outrageous?! To be continued! —-RESPONSES: FRIENDS Thanks Ben, Talk to you later, A- You know what I think about the whole issue, so you don’t have to really ask me. All I wanted to say to add to your thought ramblings is that… and you can quote me on this one…. what the hell, have a good time, and chill out a little…. Later, M- — 1) all issurei erva derive from a basic concern of the rabbis that people might end up committing some grave issur, like adultery or nidda (incest is less of a concern). Since nowadays all single girls are niddot, the issur applies by extension to all single jewish girls (non-jewish girls may be less of a problem). 2) despite the assertions of the orthodox rabbi, there are a heck of a lot of orthodox people (almost all modern orthodox, with some pretty big guns on their side halachically) that have zero problem shaking hands. Hugging a girl you find unattractive might be the same kind of thing (there is a precedent for this in the g’mara, an old man carries around a bride and explains “she is like a piece of wood for me”). On the other hand, once you hug girls in general, you probably won’t *refuse* a hug from that girl you think is cute, and yeah that’s definitely n’giyat chiba. Whether or not it will lead to sex (now or later or ever) is predicting the future, and of course these are general guidelines that don’t really consider such predictions. You can’t really know what effect an action will have! 2) to suggest that the times have changed so much is kind of a silly argument, in my opinion. People mostly got married around 20 back in the mishna’s time, too (“ben shmoneh-esrai l’chupa”), I think they always have. (Girls maybe got married earlier.) 3) MOST IMPORTANT: as for sexual frustration: I think the halacha is supposed to make sense, but as a mature person of 22 I gotta admit that being shomer n’giya is NOT such a big sacrifice as the conservative rabbi makes it out to be. I used to think that falling in love demanded a physical relationship; I don’t think that’s true any more, not at all (based on personal experience). I feel much more frustrated by a lack of LOVE in my life than by a lack of SEX, and I think most people would agree. There’s no rule against talking with a girl, btw, although you should keep away from flirting with other peoples’ wives. 4) If you really feel frustrated (like you’ve been going out for a long time), well sometimes rules are made to be broken, although it’s nothing to be proud of. A lot of people have moments of weakness, no big deal. The main thing is, they’re breaking a d’rabbanan, not a d’oraita like niddah! —I Respond: And as you pointed out, it is just de-rabbanan. And the Conservative movement is willing to reject a de-rabbanan where they believe there is an ethical imperative or other motivating reason to change the gezera. Just like the Tosfists who changed the law regarding clapping so we change the law regarding touching. My opinions, of course, are directed towards religious people who care enough about niddah not to have sex with such a person. To one who doesn’t care, the restriction of shomer negiyah is irrelevant. I see your point. I just don’t see the value in maintaining the law. I would rather just tell people the truth and that they shouldn’t have premarital sex. so ends our discussion. —B responds an interesting little can of worms you have opened. i will look forward to the content of r. dorff’s opinion on shomer nagiya. i however am dismayed that once again a halacha of this nature has now crept into the discourse of conservative judaism. i beleive we stand (or should) for an ethically concerned halacha that confronts the major issues of the time. i do not believe sh. negiya meets this criteria at all. and in its most radical form is quite offensive and repugnant – that a girl of three can no longer be “intimately” touched by her father. why must our movement only discuss the halachot practiced by other movements and not forge out on the road to developing guidelines to practice for issues concerning human rights and others of this nature. be well and shabbat shalom S- |

Regarding the last section… there is no prohibition for a father to touch his daughter over the age of three.
Comment by Elyse — April 13, 2008 @ 5:57 pm
I appreciate your approach to posing the questions. Very enlightening. I think that side-by-side “ask the rabbi” replies are a gas.
The Aish guy is a moron. The permission to accept a handshake is not just because of the issue of not embarassing someone else. Frumchiks embarass others all the time. It is because, as he knows perfectly well, shelo b’derech chibah (not lustful touching) is not covered by dinnei negiah. Face it, we live in a society where we are pretty well educated on the difference between a hot-hug and just a hug. When the president gives a widow at gravesite a hug, do we have any trouble watching it and knowing whether he is hitting on her. Frankly, I know of virtually no lustful handshakes I have gotten in my whole life.
Comment by Yerachmiel Lopin — November 17, 2009 @ 11:28 am