Carnal Isræl: Reading Sex in Talmudic Culture (21 page)

Read Carnal Isræl: Reading Sex in Talmudic Culture Online

Authors: Daniel Boyarin

Tags: #Religion, #Judaism, #General

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historical-biographical reality or a literary version of a "kernel" of biographical truth.
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However, it is not
just
a romance either, not just a fictional tale about made-up characters, but a highly charged story about a central culture hero. Why is this story told about Rabbi Akiva? What is the cultural work that is done by making the hero of the "romance" specifically a great scholar and martyr and more specifically Rabbi Akiva? To attempt an answer to these questions, let us have a look at some rabbinic discursive practices that can be made to inform our reading of the biographical narrative, and especially the genre of halakhic (ritual legal) controversy.
Halakha
Which Precedes: Marriage or Torah?
The first halakhic text that seems relevant for the narrative of Rabbi Akiva's romance is the discussion in Babylonian Talmud Kiddushin 29b of the appropriate timing for marriage; the question is which comes first, study or marriage:
The sages have taught: On studying Torah and marrying a woman? He should study Torah and then marry, but if he cannot manage without a wife, he should marry and then study Torah. Said Rav Yehudah that Shmuel said, "The
halakha
is that he should marry and then study Torah." Rabbi Yohanan said, "A millstone around his neck and he will study Torah!?"
And they do not disagree; that is for us and that is for them
.
First of all, some simple commentary. The text begins with a
baraita
that is, an early Palestinian halakhic traditionwhich in the absence of a contraverting text from the same period is normally halakhically authoritative. Despite this theoretically definitive statement, the later Babylonian authority Shmuel is reported as having held that the young scholar should marry and then study Torah. His equally authoritative Palestinian counterpart and contemporary, Rabbi Yohanan, holds the opposite view,
9. The historical reading is problematic, that is, beyond the bare facts that there was an Akiva, that he was married, and that apparently he and his wife suffered great poverty while he studied Torah. This much of the story seems so frequently told as to be established historically, though given the nature of rumor, one may even wonder at this. If we only find significance, however, in the historically "true," then, we will be left with very little to read in rabbinic literature.
 
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expressing himself in what seems to be a proverbial formulation, that the responsibilities of marriage are a millstone around the neck of the young scholar, who cannot be free, then, for the study of Torah. The Talmudthat is a later stratum thereofcomments that in fact they do not disagree with each other, but each is referring to the situation of a different community, presumably each to his own (that is, Shmuel to Babylonia and Rabbi Yohanan to Palestine). Presently I shall undertake to interpret this difference, but for the moment let us note that there is, as expected, no disagreement on the obligation to marry for Torah-students, only on its antecedence to study. Moreover, even Rabbi Yohanan, who expresses himself so strongly to the effect that Torah comes first, does not project an essential contradiction between the holiness or spirituality of Torah-study and sexuality but only a pragmatic contradiction (however caustically expressed by Rabbi Yohanan) between the responsibilities of marriage and full commitment to the study of Torah. Quite the opposite: the idea is that being married and having a sexual outlet is productive of "one who studies Torah in purity," as explicitly stated in Babylonian Talmud Yoma 72b (and see Pesachim 112b and Menahot 110b). One who is
unmarried
cannot study Torah purely. This concept is, moreover, well supported in other rabbinic texts, such as the requirement that only married men should be the leaders of prayer (Babylonian Talmud Taanith 16a).
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10. This enables us to understand better a passage (already quoted above) in the Persian Church Father Aphrahat, which puzzled Gary Anderson somewhat:
Aphrahat declares that one Jew has asserted that Christians are unclean because they do not take wives. He writes:
I have written to you, my beloved, concerning virginity and holiness because I heard about a Jewish man who has reviled one of our brethren, the members of the church. He said to him, "You are impure for you don't take wives. But we are holy and more virtuous for we bear children and multiply seed in the world."
Aphrahat's understanding of holiness is significant. He correctly distinguishes the Jewish understanding of the term, as reflected in rabbinic documentation, from the Christian. Jews understood the term to refer to the state of marriage. Syriac Christians understood the term to refer to sexual continence. Aphrahat's identification of sexual abstinence with uncleanness might seem unusual. The Rabbis never placed the sexually abstinent individual in the legal category of unclean.
(Anderson 1989, 12223)
We can see, however, that Aphrahat's allusion is exactly correct. For the (Babylonian) Rabbis (the ones that Aphrahat's congregation would have been in contact

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