Another Landlord Worry: Is the Elevator Kosher?

Do Jews smoke (genuine question - I have no idea if there is a religious proscription against smoking)? How do they light up on the Sabbath?

Not on the Sabbath.

Do they sit in the dark after sunset? Do they light candles - if so, how?

The Jewish Sabbath runs from sunset to sunset -- they light candles just before the sun sets. By the time it gets dark enough to need them again, the Sabbath will be over. If for some reason the candles go out,... yes, they sit in the dark.

Do they watch television? Listen to the radio? Surf the internet?

Sometimes, sometimes, and no. If the "fire" has already been started, you can leave it going -- so if the TV is already on at sunset, you can leave it. (In fact, I believe that you're not allowed to turn it off, for the same reason you can't turn it on.) But you're also not allowed to change channels, so you better REALLY like the Shopping Network, 'cause it's going to be on all night and all day.

If so, how are these sparks different?

No one's "making" them. Similarly, riding in the elevator is okay as long as you don't need to press any buttons or throw any switches. Similarly, there are stoves with "Sabbath modes" that you can turn on and leave running all night and day (essentially, by disabling the safety interlock that would normally turn the stove off after it's been running for X hours).

The "Sabbath" elevator is all right because it runs all by itself, up and down, opening and closing the doors at each floor, so you don't do anything to it (like push a button).
 
Not on the Sabbath.



The Jewish Sabbath runs from sunset to sunset -- they light candles just before the sun sets. By the time it gets dark enough to need them again, the Sabbath will be over. If for some reason the candles go out,... yes, they sit in the dark.



Sometimes, sometimes, and no. If the "fire" has already been started, you can leave it going -- so if the TV is already on at sunset, you can leave it. (In fact, I believe that you're not allowed to turn it off, for the same reason you can't turn it on.) But you're also not allowed to change channels, so you better REALLY like the Shopping Network, 'cause it's going to be on all night and all day.



No one's "making" them. Similarly, riding in the elevator is okay as long as you don't need to press any buttons or throw any switches. Similarly, there are stoves with "Sabbath modes" that you can turn on and leave running all night and day (essentially, by disabling the safety interlock that would normally turn the stove off after it's been running for X hours).

The "Sabbath" elevator is all right because it runs all by itself, up and down, opening and closing the doors at each floor, so you don't do anything to it (like push a button).



And now I understand global warming....

;)
 
And now I understand global warming....

Oh, it's heinously wasteful. I believe that was part of the point Way Back When. Elementary social psychology -- one of the easiest ways to make the in-group stay in and the out-group stay out is to make it hard to be in.

It's hard to be (observant) Jewish. There are a lot of rules and regulations that even the rabbis admit do not make a hell of a lot of sense, but they keep them anyway. Keeping a fire going all night and all day on the off chance you want hot water tomorrow afternoon takes a lot of firewood and is therefore expensive. Keeping two sets of dishes so that your meat doesn't touch milk and vice versa is a nuisance. But that's how the observant Jews show God how much they honor Him.
 
But that's how the observant Jews show God how much they honor Him.

One suspects its more a case of showing how apart and different Jews see themselves from others. There is, after all, no good reason to separate meat and dairy components of meals, except by the fiat of the earliest elders. Was this not designed to ensure Jews would not sit at gentile tables and vice versa?
 
I wonder how pressing a button is seen as doing more work that walking up x flights of stairs...? (where "x" = any number greater than 0.1)


Generally, "work" is not prohibited on the sabbath. There are two major categories of things prohibited on the sabbath. One is based on the idea that the sabbath must be honored and kept holy. That idea was developed into the idea that one should not do ordinary, everyday, things on the sabbath. It must be separated from the ordinary days. On an ordinary day, you have a job that you go to. On the sabbath, you shouldn't go there. On an ordinary day, you might do laundry. Don't do that on the sabbath. If you do something every normal day, either don't do it on the sabbath, or do it differently.

The other prohibition against "work" is based on the fact that God took 6 days to create the universe, but rested on the seventh. Now, the most misunderstood element of the sabbath prohibitions, as practiced in Judaism, is the idea that one ought to refrain from "work", in honor of God's day of rest. That's a misunderstanding, and maybe a mistranslation. The prohibited actions are not "work", but rather "creation". God spent six days creating and shaping and forming the world, but on the seventh day did no creation.

Generally, observant Jews are forbidden from creating new things, or transforming an existing thing into its final form, on the sabbath.

When one lights a match, one creates a fire. Creating a fire is something that is forbidden on the sabbath, because of the "creating" part. When electricity came along, they decided that completing an electric circuit was a lot like creating a fire, and so it was forbidden.

And this was inconvenient, but workable, so long as electrical devices were the sorts of things that were either "on" or "off" and had a switch that a person activated to make them do something. Here in the modern world, we have more and more things that activate automatically. They have some sensor that is always working, but when it detects something, it does some work, all without human intervention. Once again, the rabbits have to figure out what to do.

One thing that guides them is the idea of "building a fence around the Torah". The principle is that if it might be a violation of divine law, one cannot take a chance that you might be violating it. So, the strictest rabbis conclude that anything that completes a circuit might be like lighting a forbidden fire, and so they are inclined to say that a Jew is not allowed to do anything that might trip one of those sensors.

I think it's silly, personally, but there is no doubt that it affects their lives, and not all of those effects are negative. On those occasions when I have been in the Orthodox neighborhood on Shabbat, I have felt a very small amount of envy toward their lifestyles. Not enough to be even remotely tempted to join them, but I can understand the appeal.
 
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If the "fire" has already been started, you can leave it going -- so if the TV is already on at sunset, you can leave it. (In fact, I believe that you're not allowed to turn it off, for the same reason you can't turn it on.) But you're also not allowed to change channels, so you better REALLY like the Shopping Network, 'cause it's going to be on all night and all day.

No one's "making" them. Similarly, riding in the elevator is okay as long as you don't need to press any buttons or throw any switches. Similarly, there are stoves with "Sabbath modes" that you can turn on and leave running all night and day (essentially, by disabling the safety interlock that would normally turn the stove off after it's been running for X hours).

The "Sabbath" elevator is all right because it runs all by itself, up and down, opening and closing the doors at each floor, so you don't do anything to it (like push a button).

When one lights a match, one creates a fire. Creating a fire is something that is forbidden on the sabbath, because of the "creating" part. When electricity came along, they decided that completing an electric circuit was a lot like creating a fire, and so it was forbidden.

And this was inconvenient, but workable, so long as electrical devices were the sorts of things that were either "on" or "off" and had a switch that a person activated to make them do something. Here in the modern world, we have more and more things that activate automatically. They have some sensor that is always working, but when it detects something, it does some work, all without human intervention. Once again, the rabbits have to figure out what to do.

Sorry to piss on your fireworks Jews (so to speak), but I think you should check this out. :o

50 "kindled fires" per second (in the UK) per appliance (not to mention individual components)!
 
Do they watch television? Listen to the radio? Surf the internet?
If pressing a lift button is forbidden, because closing an electric circuit potentially creates a sparkle, the same logic might ban also mouse clicks or typing with keyboard. I have never seen any sparkles coming from my mouse or keyboard though.

Writing is clearly forbidden on Sabbath, so you better not have a password-protected computer or anything, because you cannot write the password. And you cannot write a website address in the web browser.

The most observant ones probably have ruled that any use of Internet is forbidden on Sabbath. The websites of some religious parties in Israel show a blank page on Sabbath, open for surfing Sunday-Friday only.

Using the telephone is forbidden on Sabbath, I have personally witnessed a religious woman sitting behind the desk at a hospital in Jerusalem, the phone ringing, the woman not answering because using a phone is forbidden on Sabbath. Hope it was somebody calling the hospital to say just hello and greetings to mom.
 
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If pressing a lift button is forbidden, because closing an electric circuit potentially creates a sparkle, the same logic might ban also mouse clicks or typing with keyboard. I have never seen any sparkles coming from my mouse or keyboard though.
That's because they're low voltage. It takes a much higher voltage for electricity to pass through air. :)

ETA: They shouldn't turn on the monitor or a laptop though!
 
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If pressing a lift button is forbidden, because closing an electric circuit potentially creates a sparkle, the same logic might ban also mouse clicks or typing with keyboard. I have never seen any sparkles coming from my mouse or keyboard though.

The orthodox Jews that I know do not use computers on the sabbath.

Using the telephone is forbidden on Sabbath, I have personally witnessed a religious woman sitting behind the desk at a hospital in Jerusalem, the phone ringing, the woman not answering because using a phone is forbidden on Sabbath. Hope it was somebody calling the hospital to say just hello and greetings to mom.

Saving life supercedes all the sabbath rules, so presumably they had a different line for emergencies.
 
All seems a lot of damn-foolishness to me.
 
Using the telephone is forbidden on Sabbath, I have personally witnessed a religious woman sitting behind the desk at a hospital in Jerusalem, the phone ringing, the woman not answering because using a phone is forbidden on Sabbath. Hope it was somebody calling the hospital to say just hello and greetings to mom.

Your interpretation seems a bit unlikely as someone religiously observant enough to not answer a phone is unlikely to be at work on the Sabbath. Perhaps that phone was not her responsibility or she was just a poor employee.
 
Your interpretation seems a bit unlikely as someone religiously observant enough to not answer a phone is unlikely to be at work on the Sabbath. Perhaps that phone was not her responsibility or she was just a poor employee.


I kind of agree. It sounds more like a union issue than a religious issue to me.

"I am not employed to answer that phone."

;)
 
I am not sure, the prohibition against certain things is based upon the sabbath law, not doing 'work' or in the case of the light switch 'not kindling a fire'.

But all I can say is, who cares? If they want to use the elevator , that is their issue.

I would hate that myself, the elevator stopping at every floor.

All night and day. You can't have the elevator need to be summoned by a button after all.

It is not the level of superstition that gets me, it is how legalistic and lawyerly the superstition is. There is a prohibition and then you try to weasel around it.
 
The kosher elevators and the Sabbath ovens (and, for that matter, Orthodox women covering their hair with... wigs) seem like the exploitation of loopholes to me, y'know.

It seems really strange that someone would be observant enough to follow the letter of the law, but not observant to follow the spirit of the law, which such technological work-arounds seem to violate quite egregiously.

Some of the text of the linked article seem to suggest entirely that - Rabbinical councils having detailed arguments not about the spirit of the law, but whether or not the letter can or cannot be circumvented by some novel use of technology.
 
All night and day. You can't have the elevator need to be summoned by a button after all.

It is not the level of superstition that gets me, it is how legalistic and lawyerly the superstition is. There is a prohibition and then you try to weasel around it.

Spooky! You wrote that whilst I was composing my response. I agree entirely.

The wearing of wigs by orthodox women is the textbook example - God said I had to cover my hair... but he didn't say I couldn't cover it *with more hair*. Pow!
 
The kosher elevators and the Sabbath ovens (and, for that matter, Orthodox women covering their hair with... wigs) seem like the exploitation of loopholes to me, y'know.

It seems really strange that someone would be observant enough to follow the letter of the law, but not observant to follow the spirit of the law, which such technological work-arounds seem to violate quite egregiously.

Some of the text of the linked article seem to suggest entirely that - Rabbinical councils having detailed arguments not about the spirit of the law, but whether or not the letter can or cannot be circumvented by some novel use of technology.
It's not just Jews though, is it. Probably all religions.
During the holy month of Ramadan, for example, in the Middle East (well certainly in Saudi Arabia and Bahrain, at least) locals start work later and finish earlier than normal, apparently to allow more/longer rest periods to compensate for a lack of energy due to not eating between sunrise and sunset. The locals' working "day" typically becomes 10.00 to 14.00. Oh - forgot to mention: eating between sunrise and sunset is only illegal in public places. Deduce from that what you will!
 
A rabbi was asked why Jews undertook all these observances because they obviously made life so difficult. He said it was because these observances were so difficult that they were worth doing.

This makes sense, the problem is when they try to get around the difficulties imposed by their own rules by looking for legalistic shortcuts that I find it strange.

Either accept that you are doing something to make your life difficult or don't do it. Trying to work around the difficulty is what I just do not understand.
 

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