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BAIS HAVAAD ON THE PARSHA - BRING THE PARSHA TO LIFE! LEARN MORE

Bais HaVaad on the Parsha, Parshas Shmos

Junk Food

January 16, 2025

Excerpted and adapted from a shiur by Dayan Yosef Greenwald

Shall I go and summon for you a wet nurse from the Hebrew women, who will nurse the boy for you?

Shmos 2:7

This teaches that she had taken him around to many Egyptian women to nurse and he had not nursed, because he was destined to speak with the Shechinah.

Rashi ibid.

Why is a child subject to food prohibitions? The Gemara says in Yevamos that forbidden foods are metamteim es haleiv (create a spiritual blockage in the heart). This applies even to children; though not yet subject to the prohibition, they still suffer the effects.

What in a non-Jewish woman’s milk causes timtum haleiv? Some say that the milk is kosher, but because it transmits nutrients from the nonkosher food the mother ate, it causes spiritual impediment. Others explain that milk transmits to the child the essence of the woman who produced it, so if it comes from an impure source, it will impact the baby negatively.

The Rishonim point out that the food you consume becomes part of your body, so the capacity of your body to be a receptacle for dvarim shebikdushah can be damaged with forbidden food more than with any other kind of violation.

It is interesting to note that ma’achalos asuros differs from some other aveiros. In the case of Shabbos, when a pikuach nefesh situation requires that Shabbos be violated, there is no negative impact. By contrast, some say that one who eats ma’achalos asuros because he is required to do so for pikuach nefesh still incurs the effects of timtum haleiv.

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