Monday, March 2, 2026

Reb Moshe's 40th Yartzeit and the Agunah Problem                    Rav Shalom C. Spira

 Today, 13 Adar 5786, marks the fortieth yartzeit of R. Moshe Feinstein. The Gemara, Avodah Zarah 5b derives from Deut. 29:3 that a student does not understand his teacher until after forty years. [This prescription is also inherent in Sotah 22b according to the elucidation of Tosafot, ad loc., as well as in Bava Metzi'a 33a according to the elucidation of Rabbeinu Chananel, ad loc.] Hence, the 40th yartzeit of Rabbi Feinstein represents an opportunity to finally arrive at a true understanding on his legacy regarding the agunah problem.

    In Iggerot Mosheh, Orach Chaim, IV, no. 49, Rabbi Feinstein dismisses those advocates who seek to change the laws of the Torah for the sake of satisfying the feminist ideology. Rabbi Feinstein explains that since the laws of the Torah are from the Holy One, Blessed Be He (as per Rambam's eighth principle of faith) and cannot change (as per Rambam's ninth principle of faith), it is therefore both silly and heretical for any human to advocate for halakhic reform. The responsum was written by Rabbi Feinstein in 5736, precisely one year after his cousin R. Joseph Ber Soloveitchik announced ​the same in his famous "Gerus and Mesorah" lecture. Rabbi Soloveitchik delivered that lecture [available online at YUTorah Online ] in order to repudiate R. Emanuel Rackman's fraudulent proposal to [ostensibly] rescue agunot by allowing them to remarry without a get
    True to form, in a responsum composed on 7 Nissan 5730 (Iggerot Mosheh, Even ha-Ezer, III, no. 49), Rabbi Feinstein summons a lady to respect the sanctity of her dysfunctional marriage. In the tragic case that Rabbi Feinstein adjudicated, the husband had been exiled to Siberia, then drafted into WWII, and ultimately declared missing in action by the Soviet government in 5703. Despite it now being 27 years later [and the husband possibly dead], Rabbi Feinstein concludes that the wife cannot remarry but must rather patiently continue to wait for her husband's return, the husband maintaining his chezkat chaim according to Torah law. This responsum clearly rejects the feminist ideology of self-determination by every wife, and instead illuminates the path for we as Orthodox Jews to uphold the Jewish faith, apropos Yehudah ben Teima's prescription (Avot 5:20) to "be bold as a leopard, light as an eagle, swift as a deer and heroic as a lion, to champion the Will of your Father in Heaven." 
    It is therefore imperative to correct the agunah errors that have been attributed to Rabbi Feinstein by [a distinguished scholar who shares the same first name] R. Moshe Kurtz (be-mechilat Kevod Torato) in his recent article at Unpacking the Iggerot: Aiding Agunot - Tradition Online, as follows:

  1. In paragraph 12, Rabbi Kurtz claims that Rabbi Feinstein "ruled that a man who is incapable of fathering a child possesses a categorical defect vis-à-vis marriage and that the couple’s union could thereby be dissolved retroactively (E.H., vol. 1, #79)."
    WRONG. Reb Moshe׳s responsum in EH 1:79 only nullifies a kiddushin when the bride did not realize that her groom is physically incapable of consummating the marriage even once. Reb Moshe infers this nullification from Bava Kamma 110b which he deciphers to mean that there is mekach ta'ut if the bride did not realize that her groom is afflicted with boils. Reb Moshe argues that a groom who cannot cohabit is the halakhic equivalent of a groom afflicted with boils. But if the groom can consummate the marriage even once, there is no comparison to Bava Kamma 110b, and hence the kiddushin is valid even if no child is ever born.
  2. In paragraph 14, Rabbi Kurtz claims: "One of the most iconic instances that he [Rabbi Feinstein] employs kiddushei ta’ut regards a woman who discovers that her husband is attracted to men. Depending whether it is an occasional temptation or his primary preference would be key to determining whether it meets the qualifications for declaring the marriage retroactively void (E.H., vol. 4, #113)."
    WRONG. This responsum (EH 4:113) which is attributed to Reb Moshe [-see further that this attribution is contested-] only nullifies kiddushin if the bride did not realize that her groom actually engages in sodomy, not if the groom was merely attracted to other men. The distinction is essential. As per supra, point 1, Reb Moshe argued (EH 1:79) that where a bride who does not realize that her groom cannot cohabit even once, mekach ta'ut has occurred. Here, in EH 4:113, Reb Moshe is adding the further innovation [what can be termed "chiddush al gabbei chiddush"] that because a Jewish gentleman must commit suicide al Kiddush Ha-Shem rather than actually commit sodomy, a groom who actually engages in sodomy is the halakhic equivalent of a groom who cannot cohabit with his bride even once. [A dead groom cannot cohabit.] However, by contradistinction, the kiddushin of a groom who is unfortunately afflicted with a same-gender attraction, but who has the self-discipline to refuse to act on that attraction [and hence is not obligated, and indeed not allowed, to contemplate suicide], is a perfectly valid kiddushin even according to Reb Moshe's chiddush al gabbei chiddush. While superfluous in making the point, it should also be noted that the provenance of the entire volume in which EH 4:113 appears is contested by Rabbi J. David Bleich, Contemporary Halakhic Problems, VII, p. 150. [I.e., according to Rabbi Bleich, we are not necessarily compelled to even accept that Reb Moshe professed the chiddush al gabbei chiddush.]
  3. In paragraph 17 and again in paragraph 19, Rabbi Kurtz cites an oral report claiming that Rabbi Feinstein allowed incarceration as a legitimate way of securing a get from a recalcitrant husband.
    WRONG. Reb Moshe actually acknowledges in EH 3:44 that incarceration of an innocent husband is a form of coercion that will invalidate the resulting get.
  4. Also in paragraph 17, Rabbi Kurtz claims that if a penuyah (who is in collusion with an agunah) deceitfully pretends to propose a shiddukh with a recalcitrant husband and the recalcitrant husband therefore writes a get to the agunah (mistakenly thinking he will have a shiddukh with the penuyah), the agunah is thereby rescued.
    WRONG. That would be a get mut'eh and hence worthless as per Yevamot 106a, still leaving the agunah stuck.
  5. In paragraph 18, Rabbi Kurtz claims: "In Iggerot Moshe (E.H., vol, 3, #44), he writes that the husband need not give the get out of a sense or moral duty, but even doing so to avoid financial penalties from the court would be sufficient. He elucidates that while a forced divorce is ineffective, in this case, he is seeking to alleviate the monetary pressure and the divorce is just the extrinsic means for achieving it."
    WRONG. Financial coercion invalidates a get coerced from an innocent husband, as per the Gemara, Bava Batra 40b that financial duress deprives the subject of free will. Reb Moshe's responsum in EH 3:44 is only referring to a special case where the husband already announced that he wants to divorce his wife anyway before the coercion was applied to him, and even there Reb Moshe has a safek whether this leniency [which he calls a sevara gedolah] is actually valid, meaning that Reb Moshe refuses to rely on the sevara gedolah alone. See Section K (commencing p. 59) of my essay Prenuptial Agreements | PDF | Halakha | Hebrew Words And Phrases .
  6. In paragraph 21, Rabbi Kurtz claims: "Not only would the man be required to provide the aguna with the means she needs to survive but in a short, yet consequential responsum (E.H., vol. 4, #107), he [Rabbi Feinstein] even authorizes an additional stipulation in the tenaim documents that the husband will be penalized if he unilaterally refuses to issue a get."
    WRONG. Reb Moshe never authorized penalizing an innocent husband by way of a prenup. See Section R (commencing on p. 92) of my aforementioned prenup essay which clarifies what Reb Moshe actually intended with his prenup in EH 4:107. Importantly, Reb Moshe's responsum was published in two different versions, and the provenance of the entire volume of Iggerot Mosheh in which that responsum appears has been contested (as per supra, point 2). See also Yechezkel Hirshman's approach to Reb Moshe's prenup at Achas L'Maala V'Sheva L'Matta: Prenups X: More Trei Gadya - A Consumer's Guide to Halachic Prenuptial Agreements , which likewise contradicts Rabbi Kurtz.
  7. In paragraphs 22-23, Rabbi Kurtz cites R. Yonah Reiss as ostensibly proving that R. Moshe Feinstein's willingness to apply financial pressure on innocent husbands served as the precursor to the RCA prenup.
    WRONG. Reb Moshe never authorized financial pressure imposed on innocent husbands (as per supra, point 6), and R. Yonah Reiss' academic dishonesty has been exposed by my article last year at Daas Torah - Issues of Jewish Identity:  Shabbat Zakhor and the Agunah Problem by Rav Shalom C. Spira
  8. In paragraph 26, Rabbi Kurtz claims: "The veracity of these accounts notwithstanding, an undeniable hallmark of R. Feinstein’s writings is his compassion and resolve to aid all agunot. In Iggerot Moshe (Y.D., vol. 1, #101), he vehemently insists that “it is forbidden for us to be from the ‘humble ones’ and to cause a Jewish woman to remain an aguna or to cause her to turn toward illicit deeds or even to cause the loss of a fellow Jew’s finances.” He proceeds to cite the account of R. Zekharya ben Avkulus, whose exceeding “humility” in halakhic decision making was credited with the ultimate downfall of the Temple (see Gittin 56a)."
    WRONG. Rabbi Kurtz is repeating the discredited canard of R. Michael Broyde and R. Shmuel Kamenetzky. This is because Reb Moshe (YD 1:101) is not talking about an agunah where a wife wants to abandon her husband. Rather, Reb Moshe (YD 1:101) is talking about a wife who actually seeks to live in harmony with her husband, but she can't immerse in a mikveh without a cotton ear plug. See my essay on Response To R. Shmuel Kamenetzky | PDF | Philosophy | History which explains this in detail.

   The Gemara, Yoma 86b, requires us to publicize scam artists in order to prevent a profanation of the Name. Indeed, R. Samson Rephael Hirsch comments (on Genesis 27:1) that this is what ethically empowered Rebecca to expose Esau as a scam artist by having Jacob masquerade as him. Now add to that calculation the fact that Rashi to Genesis 26:34 reports that Esau would steal wives from innocent husbands. Hence, on this 40th yartzeit of Reb Moshe, we as Orthodox Jews must successfuly grasp what Rabbi Feinstein actually paskened and what he did not pasken regarding the agunah problem, so that we can distinguish true agunah experts from scam artists.
    May the light of Torah, so central to the holiday of Purim (as per Megillah 16b), help the bereaved children of R. Nota Zvi Greenblatt [who all pledged allegiance to Reb Moshe in their eulogies for Reb Nota] finally grasp that Ms. Tamar Epstein is indeed the wife of Reb Aharon Friedman according to the Jewish faith, as I have already established at Daas Torah - Issues of Jewish Identity: Response to the Eulogy for Rabbi Nota Zvi Greenblatt by Rabbi Shalom C. Spira . Just last month, on 19 Shevat 5786, R. Menachem Zechariah Zilber's treatise to the same effect was published at HebrewBooks.org Sefer Detail: מקח טעות בקידושין -- זילבער, מנחם זכריה בן רפאל  .

Rabbi Spira works as Editor of Manuscripts and Grants at the Lady Davis Institute for Medical Research [a Pavillion of the Jewish General Hospital] in Montreal, Canada.

29 comments :

  1. "who seek to change the laws of the Torah for the sake of satisfying the feminist ideology"
    This was not about agunot, it was about female minyanim etc
    Rav Moshe actually said the opposite about agunah, and invited scholars to come up with new innovations

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  2. One irony I've always enjoyed about Rav Moshe, zt"l. In a few places, when faced with an authority who says something he can't accept, he writes that it must be a forgery.
    And now we have a whole volume of Igros Moshe that have teshuvos that people can't accept so they declare them to be forgeries!

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    1. Even the approved ones are not always consistent. Rav eidensohn asked Rav dovid F, and he said they are not always consistent

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  3. I have 2 questions for Rabbi Spira:
    1. Where does the BDA get the authority to bifurcate the get and going to arko"oys? Where does halocho permit this? ThBDA claims that since a woman cannot obtain a get through arko"oys (they can order one - get meuseh) it is permissible for the BDA to order a Get even though someone who is lo tzias dina (a sin well below going to arko'oys) loses her rights to litigate in bais din?
    2. The famous teshuva of the Rashba not to use secular law in Bais Din is not being followed by the BDA. Rabbi Y Reiss has a whole long arichus explaining why not. I would be grateful if you could shlog this up as this is a new fangled idea that I have not heard any other bais din applying?

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    1. You sound familiar. Have you been here before under another name?.
      Someone else was saying exactly the same as you a few years back

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  4. Spira is making a false statement.
    Igros Moshe 101 is saying

    "Thus we are obligated to make a ruling if it appears to us that there is a basis for a heter. It is prohibited for us to show false modesty and cause a Jewish woman to be trapped as an aguna or to cause a stumbling block with prohibitions or even to cause loss of money. Look at Gittin (56) where it condemns the humility of R Zechariah for causing the destruction of the Temple! The obvious question is what does humility have to do with the destruction? Look at Maharetz Chajes who gives a proper explanation."

    He is not limiting this to the specific case in his yeshiva. It is an example.
    Forbidden to leave women as agunot.

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  5. from Igros Moshe: YD 1 : 101

    "He should not issue a ruling simply because he saw an authoritative source expressing such an opinion. This is the same as poskening mechanically from one’s notes that the gemora (Sotah 22a) condemns: Tannaim who teach halacha from their notes without paying attention to the reasons behind them destroy the world Even if these rulings are occasionally against the views of Achronim - so what? There is no question that we have the right to disagree with Achronim and also sometimes against particular views of certain Rishonim when we have clear-cut analysis and especially also correct reasons. On such matters our Sages (Bava Basra 131a) say, “A judge can only rely on what he sees”
    This is precisely how hareidi people pasken, they rule mechanically and robotically and attack anyone who is creative.

    source https://daattorah.blogspot.com/search?q=Igros+Moshe+101&updated-max=2025-09-30T22:02:00%2B03:00&max-results=20&start=3&by-date=false

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    1. Ignominious, are you Stan by any chance?

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    2. "He should not issue a ruling simply because he saw an authoritative source expressing such an opinion. This is the same as poskening mechanically from one’s notes that the gemora (Sotah 22a) condemns.. "
      That's a fact
      You brought the dba into it.

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    3. I addressed my original comments to Rabbi Spira. Are you Rabbi Spira or do you have a problem understanding simple English?

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    4. Today's comments were not aimed at Spira, though.
      Btw, DBA is Database Administrator

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  6. Let us get to the bottom of the allegedly very anti-halachic practices oof the DBA. There allegedly seems to be a deliberate feminist agenda in the dba world which ignores severe violations of halocho and thus far I am not hearing anything remotely sounding like a plausible justification for these violations from either KA or ABD. Perhaps either of you are the infamous Michael Tzadok?

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    1. Is it Stan or berel?
      I remember talking to you previously.
      Around the time of Mr elk, (not a Cohen).

      Rav Moshe gives the imperative to find leniencies for agunot and to avoid financial loss.
      The regular hareidim who pretend to know halacha, so the exact opposite.
      The BD of America - I have nothing to do with them.

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  7. Many thanks to the תלמידי חכמים who commented on my article. Allow me to begin my response to these comments by advising that under no circumstances should a bride or groom sign the Beth Din of America 1993 prenup written by R. Mordechai Willig. As פוסק הדור Rav Bleich personally told me “Rav Willig was mekalkel be-yadayim [במחילת כבוד תורתו].” See http://daattorah.blogspot.com/2023/01/the-legacy-of-rabbi-feivel-cohen-vis.html

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  8. The second response I would like to make is that a husband who is threatened by a disgruntled wife seeking a גט should [before going to Beth Din] sign the שטר בירורין formulated by R. Avraham Shmuel Yehudah Gestetner. This שטר בירורין prevents Conservative rabbis like Saul Lieberman who masquerade as תלמידי חכמים from fraudulently coercing the husband שלא כדין. Available online at: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1PR3e5HIQ6LK79unKCdOlvWSXOsVqzJR9/view

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    1. As to your 2nd response, how does that shtar prevent someone else taking action?
      Perhaps you are not aware but Shaul Lieberman passed away 43 years ago.

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    2. Yes, thank you, you are correct that the wife is able to present a petition to a Beth Din for a get [as she always should be able], even after the husband signs Rabbi Gestetner's shtar berurin. However, the Beth Din will now be required to behave itself according to Halakhah and only respond to the wife's petition by coercing a get if this is the case where Shulchan Arukh actually prescribes to coerce a get. Likewise, the Beth Din will only be allowed to non-coercively demand a get by saying "mitzvah le-garesh" if this is a case where Shulchan Arukh actually prescribes "mitzvah le-garesh." And the truth of the matter is that all batei din should be behaving themselves in this manner even without the shtar berurin, for otherwise the batei din would be violating Exodus 20:14 (as per footnote 6a of my prenup essay). However, Rabbi Gestetner saw that confusion has evolved on the North American scene, and so he developed this shtar berurin to solve the problem. Well done.

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    3. Thank you - I ihave a couple more questions for you -

      a) You mentioned Rav Bleich shlita. Some years ago he published an article on the Device of the Spanish Rabbis, which was system used in the era of the Spanish pre-inquisition Jews - a proposal that avoids the problem of pre nups and get m;usa.
      He did clarify that it would need wide acceptance of authorities for it to be introduced. Has this made any progress?

      b) You published during the Gaza war a request for Hamas to surrender. However, my question is whether you follow Rabbi gestetner on his views towards the state of Israel and its army, or not? If not, then why would anybody be obliged to listen to his views on gittin? If yes, why were you praising the Tzahal campaign, which according to the anti-Zionists is illegal and a violation of "halacha"?

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    4. a) You are eminently correct that Rav Bleich has formulated a prenup based on the Device of the Sages of Spain, as published in 1989 in Contemporary Halakhic Problems Vol. 3. Furthermore, in an e-mail he sent me on April 26, 2012 [and published within (the rather lengthy) footnote 85 of my prenup essay], Rav Bleich suggested to me that if I am dissatisfied with his tosefet mezonot prenup [a different prenup of his, published in Be-Netivot ha-Halakhah Vol. 1], then I should employ his Device of the Sages of Spain prenup instead. This 2012 remark of Rav Bleich indicates that he stands by what he previously published in 1989. However, as I explain in Section S (commencing on p. 102) of the prenup essay, this was a mistake by Rav Bleich, be-mechilat Kevod Torato. More to the point [which I actually overlooked when I originally wrote my prenup essay, and so I am now mentioning as an addendum to that essay], Rabbeinu Tam cited by Tosafot to Ketubot 63b holds that it is impossible that the Torah would allow every lady to abandon her husband [even if the husband is innocent of any wrongdoing] whenever "she sets her eyes on a different gentleman." Thus, for Rabbeinu Tam, I must be right that the Device of the Sages of Spain will not work to allow a wife to receive a get upon demand.
      You are also eminently correct that, as a matter of policy, Rav Bleich has never actually used his Device of the Sages of Spain prenup in practice [nor, for that matter, the tosefet mezonot prenup in Be-Netivot ha-Halakhah Vol. 1]. Rav Bleich told me this on multiple occasions, as cited in footnote 82 of my essay. [After I completed the essay, I subsequently realized that he also writes this in Tradition 33:1 (Fall 1998), p. 118. Ergo, I hereby offer my apologies for bothering Rav Bleich in person over a concept I should have realized from his written record.] Thus, the entire debate between Rav Bleich and myself over the Device of the Sages of Spain is academic.

      b) This is a fascinating issue you raise, which merits its own article. However, to answer on one foot [until such time as a new article can be formulated], I would refer to R. Moshe Sternbuch, Teshuvot ve-Hanhagot, V, no. 201, who offers guidance to IDF soldiers how to dwell in the sukkah. Available online at https://hebrewbooks.org/pdfpager.aspx?req=69067&st=&pgnum=300&hilite=
      So we see that all poskim agree that, be-di'avad, once the state of Israel already exists, the IDF must be supported.

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    5. I respect Rav Bleich immensely. There are statements or positions of his that I may not currently be supportive of, but I see him as a major talmid chacham and poseq.
      The device of the Spanish rabbis is brilliant. Whether your analogy of Rabbeimu Tam, is accurate, and I don't agree that it is - it doesn't matter. Spanish rabbis were Sephardim.
      They have their own authority.

      The other point, I'm not sure I agree with your argumentation.
      Rav shternbuch has only said that you are obliged to dwell in a sukkah wherever you are. It's no different from them wearing tzitzit or keeping Kashruth (which Rav Goren made possible for them).
      Rav Henkin ztl better made the point you are arguing - (and Rav Bleich repeated it to me verbally) - now that the state is here, we cannot say anything against its existence . Rav Bleich said this when I asked if the oaths are still valid (during the Oslo talks) .

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    6. Thank you for the counterpoints. I note that my interpretation of R. Yoel Teitelbaum is supported by the Coalition for Jewish Values’ recently released treatise on combating anti-Semitism, available at https://coalitionforjewishvalues.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/Jew-Hatred_Mindset.pdf
      Specifically, on p. 14, the CJV seems to assert that Rabbi Teitelbaum accepted the legitimacy of the IDF post facto. Indeed, I would add that this is consistent with the famous eulogy that Rabbi Teitelbaum delivered at R. Aharon Kotler’s funeral in 1962, where he honoured Rabbi Kotler with Rashi’s comment להגיד שבחו של אהרן שלא שינה. Rabbi Teitelbaum knew full well that Rabbi Kotler was the head of Agudath Israel of America, which lobbies in support of the IDF, and still he said this. So we see that Rabbi Teitelbaum was a post facto Zionist (sort of, at least).

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    7. Thank you for your comments and for pointing out this interesting phenomenon.
      Although we spoke about Rav shternbuch shlita, your latest reply discusses the Satmar Rebbe Rav Yoellish.
      they have different halachic styles.
      I've heard for example that Rav Avigdor miller would pray for the idf.
      It's not clear to me what the position of Rav shternbuch is, although I suspect it's more pragmatic.
      The background to the levaya of Rav Aaron Kotler was more complex
      Whilst he was alive, the Rebbe was attacking Rav Aaron with bitter words. But it's the same about America - first they were calling it the treif Medina, then when Europe became hell, they loved America so much.
      During the shoah, Rav Aaron was forced to work on Shabbat to save Jewish lives - which is correct halacha.
      But he was attacked for this too, by the friedicke Rebbe of 770.
      So this funeral behaviour by itself doesn't a Zionist make.
      I'm not sure if the Eidah people visit the kotel. But Rav Eliashiv would, I was "with" him there at a great asifa in the 90s.

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    8. Thank you for your illuminating insights. Yes, I should have explained why I combine R. Yoel Teitelbaum and R. Moshe Sternbuch into one school of thought. It is because R. Moshe Sternbuch prefaces his Mo'adim u-Zmanim with a letter of approbation by Rabbi Teitelbaum, whom Rabbi Sternbuch describes as the splendour of our generation. Available online at https://hebrewbooks.org/pdfpager.aspx?req=19963&st=&pgnum=9

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  9. The third response I would like to render is that KA's comments [first on March 2 at 12:46 p.m., and then on March 4 at 2:46 p.m.] correctly highlight the reality that Reb Moshe's responsum OC 4:49 is specifically dealing with Orach Chaim (ladies donning tzitzit, and according to oral testimony recorded at https://traditiononline.org/womens-prayer-services-theory-and-practice-part-i-theory/ , Reb Moshe also intended to refer to ladies' hakafot, although this is never spelled out in the responsum) and Reb Moshe's responsum in YD 1:101 is specifically dealing with Yoreh De'ah (mikveh immersion). Hence, KA is really asking me: why am I elucidating OC 4:49 expansively to also apply to Even ha-Ezer, whereas I refuse to apply YD 1:101 to Even ha-Ezer? The answer is that chazakah is a powerful concept in the Oral Torah (as per Kiddushin 80a that "soklin ve-sorfin al ha-chazakot") and hence Reb Moshe's responsa should be elucidated in such a manner that respects the chezkat eshet ish. Hence, OC 4:49 would prohibit feminist-driven reform to halakhah not only regarding Orach Chaim but also regarding Even ha-Ezer, whereas YD 1:101 would be encouraging innovation to rescue an agunah only with respect to Yoreh De'ah [and, even then, presumably only when the innovation can be rigorously defended]. And I would contend that this approach of mine to Reb Moshe's responsa is confirmed by Reb Moshe's responsum EH 3:49 [analogous to "ha-katuv ha-shlishi shé-yakhri'a beineihem"], as well as in Reb Moshe's critique of R. Shlomo Goren that is published at https://hebrewbooks.org/pdfpager.aspx?req=12319&st=&pgnum=2 . Indeed, R. Avraham Chaim Sherman has challenged Dr. Rachel Levmore's prenup [that purports to announce itself as rescuing agunot] by marshalling Reb Moshe's responsum in OC 4:49 as proof that feminist-driven reform is unacceptable. See here: https://hebrewbooks.org/pdfpager.aspx?req=57473&st=&pgnum=357

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    1. Well that is your rationale, but it doesn't prove what Rav Moshe would have said.
      An example was brought here
      A year or so ago, where Rav Moshe argues 2 different things regarding aluminium.
      One was whether it conveys tumat Hameitim, the other is whether it requires tevillah.
      And they were not consistent.
      Rav Moshe on Rav Goren was simply signing off on what his fellow agudists were saying.
      His uncle or cousin Rav Michel had signed against RSG, so he was essentially holding the party line
      How exactly does your analysis apply to the Goren psak?

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    2. Thank you and יישר כחך for inspiring me to clarify my analysis. The case adjudicated by R. Shlomo Goren was indeed one of an עגונה, since he was retroactively allowing Chava Ginsburg to marry Otto Langer in 1944 even after Ms. Ginsburg left her first husband Avraham Borokovsky without yet [in 1944] receiving a גט from Mr. Borokovsky. And subsequent to that 1944 marriage (real
      or imagined) to Mr. Langer, two children were born [to Ms. Ginsburg’s real-or-imagined marriage with Mr. Langer], prompting numerous rabbis to announce that the new children were ממזרים. And then Rabbi Goren materialized on the scene with his own Beth Din and its creative לומדות to retroactively permit Ms. Ginsburg’s marriage to Mr. Langer and to purify the children from the stigma of ממזרות. R. Moshe Feinstein’s reaction to Rabbi Goren leaves no doubt that he regards such creative reasoning to be unacceptable. See the translation of Reb Moshe’s remarks in footnote 46 of “Response to R. Shmuel Kamenetzky on the Methodology of Resolving Cases of Iggun.” And see also footnote 101, first paragraph, where I cite R. Shlomo Eliyahu Miller as drawing a קל וחומר from the Langer case to Epstein vs. Friedman. [Furthermore, in the same footnote 101, second paragraph, I argue that even Reb Moshe’s opponent R. Joseph Elijah Henkin (who supported Rabbi Goren regarding the Langer case) would be compelled to concede that Ms. Epstein is wife of Reb Aharon Friedman. In any event, what is significant is that I have demonstrated that I am correct to interpret Reb Moshe’s responsum in OC 4:49 expansively to include Even ha-Ezer, and concomitantly to limit his other responsum in YD 1:101 to matters of Yoreh De’ah.]

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    3. Rav Goren approached the problem differently, setting a higher bar for providing mamzerut, and also for conversion. Mr borokovsky could not name the BD that converted him, nor was evidence that he had married chava with a Rav and witnesses.
      Also, the get you mentioned that he gave later on, was signed avraham ha'ger - which invalidated his so called giur.
      I will try to check your notes later on.
      The problematic issues with the Goren psak, IMHO, are that he was going against a BD headed by the future posek hador of the charedi world. Presumably there had already been outreach and recognition of Rav Eliashiv by the Lithuanian camp. Also the battle was between the old school of European hareidi poskim, and new RZ school who had been riding high on the victory of 1967. There was already a theological battle, when Rav Goren said in 1968 that this victory was atchalta d'geula and anyone who denies it is a heretic. The hareidim essentially denied it.
      There's a historical note about the HTC in Skokie, who dismissed the gaon Rav Chaim Zimmerman ztl, after he had jokingly insulted eliezer berkovits. The American hareidim put the HTC in herem.
      It's ironic that both Rav Zimmerman and rav berkovits supported the Goren psak.

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    4. I had a look at the notes you cited in your "Response to R. Shmuel Kamenetzky on the Methodology of Resolving Cases of Iggun."

      It is interesting that you cite Maaneh L'igros in your essay - although I haven't read the Maaneh, from what I have gathered, it is quite insulting to Rav Moshe.
      Here is something worth considering - in his sefer "One man's Judaism", R Emanuel Rackman devotes a chapter to praising the responsa of Rav Moshe Feinstein. In his conclusion, he says that Rav Moshe "has opened the door" [to halachic development]. And that whilst some will try to open it even further, others will try to close it altogether. We are witnessing both categories. Rabbi Rackman's BD, the IBD, Rav Shmuel and R Greenblatt have all variously tried to open it further. others, such as yourself, the maaneh, possibly Rav Bleich shlita, and Rav Elysahiv ztl have all tried to close it altogether.

      Finally, I had a correspondence with Rav Bleich many years ago, in English, on a separate controversial matter and he gave a similar response to that which you quote. His English term was to apply "benign neglect"...

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    5. Thank you, Reb KA. The "Anonymous" comment posted on March 8 at 8:02 a.m. was indeed from me. I sincerely apologize that I forgot to sign in as "Shalom C. Spira" as I previously did, and hence my comment was displayed under "Anonymous." I am grateful that your intuition is superb and that you correctly deciphered the authorship of the comment.

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