New York – All Night Shavuos Learning: What to Learn? And Its Controversy

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    New York – It is a custom whose roots reach back to the earliest era of our nationhood.

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    To make up for the fact that our ancestors actually had slept the night of the Sinaitic revelation, religious Jews stay up all night and study Torah (Midrash Shir HaShirim Rabbah 1:56). The custom does not fault our ancestors for being ill-prepared, for how does one prepare for something that one does not know anything about? Rather, it is a custom that allows Klal Yisroel to shine ever further.
    The practice is mentioned in the Zohar (Parshas Emor 98a). There it even describes the reward that awaits one who studies Torah all night. The all-night learner receives no less than seventy divine blessings from above and is crowned with a special celestial crown of the upper heavens. Then they are inscribed in a special Sefer HaZikaron.

    The Arizal writes in Shaar HaKavanos that whoever stays up all night learning is assured that he will certainly live out the year. (This seems to be true under all conditions, Swine Flu or no Swine Flu.) The Chofetz Chaim records this statement lehalacha (Mishna Brurah 494:1).

    There is another interesting point too. Rav Dessler zatzal writes in Michtav M’Eliyahu that time is not a straight continuum. Rather, the nature of time is like a carousel that turns in circles. He writes that each Yom Tov is actually the very same Yom Tov that Klal Yisroel experienced in thousands of years ago in the year 2448. Each day on this carousel of time has its own special unique aspect to it. With this thought of Rav Dessler in mind, let us examine the words found in the Siddur Etz Chaim (page 46a). There it states that fulfilling this practice of learning all night makes it as if we ourselves received the Torah when we hear the Krias HaTorah of Shavuos. It is therefore, as if we were actually there at Har Sinai on the actual day of Matan Torah itself!

    The question is, however, what should one learn? There is a special Tikkun Lail Shavuos that much of Klal Yisroel studies each Shavuos night. It encompasses Torah, Neviim, Ksuvim, Midrashim, and certain mystical parts of Torah. The Tikkun was established by the AriZal HaKadosh.

    And here is exactly where the controversy begins.

    The Shlah HaKadosh (Tractate Shvuos 47) writes that this order of what to learn has become a Minhag in Klal Yisroel and this is what we learn. The Shvus Yaakov, however, (Chok Yaakov 494) writes that this Tikkun was only enacted for the masses of people, and those that are capable of doing so should learn their own study regimen.

    What is the common custom? Chassidim generally learn the Tikkun, but Litvaks generally learn their own study regimen. Sefardim also generally learn the Tikkun, particularly because the Chida writes (Lev David 31) that one should do so. Indeed, he writes that a group of people who changed the study regimen to studying the Rambam did the wrong thing. He compares what they did to building a Bamah – an unauthorized sacrificial platform.

    The minhag in virtually all of the Litvish Yeshivos, however, is to study what the Yeshiva itself studies during the regular Zman. What about the Chida’s point against the group of people that studied the Rambam? We should note that this group created a new regimen for Shavuos. They did not continue their regular yearly regimen. Our Yeshivos are continuing their regular regimens.

    It is interesting to note that the Vilna Gaon himself learned the Arizal’s special Shavuos regimen. It is also interesting to note that in the time of Rav Aharon Kotler zatzal in Lakewood there were many bochurim that learned Torah on both nights of Shavuos.

    So what should one be studying on this night? The Gemorah tells us (Avodah Zarah 19a) that a person does not learn except for where his heart desires. The Yeshivos should therefore continue their practice, and theplaces that study the Tikkun should continue their practice too.

    Rabbi Hoffman is a Mechanech in a Bais Yaakov and the former Morah D’Asrah of the Young Israel of Patchogue. He has written Seforim on Hilchos Mezuzah, Lifnei Iver, Chanukah, Purim, Niddah, His seforim have Haskamos from Rav Yisroel Belsky, Rav Malkiel Kotler, Rav Dovid Kviat, Rav Shmuel Kaminetsky, Rav Chaim Scheinberg, and Dayan Roth’s Beis Din. He is also the author of the forthcoming Sefer entitled, “Not Your Usual Halacha.”


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    35 Comments
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    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    This is dancing on the head of a pin for the sake of creating a shailoh where none exists. It is IRRELEVANT what one learns on Shavuos night as long as one is engaged in some lamdus of torah or talmud that enough. Lets not complicate matters beyond necessry. Anything that promotes greater knowledge of hashem’s words will be music in his ears.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    Tank you vin. The Ramban writers that the reason why the toirah was given to 600,000 people is because that’s the amount of “ideas” so tanks for bringing up the issue.

    Jefferson
    Jefferson
    14 years ago

    It’s all Hashem’s Torah

    An Ignorant Jew
    An Ignorant Jew
    14 years ago

    Are there any sources that precede the Zohar that speak of the custom of “learning all night” on Shavuos? Is it mentioned anywhere in Midrash or Talmud?

    shimon
    shimon
    14 years ago

    Learning all night long is certainly a great and holy thing BUT don’t forget that shachris contains many mitzvos de’oraysa and de’rabbanan that you have to be fully awake to fulfill (not to mention the importance of seudas hayom). So please keep this in mind when making your choices.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    on a lighter note: for those that take a nap on a sefer. when sefer should he nap on ?

    thecommentsonthissitemakemelaugh
    thecommentsonthissitemakemelaugh
    14 years ago

    Is it worth it to stay up all night at the risk of sacrificing two days worth of learning on the day we received the torah??
    I dont know about you but when i stay up all night i’m wiped for the rest of yom tov. This not to mention the immense difficulty of having the proper kavana during shachris after having been awake for hours before.

    Eilu v'Eilu
    Eilu v'Eilu
    14 years ago

    There’s a famous story of the Vilna Ga’on and the Dubna Maggid regarding the former’s learning the Tikkun and the latter’s learning b’iyyun.

    …and another famous story of a gadol berating a wealthy ba’al’abus for staying up all night learning. The former told the latter that his job was to get a good night’s sleep so he can have the energy to be mis’asek be’tzorchei tzibbur.

    Bottom line: rotze kmar avid, v’rotzeh kmar avid, u’bilvad she’yechavein libo l’Shamayim.

    A meaningful Yom Tov to all!!

    power up
    power up
    14 years ago

    Interesting, our fathers slept all night, and got up late to matan torah, and we are up all night, and we chasidim go to sleep right at the alus , the tikkun should have been in the morning hours, when our fathers were suppose to get up

    BB
    BB
    14 years ago

    Eilu v’eilu divrei alokim chaim.

    Wake up, don't do without thinking
    Wake up, don't do without thinking
    14 years ago

    The early sources, including the Zohar, talk about this as something done by very pious people, and not by the masses (hamon am).

    As others have written above, there is no chiyuv for everyone to stay up all night.

    There are and were great people who didn’t stay up all night.

    One also has to be careful that it shouldn’t be, chas vesholem, yotzo sechoro bihefseido (loss exceeds the gain). If people are sitting around for hours, noshing, shmoozing, and sleeping, with very little learning, one has to ask if this is really what Hashem wants. Especially if they have trouble davening properly and other complications from disruption of the sleep cycle.

    Sometimes it is better just to go to sleep, if you want you can alays wake up early and learn then.

    Another problem is little kids, like under bar mitzvoh even, maybe even like eight years old, forcing themselves to stay up. They need to sleep, and if they fall asleep in Shul/beis medrash anyway, what was gained? Sleeping in Shul is a problem in halocho.

    Bottom line – people should think carefully and not just ‘follow the crowd blindly’.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    This all night learning minhag is like eating milchig on Shavuos and other harmless babba meisas that do no harm since yidden who follow the minhag will not be driving home in the morning without having slept. At some point, some rebbe will finally tell his talmidim to go home and spend some time with the kids and family, enjoy the yom tov and catch up on your sleep. At that point, he will be declared the gadol h’dor, but immediately condemned on VIN for exhibiting common sense.

    David
    David
    14 years ago

    “The Arizal writes in Shaar HaKavanos that whoever stays up all night learning is assured that he will certainly live out the year. (This seems to be true under all conditions, Swine Flu or no Swine Flu.) The Chofetz Chaim records this statement lehalacha (Mishna Brurah 494:1).”
    With respect, I think this is an awful thing to say. Nobody is in a position to promise someone else that they’ll live out the year, because that’s not in our hands (and we can’t impose rules on the One in Whose hands it is). In the end, someone learns, then dies, and the one who makes the promise has to do back flips to prove why he was right– which, of course, involves blaming the niftar. “He probably drifted off,” or “he wasn’t learning right,” or “his kavana was lacking.”

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    Let’s all get along? Oseh shulom bimromav hee uuuseh shulom ulainee – – number one maybe ask rav hoffman mechilla for the bizui tlamid chachomim

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    Yes…if some gadol were to make a statement that contradicts the masorah we have followed for generations or that is at odds with the views of other gadoeli torah, we would not blindly follow him without careful analysis of his words and their implications. Even chasidim do not blindly follow their rebbe and there are many cases where there have been splinter groups forming because of a particular posek or tshuvah which they view as totally wrong or borderline apikorsus.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    Instead of sitting around the bes medrash all night trying to stay awake while making believe your really learning–either lumdes or learning lishmah–why not go out and do somthing that will improve the life of just one poor or elderly yid…help them repair their home, drive them to the doctor, help them cook some meals or go shopping. This will give you a much bigger zhchus with hashem them listening to the rebbe drone on about dinei ma’aser.

    Out There
    Out There
    14 years ago

    I’ve heard that in some communities they do not stay up and learn all night leil shavuos because of chatzi lashem v’chatzi lachem…

    Also on the topic of the zohar coming before the gemara – not so pashut… we all know the standard chareidish line that’s towed on the matter – but not all of us are modeh, and those of us that are not have on what/whom to rely. Before you state things so dogmatically and matter-of-factly as if you know this al pi nevua, please think a little bit longer…

    Not so Simple
    Not so Simple
    14 years ago

    There are many things in the Zo’har that indicate that it was actually written in the time of the early Rishonim. 1) Seder Hatkious of Rosh Hashannah. 2) The fact that the moon does not have its own light, only a reflection of the sun. 3) Names of various Amoroim. 4) The language “Kom Reb Shimmon. 5) Many other practices established in the time of the later Amoroim, mentioned in the Zohar. .Etc., Etc.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    How much Torah and family time is disrupted by some who stay up the whole night, often without truly learning nonstop, and then sleep away the next day, after a rushed davening without kavana, and often have a disrupted sleep/ wake pattern for a couple of more days. Meanwhile, the women are stuck watching the children, etc.

    This was for unique people, it seems, originally, not for everyone.