Shekalim 1:1

By :  Daniel Nevins Former Pearl Resnick Dean of The Rabbinical School and the Division of Religious Leadership Posted On Jan 1, 2008 | Mishnat Hashavua

What preparations are needed for the Jewish community to begin a new year?

באחד באדר משמיעין על השקלים ועל הכלאים. בחמשה עשר בו קורין את המגילה בכרכין, ומתקנין את הדרכים ואת הרחובות ואת מקואות המים, ועושין כל צרכי הרבים, ומצינין את הקברות, ויוצאין אף על הכלאים.

On the first of Adar [i.e., the last Hebrew month] they make proclamations regarding the shekel tax and kilayim [the prohibition of mixed vegetable gardens]. On the fifteenth [of Adar, i.e., Shushan Purim] they read the Megillah in [walled] cities and begin to repair the roads, plazas, and mikva’ot [ritual baths], and attend to all public works, and mark the graves, and send forth inspectors regarding kilayim.

Comments

The Torah (Exod. 30:12) commands the collection of a half-shekel poll tax from every male over twenty. While this may have been a one-time tax, later generations mandated its collection every year by the first of Nisan for the maintenance of the temple, and to pay for the daily sacrifices on behalf of the nation. One month prior to the due date, the government reminded people to pay the tax, and also adjured farmers to inspect their fields to remove forbidden mixtures that might have grown together over the winter. By Purim the raining season was over, and only a month remained until Pesah. Thus, it was important to clear the paths and plazas that would be used by pilgrims, and to help them be ritually pure by refilling ritual baths and refreshing the lime markers that indicated the presence of a grave. Stepping over a grave would render a person impure, and thus unable to enter the temple or eat the paschal lamb.

Questions

  1. Even today, when there is no temple, nor pilgrimage rite, it takes great effort to prepare for Passover. What are the responsibilities of the Jewish community to help people prepare for the holiday?
  2. Who has assumed responsibility for the ritual needs of the public? Is the synagogue responsible for the observance of the Jewish public, even beyond its membership?
  3. In ancient times they collected a poll tax from every male adult. Should our Jewish community have a token membership fee for every adult? What would be the consequences, good or bad, of such a system?