New Brooklyn Eruv: Time to Accept?

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  • #2195133
    AviraDeArah
    Participant

    Neville, while rav roth might have lived contemporaneously with tav moshe, one can hardly compare the two. There just isn’t a comparison.

    Learning dibros moshe is like learning the maarachos of rav akiva eiger… Rav moshe was similar to the Gaon in that he did not belong in his generation, and was sent here to hold back yeridas hadoros. I say this not only as a talmid of his talmidim, but as someone who learned his seforim on shas while learning sugyos.

    So no, i do not think it was appropriate for those poskim to authorize a communal norm change which went against him and the majority of poskim, including many chasidishe poskim as well.

    #2195186
    Richmond Braun
    Participant

    “communal norm”??
    Well who was the first to actually have an eruv in the Brooklyn Queens area if not Rav Moshe with the KGH eruv. So please don’t create norms out of whole cloth. Besides, there were eruvs in nyc over 100 years ago, so regardless of how many people did or did not rely on it the “norm” was already established. How about the Baltimore eruv which Rav Moshe supported (according to RAv Heineman shlita), where it was also against the “communal norm” of that city where jews resided already for 100 years by then.

    #2195180
    Richmond Braun
    Participant

    Sorry, but please make a list of poskim (and I mean poskim, not Roshei Yeshiva who never issued a halachic ruling) first and we’ll see who is majority. Besides who says one must follow majority in this issue? Especially since Rav Moshe is against most gedolei acharonim, POSKIM, of the past few generations. Even more, being that Rav Moshe stated clearly his shitah, and if somebody feels he fits Rav Moshe’s shitah then he is not going against him.

    #2195178
    DaMoshe
    Participant

    n0mesorah, regarding R’ Tuvia GOldstein zt”l, I was told by one of his main talmidim that while he himself held an eruv was allowed in Brooklyn, he wouldn’t pasken that way out of respect for R’ Moshe, except for very specific circumstances. He never allowed it to be used openly. The example told to me was that if someone has asthma and needs to carry an inhaler, R’ Tuvia held that it could be kept in your pocket, because it’s not visible. R’ Moshe would have held that one shouldn’t leave the house on Shabbos with it.

    #2195205
    Richmond Braun
    Participant

    I really don’t follow this “respect for rav moshe” concept. Didn’t Rav Yaakov Kamenetzky object to a monsey eruv? Why aren’t we instructed not to carry “out of respect for Rav Yaakov? Same for any city. As there are almost always (great) rabbis who object.

    #2195202
    Richmond Braun
    Participant

    Thanks, Neville.
    By the way, please check your history. Both the Flatbush and the BP eruv (in its first gilgul) were established while Rav Moshe was alive and well. Additionally, what’s this fabricated “waiting till the gadol dies” which you repeat (but didn’t invent), if Rav Moshe states clearly black on white numerous times in plain lashon kodesh, both in his manhattan and brooklyn teshuvos, that the rabbanim have a right to pasken and make an eruv and do not have to follow his psak, then why are people frummer than him and condemning those who don’t follow him? Additionally, why, for heaven’s sake, must one follow his fellow’s rav if he has his own?

    #2195207
    Richmond Braun
    Participant

    Dear sir, did you bother to reach out to them? I’m sure that if you speak sincerely that they’ll gladly explain to you. Besides, most of the issues and what they hold was already rehashed during the controversies of 5760 and 5765 respectively. The material is available largely online, too.

    #2195208
    Richmond Braun
    Participant

    Thanx, Neville,
    There was and is no “minhag” in this issue. Why didn’t this “minhag” disrupt the KGH eruv? The Chicago one? The Boston one? Each of which had people who disliked it.

    The “minhag” in Europe was always to make. The minhag in America was that many rabbanim over the past seven decades tried to make. Some succeeded. Some didn’t.

    #2195206
    Richmond Braun
    Participant

    I also don’t understand the fuss with kavod for rav moshe. didn’t many chasidishe shuls and houses have smaller block or front-of-the-house-eruvs all over the place in Bp and Willimsburg for decades? Why is that any more kosher/kavod’ig to rav moshe (to one who learnt the subject)?

    #2195250
    AMJC
    Participant

    If you check the census numbers in Queens – the increase from 1970 when R’ Moshe was Matir Aruvin in different parts of Queens to today, all the Aruvin in Queens are probably also not good according to R’ Moshe.

    #2195355
    Richmond Braun
    Participant

    Neville,
    As for the second part of your post, the point is that if you hold that Brooklln and Manhattan have issue even according to Rashi’s opinion (due to 600,000 inhabitants), then you’ve got the same issue in Baltimore and Chicago and others. Rav Moshe would actually be a yechida’ah opinion then by being mekil for those cities. However, if we assume like most poskim that Rashi’s shitah WOULD work for Chicago and Boston (because we need 600,000 traversing on at least a single street) then it works equally for Brooklyn & Manhattan.
    Anyway, there are other factors to be lenient besides for Rashi. Do you homework.

    #2195361

    “Additionally, why, for heaven’s sake, must one follow his fellow’s rav if he has his own?”
    I agree, like I said before to Avira. The thing bothering me here with the new eruv is their lack of willingness to explain their halachic justification. You’re correct that other big cities in the past have had eruvin, yet they generally have had very specific reasoning. Even the Manhattan eruv has an official justification, albeit I don’t personally hold of it.

    “There was and is no “minhag” in this issue. Why didn’t this “minhag” disrupt the KGH eruv?”
    Not sure what this is in response to; when did I mention minhagim?

    “Additionally, what’s this fabricated “waiting till the gadol dies” which you repeat (but didn’t invent)”
    I could be wrong about this being an example of it. My chronology of the events might be off, as you pointed out. The general idea is certainly not fabricated, however (eg. the OU reversed some kashrus stances after Rav Belsky was niftar).

    Avira:
    Obviously you’re going to say Reb Moshe is way more chushuv than Chassidishe rabbonim, and obviously chassidim will disagree. There’s really no purpose in bringing those types of points into this discussion. Even if they really were lower tier than Reb Moshe, they’re paskening for their people, he did for his. Not everybody has to hold like Litvish Ashkenazim on everything.

    #2195353
    Richmond Braun
    Participant

    Neville,
    The problem with your approach is that you make Rav Moshe as a gzeiras hakasuv, or, if you will, as a chasidic Rebbe who issues statements that don’t require rationale. Well, I believe they do require as such – and they’re right there to whoever wants to learns his teshuvos objectively. I believe his heter would apply to sections of Brooklyn just as to KGH.

    #2195387

    “The problem with your approach is that you make Rav Moshe as a gzeiras hakasuv”
    In other words, you didn’t even read my post, or you’re potentially confusing me with other posters.

    “Well, I believe they do require as such – and they’re right there to whoever wants to learns his teshuvos objectively.”
    Clearly you aren’t one of these people. I told you earlier, you can find his letter about the KGH eruv easily; I’m guessing you didn’t, and there’s nothing objective about your approach. You are strangely obsessed with wanting this to come out l’kulah.

    “I believe his heter would apply to sections of Brooklyn just as to KGH.”
    Is this a joke? We don’t need to guess or theorize how Reb Moshe would have paskened for a Brooklyn eruv based on his psak regarding KGH. We KNOW how Reb Moshe paskened regarding Brooklyn.

    Your entire contribution to this discussion has been one big embarrassing lack of understanding causing you to believe that being matir one city means being matir all cities. There are plenty of resources out there for you to educate yourself on why you’re wrong.

    If you really want to be “objective,” go back to the elu v’elu approach. There are respectable rabbis who were matir eruvin in Brooklyn, specifically Boro Park. That should be end of story. Everyone goes like their rav and doesn’t try to convert the other side. Why can’t you be satisfied with that? Two posts ago it seemed like you were.

    #2195511
    Richmond Braun
    Participant

    Neville,
    You’re right, i might have meant other commenters while replying to you.
    Anyway, if one reads the teshuvos they can see the mechanism rav moshe works with and the factors he bases his issur or heter on. Therefore, if one sees a certain situation matches any given factors they can issue a ruling on that basis. It doesn’t make a difference what Rav Moshe paskened then assur for such and such city, if the factors known to us match KGH. People just can’t seem to get this through their head.
    Just as a possible example: (please don’t focus on the details of this case, just the concept i’m trying to share) say, a woman asks a rav about a chicken and he paskens trayf. Now, say this chicken falls into a pot that has shishim, and her husband tells her, okay, we can now consume the whole pot. So she insists, what do you mean?! The rav clearly said its trayf! What’s the difference WHERE it fell in! Well, anyone can see that it’s stupid to say such a thing, for the rav only paskened based on the factors he knew, namely, that the chicken is standing alone. However, after it gets mixed into taaruves, if she would ask him, he may be matir based on the current factors.
    Same for Brooklyn eruv and Rav Moshe.
    If anybody out there still can’t wrap their heads around this then it’s just too bad.

    #2195513
    Richmond Braun
    Participant

    I will (hopefully…) end off my contribution to this thread that it’s not that I, personally, actually believe in any city eruv in principle. My thesis is just that if Klal Yisroel, (including at least many of those who have a hard time with Brooklyn eruvs) accepts the city eruv as a concept in general, then they shouldn’t make a fuss about Brooklyn eruvs either. For that city has just as much heter to rely on an any other city (according to 99% of Poskim, and I mean poskim – not lamdanim or baalebatim).
    Even if most litvishe can’t get through their heads that Brooklyn MAY be accommodated according to Rav Moshe, they must realize that we had great poskim both before and after him who do not agree with him.
    Hashem oz l’amo yiten Hashem yevarech as amo vashalom. Amen.

    #2195530
    Richmond Braun
    Participant

    Avira,
    Fact is MOST chasidishe poskim DID approve. Even those who didn’t are mostly for political reasons vd”l. The reason you got the impression you did is because of propaganda of the anti camp.

    Edited
    The simple proof is that most of them have or had house or block eruvs which wouldn’t work according to the litvishe who really hold against. Then when it became a normal city eruv with a good hechsher suddenly they oppose. Politics. Period. There’s much more to say. Do your homework.

    #2195545

    “accepts the city eruv as a concept in general, then they shouldn’t make a fuss about Brooklyn eruvs either.”
    Highly recommend you read an article published by the OU called “Major Cities and Their Eruv Status.” Eruvin in highly populated cities is not a “general concept” where if you accept one you accept them all. Each one seems to have a unique heter for its situation, and all the cities listed have more than 600K people.

    Sadly, they don’t say why Reb Moshe was ok with considering KGH its own reshus separate from the rest of Queens. They do mention that he forbade the inclusion of the highways, which means the new connector between KGH and Forest Hills does not have the backing of Reb Moshe. The author of the OU piece agrees with you that this would allow for eruvin in sub-sections of Chicago.

    There are plenty of extremely meikel shittos on the books, but the new Brooklyn eruv needs to detail which one(s) they are utilizing, otherwise no frum yid should be using it and signing on to blindly trust a mystery heter. Again, not talking about the BP or Flatbush eruvin, talking about the new one that goes all the way around Brooklyn.

    #2195561

    Neville, thanks for the reference. Interesting to note some of the factors that R Moshe used re:Queens – reliability of checking and sholom between communities.

    #2195671
    Richmond Braun
    Participant

    Neville,
    As I wrote in an earlier post. If you want to know the basis of the GBE why not reach out to them, they’d be glad to explain it to you.
    Anyway, if you ever learned the pertinent halachos, you’d realize that the halachic mechanism used is not involving any mekil shitos. It’s just as good, and perhaps better, than many out of town eruvs you’re used to.
    And no, nobody is following them blindly. One either has a rav to ask his shaila, and if not, and he chooses to rely on the rabbanim behind this eruv then he is in pretty good stead, better than anybody opening seltzer bottle caps on Shabbos, even plastic ones for which The heter isn’t nearly as clear in the gedolei haposkim as is the eruv. (Although it is perfectly fine if one follows the matirim for the bottle caps.)

    #2195672
    Richmond Braun
    Participant

    I would like to share a discussion I had on another site.
    Someone said his rav suggests he doesn’t visit BP on Shabbos so not to witness chilul shabbos by frum people i.e. carrying with their eruv.
    To which I replied:
    Well, according to this silliness, perhaps you shouldn’t visit Chicago or Cincinatti, Detroit or Denver, Toronto or Montreal, LA or Lakewood, NJ. as most of them are RESHUS HARRABIM D’ORAYSA ACCORDING TO RAV AHARON KOTLER, RAV AHARON SOLOVEITCHIK, HIS BROTHER RAV YOSHE BER, RAV YAAKOV KAMENETZKY, RAV MOSHE WEISMAN OF YETZIOS HASHABOS, RAV MOSHE BICK, THE MISHKENOS YAAKOV (forgive my order not according to proper kavod) and others. Ella mai, they have their poskim? Well Boro Park also has its poskim whom they follow and they have no obligation to follow even Rav Moshe who purportedly assers. Especially when they feel that it does satisfy Rav Moshe’s criteria.
    I don’t recall anywhere that if Bais Shammai married off a tzaras habas to a yavam, that Bais Hillel wouldn’t attend, saying: “how can we attend a chasuna of chiyuv kares?!”
    ודי בזה לחכימא ברמיזא ובזה אחתום ושלום יהי’ לנו ולכל ישראל עד העולם אמן

    #2196853
    n0mesorah
    Participant

    Dear Richmond,

    Your completely wrongheaded in your proclamations. Do you even know what eruvin issues are about? Rav Moshe was bothered that it may come to exactly what you are proposing. Paper Eruvin. It has no place in Orthodoxy.

    #2196928
    Richmond Braun
    Participant

    n0mesorah,
    Yes, I happen to have an inkling of what its about. Therefore I state what I state.
    I’m actually wondering whether you do.

    #2196951

    Richmond:
    The reason it comes across as n0m is saying is because you keep telling us there are these mysterious sources out there that we would all obviously know about if we weren’t so clueless. Then, when we bring actual sources (even ones that assist the meikel stance), you just double down with the same stuff without getting any more specific.

    In the time you’ve taken to countlessly allude to these “halachic mechanisms” without ever naming sources or explaining them, or even making any attempt to reasonably prove their existence, you could have easily just told us over the information that you allegedly think we’re all lacking.

    People here are either going to conclude–as you wish–that there is some secret halachic mechanism that is suspiciously left out of all publications discussing modern city eruvin that you are suspiciously unwilling to explain, yet somehow expect all frum yidden who have “done their homework” to know about.

    Or, we could conclude that there is no rabbit in the hat, and that you have no idea what the new eruv is relying upon, and that you’re simply talking in circles with no real answers.

    If we must be dan l’chaf zchus for anonymous forum posters, then maybe we’ll go with the first conclusion. Otherwise, we’ll go with Occum’s Razor: the simple conclusion is probably the correct one.

    #2196953
    youdontsay
    Participant

    catch yourself,
    “Yes, according to Rav Moshe v’siyato, anyone who carries in Brooklyn on Shabbos is mechalel Shabbos. If they are ill-advisedly listening to someone who thinks there is a valid Eiruv, they are not Reshai’m, but this does not change the facts of the case.”

    What, Rav Moshe maintains that we need three million people over 12 mil by 12 mil square area to be classified as a reshus harabbim. Brooklyn does not contain such a population over such an area. Brooklyn is encompassed by mechitzos, and Rav Moshe would allow as well.

    #2196954
    youdontsay
    Participant

    midwesterner,”
    “Does the Great Wall of China make that entire country no longer a Reshus Harabim?”

    You obviously never learnt the inyan.

    #2196955
    youdontsay
    Participant

    n0mesorah,
    “The point is that he admits that it’s his opinion and he couldn’t persuade his contemporaries. It doesn’t matter who else had the same idea. It’s misleading to build an eruv according to a self described minority opinion.”

    Actually, Rav Moshe is in the minority regarding these issues. Learn the inyan first.

    #2196956
    youdontsay
    Participant

    Reb Eliezer,
    “Reb Moshe ztz’l holds that a platyeh gedolah which is market or a park having 600,000 people spreads all over the city making the whole city a reshus harabim.”
    First of all a platya is not a park.
    Actually, Rav Moshe says the opposite.

    #2196957
    youdontsay
    Participant

    AviraDeArah,
    “An eruv is a far greater concern. It’s allowing widespread chilul shabbos deoraysoh, not something which is a modern day decree designed to prevent a situation where factories are running on Shabbos etc.”
    Actually, Rav Moshe never issued a psak din barur regarding Brooklyn. Furthermore, Rav Moshe admitted that his objections are mechudash. Hence, how can one argue that those who do not follow Rav Moshe are mechalal Shabbos.

    #2196958
    youdontsay
    Participant

    AviraDeArah,
    “Gadol, it needs to be very clear that rav moshe did NOT say the slippery slope thing about the eruv. He held it is assur medeoraysoh, and has no tzad heter whatsoever. And the vast majority of poskim backed him on it. Some were on the fence but joined the prohibition to show solidarity.
    And after rav moshe was niftar….people made the eruv. It was a chutzpah norah.”
    Rav Moshe stated that his shitta was a chiddush, so how can one argue that most poskim agreed with him? Actually, an eruv was made in Boro Park and Flatbush in Rav Moshe’s lifetime, so what chutzpah are talking about?

    #2196966
    youdontsay
    Participant

    AviraDeArah,
    “Hoo hoo, most poskim held that mechitzos wont help, but even if they would, the matirim said rhat things like traffic lights are mechitzos….very big dochak.”
    Huh. Most poskim including Rav Moshe would allow with mechitzos. You simply never learnt the inyan. Traffic lights were never used for more than a snif lheter. Only those who listen to people who propagate machlokas believe that mechitzos are not the main heter.

    #2196968
    youdontsay
    Participant

    DaMoshe,
    “I was told that R’ Moshe’s reason for allowing Eruvin in Queens but not in Brooklyn is because of the way the boroughs are viewed. If you mail a letter to someone in Brooklyn, you address it to “Brooklyn, NY”, no matter which area in Brooklyn it is. Nobody writes “Boro Park”, “Midwood”, etc.
    In Queens, the common practice is to write the name of the area – it will be addressed to “Kew Gardens”, “Kew Garden Hills”, etc.
    So R’ Moshe allowed eruvin in Queens, but each section has its own, and they also have to make eruvin to allow for crossing from one area to another. That is indeed how it’s done in Queens.”
    Explain how this follows Rav Moshe’s shitos in eruvin. An area of 12 mil by 12 mil which contains a population of 3 millions, is classified as a reshus harabbim. If Brooklyn does not contain such a population then it is no different than Queens.

    #2196969
    youdontsay
    Participant

    Neville Chaim Berlin,
    “Actually you would address a letter to “Flushing” if writing to someone in Kew Garden Hills, and he definitely wasn’t matir an eiruv for all of Flushing.
    From their website, it seems like it has to do with the highways.”
    Rav Moshe only said that they did not include the highways. Boro Park does not contain any highways either.

    #2196971
    youdontsay
    Participant

    AviraDeArah,
    “Anon, again, apples and oranges; kitnios is a minhag. Hotzaah is deoraysoh. And it wasn’t only rav moshe – it was tje vast majority of poskim in America who joined him.”
    Rav Moshe stated that his shitos are mechudash. It was most definitely not the vast majority of poskim who learnt the inayn.

    “Besides that, you’re cherry picking a handful of psakim which rav moshe made which were not accepted. Rav Moshe paskened the biggest shailos in the country and was, in the satmar rovs words, “mara d’asra of America” despite their disagreements.”
    Fiction, Satmar Rav never said this regarding Rav Moshe.

    #2196972
    youdontsay
    Participant

    AviraDeArah,
    “Neville, while rav roth might have lived contemporaneously with tav moshe, one can hardly compare the two. There just isn’t a comparison.
    Learning dibros moshe is like learning the maarachos of rav akiva eiger… Rav moshe was similar to the Gaon in that he did not belong in his generation, and was sent here to hold back yeridas hadoros. I say this not only as a talmid of his talmidim, but as someone who learned his seforim on shas while learning sugyos. So no, i do not think it was appropriate for those poskim to authorize a communal norm change which went against him and the majority of poskim, including many chasidishe poskim as well.”

    All irrelevant. One does not have to be on the same level to disagree. Furthermore, Rav Moshe admitted that his chidushim regarding eruvin do not follow the poskim, so of course we do not have to follow his shitos.

    #2196973
    youdontsay
    Participant

    DaMoshe,
    “n0mesorah, regarding R’ Tuvia GOldstein zt”l, I was told by one of his main talmidim that while he himself held an eruv was allowed in Brooklyn, he wouldn’t pasken that way out of respect for R’ Moshe, except for very specific circumstances. He never allowed it to be used openly. The example told to me was that if someone has asthma and needs to carry an inhaler, R’ Tuvia held that it could be kept in your pocket, because it’s not visible. R’ Moshe would have held that one shouldn’t leave the house on Shabbos with it.”
    This is simply untrue. All Rav Tuvia’s talmidim agree that he allowed carrying in the Brooklyn eruvin. He simply did not agree with Rav Moshe’s chiddushim in eruvin at all.

    #2196974
    youdontsay
    Participant

    AviraDeArah,
    “So no, i do not think it was appropriate for those poskim to authorize a communal norm change which went against him and the majority of poskim, including many chasidishe poskim as well.”
    An eruv is the same community norm as say a mikvah. No one argues when others make mikvaos.

    #2196983
    AviraDeArah
    Participant

    You – where does rav moshe say it’s a chidush?

    Counting Street lights as mechitzos, something the matirim use, is most certainly a chidush.

    #2197008
    youdontsay
    Participant

    AviraDeArah,
    “You – where does rav moshe say it’s a chidush?”
    Igros Moshe, OC, 1:139:5, 4:87

    “Counting Street lights as mechitzos, something the matirim use, is most certainly a chidush.”
    First of all, its less a chiddush than Rav Moshe’s chiddushim. Second, the light snif has nothing to do with mechitzos, but only that the philush is broken. Third, the mechitzos they are referring to, have nothing to with the lights, but only regarding the mechitzos encompassing Brooklyn. Please learn the inyan prior to pontificating.

    #2197010
    youdontsay
    Participant

    Igros Moshe, OC, 4:87
    עכ”פ אני סובר לדינא כדכתבתי, אבל לא רציתי לומר זה לפס”ד ברור, מאחר שלא הוזכר זה בפירוש בדברי רבותינו האחרונים, ובערוך השלחן משמע שודאי לא נחית לזה… אבל בזה טעם שלא אמרתי למה שאני סובר לרבנים חשובים לפס”ד ברור.

    #2197011
    youdontsay
    Participant

    Igros Moshe, OC, 1:139:5
    אבל בענין הס׳ רבוא נלע״ד דבר חדש

    #2197112

    youdont:

    Saying that an area with over 600K people is a reshus harabim is definitively not a chiddish. The shittah of the Aruch HaShulchan doesn’t seem to have ever been accepted by anyone; he’s just choosing his wording wisely when talking about a previous posek hador.

    We went through this same issue with Richmond: you can’t claim that Reb Moshe “would have” been matir a Brooklyn eruv. He was explicitly asser it. We don’t need to guess how he would have held based on other teshuvos.

    #2197535
    n0mesorah
    Participant

    Dear Richmond,

    Here is Eruvin 101. Even if a city contains a reshus harrabim deoraisa there are simple methods to build a proper eruv between houses. There is extremely complex methods to build an eruv around large parts of the city as well. The fact that there are kosher eruvin in Brooklyn, doesn’t mean that there is no rh”r. Maybe I completely misread your posts. But it seems like you are arguing on this fact.

    #2197591
    n0mesorah
    Participant

    Dear Youdont,

    Look in that very teshuvah and he writes that he was told off for using that sevarah. The poster on the first page wanted to use that specific idea that Rav Moshe and Rav Aaron completely rejected. And none of the previous poskim entertained. It would throw out the whole mesechtes eruvin. Good Yidden don’t throw away mesechtos or invent new ones. If we are to build eruvin in cities there is a whole list of precedent on how to do so. To just do a run around on the whole topic, when we have more resources than we did in the last millenium is too deviant to have a place in any form of Orthodoxy. Conservative Jews built those kinds of eruvin before they all started driving on Shabbos. This was Rav Moshe’s concern more than anything else. In his amazing foresight he saw that Brooklyn would be the battleground for the pseudo halachic eruvin.

    If you want to discuss the actual nuance of eruvin, I’ll try my best. But you can’t just quote one liners. We would have to establish what was the general precedent all over Europe and how the postwar generation transplanted it to America. And then we could examine Rav Moshe’s take. I concede that there can be a kosher eruv in Brooklyn. But anybody who cares about authenticity knows that it would have to be under the auspices of a qualified Rav who can attest to it’s proper construction and that it is frequently checked.

    To my knowledge, Rav Tuvya Goldstien was one such example. Though he explicitly said that it does not conform with Rav Moshe’s opinion. Are you claiming that it does?

    #2197606
    youdontsay
    Participant

    Neville Chaim Berlin,
    “Saying that an area with over 600K people is a reshus harabim is definitively not a chiddish. The shittah of the Aruch HaShulchan doesn’t seem to have ever been accepted by anyone; he’s just choosing his wording wisely when talking about a previous posek hador.”
    First of all, Rav Moshe says explicitly that one cannot argue that shishim ribo is conditional of a city. Since they had established eruvin in cities that contain shishim ribo. Therefore, he came up with his chiddush of three million over 12 mil by 12 mil. This chiddush is what Rav Moshe is referring to when he states that he is saying something mechudash.
    Second, The Aruch HaShulchan, chiddush has nothing to do with it. Rav Moshe is referring to the fact that the Aruch HaShulchan maintains that only machneh Leviah was a reshus harabbim. Rav Moshe’s chiddush is predicated on the entire machneh Yisroel being classified as a reshus harabbim. Third, Rav Moshe admits that his chiddush is not mentioned in any of the Achronim (in fact, most Rishonim and Achronim clearly maintain that only machneh Lviah was a reshus harabbim). Fourth, the Aruch HaShulchan is not a chiddush, Rashi says almost the same thing in Eruvin 59b.

    “We went through this same issue with Richmond: you can’t claim that Reb Moshe “would have” been matir a Brooklyn eruv. He was explicitly asser it. We don’t need to guess how he would have held based on other teshuvos.”
    Those who learn teshuvos do project into them. That is why they are written. The metzious is that Brooklyn does not meet Rav Moshe’s criteria to be clasified as a reshus harabbim. Moreover, Brooklyn is encompassed by mechitzos.
    Therefore, according to Rav Moshe there is no reason not to allow an eruv. Especially, since Rav Moshe wrote that he cannot issue a psak din barrur.
    Please learn the inyan prior to pontificating.

    #2197656
    youdontsay
    Participant

    Neville Chaim Berlin,
    “Highly recommend you read an article published by the OU called “Major Cities and Their Eruv Status.” Eruvin in highly populated cities is not a “general concept” where if you accept one you accept them all. Each one seems to have a unique heter for its situation, and all the cities listed have more than 600K people.”
    This is probably Rav Belsky’s argument, but in fact most poskim would disagree.

    “Sadly, they don’t say why Reb Moshe was ok with considering KGH its own reshus separate from the rest of Queens. They do mention that he forbade the inclusion of the highways, which means the new connector between KGH and Forest Hills does not have the backing of Reb Moshe. The author of the OU piece agrees with you that this would allow for eruvin in sub-sections of Chicago.”
    If one can make a subsection of Queens then one can make in a subsection of Brooklyn.

    “There are plenty of extremely meikel shittos on the books, but the new Brooklyn eruv needs to detail which one(s) they are utilizing, otherwise no frum yid should be using it and signing on to blindly trust a mystery heter. Again, not talking about the BP or Flatbush eruvin, talking about the new one that goes all the way around Brooklyn.”
    The Brooklyn Eruv is relying on mechitzos. With mechitzos there is no issue according to all, besides for Rav Aharon.

    #2197658
    youdontsay
    Participant

    n0mesorah,
    “Your completely wrongheaded in your proclamations. Do you even know what eruvin issues are about? Rav Moshe was bothered that it may come to exactly what you are proposing. Paper Eruvin. It has no place in Orthodoxy.”
    Rav Moshe was not worried that it will lead to paper eruvin at all. He knew that he was mechudash, and that others disagreed with him. Moreover he never issued a psak din barrur regarding Brooklyn (that is only if you accept his teshuvos over kol koreis).

    #2197674
    youdontsay
    Participant

    n0mesorah,
    “Look in that very teshuvah and he writes that he was told off for using that sevarah. The poster on the first page wanted to use that specific idea that Rav Moshe and Rav Aaron completely rejected. And none of the previous poskim entertained. It would throw out the whole mesechtes eruvin. Good Yidden don’t throw away mesechtos or invent new ones. If we are to build eruvin in cities there is a whole list of precedent on how to do so. To just do a run around on the whole topic, when we have more resources than we did in the last millenium is too deviant to have a place in any form of Orthodoxy. Conservative Jews built those kinds of eruvin before they all started driving on Shabbos. This was Rav Moshe’s concern more than anything else. In his amazing foresight he saw that Brooklyn would be the battleground for the pseudo halachic eruvin.”
    To call those who made use of eruvin, which our grandparents relied on as deviant (witness Warsaw, Lodz, and Odessa), is Conservative Judaism. You are even unfamiliar with Rav Moshe’s writings on the inyan. If you are referring to the Aruch Hashulchan’s sevarh, well Rashi says similar (Eruvin, 59b), so sorry it is not such a chiddush after all. If you are referring to the issue of cars being included in the tally, well most poskim would disagree with Rav Moshe regarding this issue [Rav Aharon never weighed in the matter (contrary to what some say in his name), for in fact he did not uphold the criterion at all]. If you are referring to traffic lights, it was only used as a snif lheter (and there are more people who accepted it than you realize).

    #2197678
    youdontsay
    Participant

    n0mesorah,
    “If you want to discuss the actual nuance of eruvin, I’ll try my best. But you can’t just quote one liners. We would have to establish what was the general precedent all over Europe and how the postwar generation transplanted it to America. And then we could examine Rav Moshe’s take. I concede that there can be a kosher eruv in Brooklyn. But anybody who cares about authenticity knows that it would have to be under the auspices of a qualified Rav who can attest to it’s proper construction and that it is frequently checked.”
    Rav Moshe maintains that eruvin were established in previous generations in cities which contained populations greater than shishim ribo. Do I need to cite more proof? There is no such thing as “transplanting halachah to America.” Halachah is the same all over and forever, unless you are a Conservative Jew. The issue of “proper construction and that it is frequently checked,” is irrelevant to the debate at hand, and is simply a smokescreen.

    “To my knowledge, Rav Tuvya Goldstien was one such example. Though he explicitly said that it does not conform with Rav Moshe’s opinion. Are you claiming that it does?”
    Rav Tuvia allowed carrying and did not accept Rav Moshe’s chidushim at all. Those who argue otherwise are lying. There is no talmid who would disagree.

    #2197679
    youdontsay
    Participant

    n0mesorah,
    “Conservative Jews built those kinds of eruvin before they all started driving on Shabbos.”
    Care to provide support for this outlandish statement. Neverminded, forget it, it does not exist.

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