Each week we discuss one familiar halakhic practice and try to show its beauty and meaning. The columns are based on Rabbi Meir's Meaning in Mitzvot on Kitzur Shulchan Arukh. Shining the Groom's Shoes It is a mitzva to gladden the bride and groom; one way this is customarily done is by dancing before them and attending to their needs. Most of us are accustomed to see guests bring glasses of water to the bride and groom or to fan them to cool them off; another kind of service that is remarkably common is shining the shoes of the groom. What is the inner meaning of this widespread custom? We explained last week that one of the main purposes of marriage is to cultivate an appropriate relationship to worldly possessions and enjoyments. A single person can subsist on a minimal income and shield himself from the challenges of the world of work, but a married person is generally obliged to devote himself to earning a living. The marriage itself is incomplete unless he provides his wife with a ketuba obligating him to support her in a dignified way (SA EHE 66), and one of the main purposes of marriage is to raise a family - which is an expensive proposition. Rebbe Natan of Breslav (Likutei Halakhot laws of Yibum) explains that our shoes are an exemplar of our relationship to our possessions. They symbolize our material wealth. One example of this is the blessing we say on donning our shoes, thanking HaShem "Who provides me with all my needs" (SA OC 46:1). Our shoes are in effect all our needs! Likewise our Sages tell us that shoes are a person's most important possession: "A person should sell even the beams of his house and buy shoes for his feet" (Shabbat 129a). As we have explained in previous columns, the basis for this symbolism is that shoes represent human dignity by elevating us and separating us from the earth, which was cursed by the sin of Adam and Chava who used HaShem's bounty against His will (Bereshit 3:19). Since married life is meant to develop a proper relationship to our possessions, and shoes represent this relationship, there is naturally a profound relationship between marriage and shoes, specifically the man's shoes (since the primary responsibility for supporting the family falls on the man, as the ketuba indicates). We find this relation ship in many places in Scripture. For example, when the brother-in-law
declines to marry his brother's widow, she makes a public demonstration of
removing his shoe, and he is called "The house of the shoeless" (Devarim
25:9-10, as we explained last week). When the anonymous relative of Elimelech
declines to both redeem his fields and marry Ruth, yielding to Boaz, we
learn, "And he drew off his shoe" (Ruth 4:8). According to one opinion in
the gemara (BM 47a), it was the relative who took off his shoe. Ibn Ezra
explains that according to this opinion, the shoe itself represents the
entire redemption, meaning presumably both the property and the marriage,
which the relative gave to Boaz. Again, the shoe is the symbol of both
property and married life. [This approach also sheds light on another aspect of this custom. Logically we should expect that the guest would do the best possible job by giving a spit shine, yet we see that this is never done. The above explanation shows why. Spitting is parallel to the removing of shoes as a symbol of separation from married life. When the brother-in-law declines yibum, the widow both removes his shoe and also spits before him. Likewise, when Miriam criticized Moshe's separation from his wife, the Torah likens her rebuke to having her father "spit before her" (Bamidbar 12:14; see Rashi on 12:1). So a spit shine would exactly contradict the message provided by beautifying the groom's shoes.] “Meaning in Mitzvot” is undergoing intensive editing, and BE"H and the help of loyal supporters, we hope to have the book out soon. If you would be interested in helping with publication, please contact Rabbi Meir about making a dedication or subscription (advance purchase): mail@asherandattara.com, fax 02-642-3141 Rabbi Meir authors a popular weekly on-line Q&A column, "The Jewish Ethicist", which gives Jewish guidance on everyday ethical dilemmas in the workplace. The column is a joint project of the JCT Center for Business Ethics, Jerusalem College of Technology - Machon Lev; and Aish HaTorah. You can see the Jewish Ethicist, and submit your own Qs — www.jewishethicist.com or www.aish.com.
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