Showing posts with label Sale of chametz. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sale of chametz. Show all posts

Wednesday, 26 March 2025

Chametz after Pesach: why are we so worried about it?

What is the big deal with the status of chametz once Pesach is over? Here's a fascinating piece by Rabbi Wein that addresses not just the halachic, commercial and legal considerations but also a spot of metaphysics. 

Sale and repurchase

There is a strong rabbinic decree forbidding the use of chametz after Pesach by a Jew if that chametz was actually in Jewish possession during the holiday of Pesach. The rationale for this decree is to prevent Jews from having chametz in their possession during Pesach, so to speak hoarding it for use after Pesach. The obvious danger is that this chametz will be used on Pesach and there is a prohibition not only against eating chametz on Pesach but also as to possessing chametz. So, in order to insure that no chametz remains in Jewish possession during Pesach, the rabbis ruled that Jews could not benefit from such chametz even after Pesach. How then can one resolve the challenges this decree poses? The answer lies in the long-accepted Jewish tradition of “selling” the chametz to a non-Jew before Pesach and of reacquiring it afterwards

The legal sale of mechirat chametz is of ancient origin, though it really only came into general use in the late Middle Ages. Jews then were increasingly occupied in operating distilleries for the production and distribution of liquor derived from chametz grain and fermenting agents. Because of the heavy financial implications, the use of a legal sale of the chametz to a non-Jew took hold and has become de rigueur for Jewish individuals and companies in our time and for the past many centuries.

While this solution avoids any problems regarding use and benefit from chametz, stores and companies need to notify their Jewish customers after Pesach that they in fact did sell their chametz before Pesach, thus obviating any hesitation on the part of their Jewish customers in purchasing chametz goods.

When solutions bring their own problems

As the economies of the world became more complex and intertwined, our rabbinic decisors had to deal with new situations and financial arrangements. What about Jews who own shares in public companies that do business on Pesach with chametz goods? What about large supermarket chains outside of Israel that sell their chametz before Pesach but nevertheless continue to sell those products on a regular normal basis in their stores on Pesach itself? Does this not render the sale of their chametz to a non-Jew before Pesach a sham? In countries that require that tax stamps be affixed to the sale documents, is this necessary for the sale of the chametz to the non-Jew and the reacquisition of the chametz after Pesach by the Jews as well? Whose loss is it if the chametz became damaged or destroyed during Pesach while technically under the ownership of the non-Jew?

Ultimately we need to know how real an apparently unreal sale really has to be. All the questions we have just listed have been thoroughly discussed and argued over by the great halachic decisors of the past centuries. Needless to say, proper solutions to all these issues have been found and implemented. It is an irony, but a very true one, that it is the very rigidity of halacha and its absolute adherence to traditional norms and constructs that allows it to be so flexible and fresh in addressing problems of this nature.

A world of chaff

In Jewish kabbalistic and philosophical thought, chametz on Pesach represents our evil inclination and immoral desires. The holiday of Pesach is instrumental in making us more focused Jews and better people. But, for this self-improvement mode to take hold within us, the chametz after Pesach that still somehow remained within us must be removed from our midst. The rabbinic decree regarding chametz after Pesach should not be reduced to its simple, practical terms. Rather it should be elevated to its highest spiritual form.

In a world of chaff, we should be the true kernel of nourishing grain and, in a world of self-promotion and puffery, we should continue to be the unleavened matzah with its low profile and holy form. Perhaps this spiritual lesson is one of the very reasons that our rabbis so emphasized the problems associated with the concept of chametz after Pesach. The lessons of disciplined freedom that Pesach created within us have to be reinforced and nurtured after Pesach too. The temptations of chametz on Pesach are well known to all of us. The harm that undisposed of chametz after Pesach can cause us should also be recognized and dealt with.

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