Tuesday, 16 November 2010

Spitting in Judaism


Spitting is important to the Jews, they're commanded to spit upon smelling food and many of them spit on the floor of the synagogue, during a prayer which makes a thinly veiled reference to Jesus.

The Shulc
han Aruch, known in English as the Code of Jewish Law, is a written manual of halacha (Jewish law), authored and published by Rabbi Yosef Karo in the 16th century. It's the most widely accepted and authoritative compilation of halacha since the Mishneh Torah or even the Talmud itself.

"Chapter 33. Things that are forbidden because they are dangerous Y

No. 4: A person should always remember that, to smell food, you should spit ascended saliva, rather than swallow it, because if he had swallowed, may expose themselves to danger, Gd forbid."


"Spitting on the Beit Knaset (synagogue) floor during Aleinu (prayer) is a common Chabad (Hasidic Jewish sect) practice; they do not find it offensive or disgusting in any way." Y


"The Aleinu prayer concludes every service. And after we say the first line of this prayer, we spit. In this first line we praise the Master of all things that He has not made us like the nations of the world, nor caused us to be like the families of the earth; that He has not assigned us a portion like theirs, nor a lot like that of all their multitudes, for they bow to vanity and nothingness - [SPIT]. But we bend the knee, bow down, and offer praise before the supreme King of kings..." Y

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