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Hilchot Rechilut Review, Part 1
Thank you to David Solomon for this review
material, which was part of his class for BMT students in Jerusalem in
1993.
- The Definition of Rechilut
- The Definition of Avak Rechilut
This is the first of three review classes on Hilchot Rechilut.
Hilchot Rechilut Review: Part 1
Rechilut is sharing information about a subject which will incite or
increase the listener's ill feelings against that subject. Often the
information is derogatory, in which case it is Lashon Hara as well as
Rechilut. Some examples:
- Reuven tells Shimon that Levi is obnoxious (which is Lashon Hara). Then
Shimon tells Levi what Reuven said about him (which could make Levi angry
at Reuven, and is Rechilut).
- Two years ago, Diane got a disastrous haircut from Evelyn; Diane was
very angry and told many of her friends (which was Lashon Hara), including Sarah.
The dispute was never resolved, and Diane does not go to Evelyn's salon
anymore. Sarah tells Diane about Evelyn's fabulous salon renovations
(even though this is not derogatory information, this stirs up the anger
that Diane has about the bad haircut, which is Rechilut; Sarah should not
have mentioned it).
- Karen told David that Elizabeth cheated him out of $5.00 by not giving
him the same discount she gave other customers that day. (This might be
permissible in order to rectify the situation, but only if certain
conditions are met; see the third Hilchot Rechilut review or Hilchot
Rechilut chapter 9.)
- Darren and Shari applied for the same scholarship. It was announced
that Shari won. Later that day, Jerry was telling Darren how great
Shari's entry was (this emphasis on Shari's winning could make Darren
jealous of Shari, so it's better left unsaid).
Rechilut causes arguments, hatred, and can incur damage. It is considered
more severe than Lashon Hara, or a more severe form of Lashon Hara (depending upon
terminology).
Even if the speaker's intention was not to create a dispute or ill will
between the listener and the subject, if ill will results, the speaker has
committed the sin of speaking Rechilut.
Avak Rechilut is an implication that causes ill will, rather than an
explicit statement of what the subject did or said. In "Chofetz Chaim: A
Lesson a Day," Rabbi Berkowitz points out that this would only be when the
result of Rechilut was unintentional (p. 312, 314, 316). There are
several types of examples of Avak Rechilut:
- An implication that there is Rechilut to be spoken. Someone asks,
"What did Jennifer say about me," and you reply, "I cannot say." The
questioner takes this as an implication that Jennifer said something
against him.
- Praise about an action of the subject which was at the listener's
expense. Jim and Jane are business partners. John tells Jim how nice
Jane was to extend him $100 in credit last week so he could purchase
equipment from them. Jim might be upset that Jane was so generous with
their business funds.
- Conveying that someone gave information about the listener that he
didn't want getting around. Ed asks Harry if he can borrow some power
tools. Harry says no, and Ed replies, "But you let Fran borrow them last
week." Harry might be angry with Fran for telling people that he lent his
tools to her. Rabbi Berkowitz (p. 320) adds that revealing secrets is the
most severe type of Avak Rechilut.
- Repeating non-derogatory information that would bother the listener.
Deborah tells Leah that Rachel is "very organized." If Leah knows Rachel
would be bothered by this compliment (maybe Rachel thinks it means she
isn't spontaneous), Leah shouldn't tell Rachel.
HaLashon, Copyright (c) 1996, 2002 by Ellen Solomon and Project Genesis, Inc.
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