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Ask now of the days that are past: The wagers of sin

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The wagers of sin
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table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright
  4. Table of Contents
  5. Introduction
  6. Scribes and Scholarship
    1. People of the book
    2. How to start a Jewish Newspaper
    3. The European Genizah
    4. The Crown of Aleppo
  7. Holiness And Heresy
    1. Where seldom is heard a mystical word
    2. A dubious blessing
    3. Hiwi the heretic
  8. Encounters And Enlightenings
    1. Rabbi in the abbey
    2. Thou shall not kill
    3. On the other hand
  9. Babies, Brides, And Burials
    1. Birth rites
    2. May the best man win
    3. Beauty versus virtue: An age-old argument
    4. Who was Rembrandt’s Jewish bride?
    5. Beneath the stars
    6. All cows go to Heaven
  10. Congregation And Community
    1. Trimming the guest list
    2. Service interruption
    3. Buddy can you spare a dime?
  11. Policy And Piety
    1. Taking leave of our census
    2. The wagers of sin
    3. Affairs of state
    4. Prophets, protests, and pepper spray
    5. The Vice-President of Grenada
    6. Majority rules
    7. Baldness, bears, and bottled water
  12. Economics And Ethics
    1. Minimizing your assets
    2. Not all that glisters
    3. You can bank on it
    4. Ransom note
    5. The price is right
  13. Buildings And Blessings
    1. Rabbi, watch out for that beam
    2. Beam me up
    3. The walls have ears
    4. Preparing for a prophet
  14. Life And Leisure
    1. Healthy advice from the top authorities
    2. Tennis, anyone?
    3. Keeping the ball in play
    4. Pushing Torah
  15. Creatures And Curiosities
    1. The siren’s song
    2. The power of the human voice
    3. The love apple
    4. Horse sense
    5. The right vampire
    6. Going to the ants
  16. Glossary
  17. Index

21 The Wagers of Sin*

NEWS ITEM October 1998: Calgary. A plebiscite calling for the removal of video lottery terminals was narrowly defeated. This development called attention to the fierce controversy over the widespread use of Bingos, casinos and other forms of gambling to finance religious and charitable institutions. Local Jewish institutions were among the beneficiaries of this problematic funding.

Calgarians have again been made aware of how dependent we are on various forms of gambling revenues, ranging from Bingo to casinos, in order to support our charitable and religious organizations.

Although the recent plebiscite on the banning of video lottery terminals was spearheaded by religious groups, the official Jewish community has stood on the sidelines, sheepishly aware of how much of our funding comes from those dubious sources.

It is clear that games of chance have never been sanctioned in Jewish tradition. The Mishnah (Sanhedrin 3:3) singled out two games that had wide currency among the ancients – dice and pigeon-racing – as disqualifying their practitioners from serving as witnesses in a Jewish court. The Talmud (Sanhedrin 24b–25a) questions whether the objection is because the winnings are treated as unlawful gains (in which case it would apply even to occasional gambling) or because gamblers make no useful contribution to society (in which case, only full-time professionals would be disqualified). At any rate, the need for such a law attests that the phenomenon did plague Jews in antiquity.

The lure of gambling continued to entice individual Jews through the Middle Ages. Documents from the Cairo Genizah tell of a visitor to the Egyptian village of Minyat Zifta who had to be expelled from his rented rooms lest his gambling habit provoke a scandal. After being excommunicated by the local Karaite leader, the gambler tried to retaliate with a counter-ban of his own, but finally relented under threats of government interference.

This situation contrasts remarkably with that of another Jewish gambler in fifteenth-century Sardinia who was invited to join the gaming table by none other than the king himself – even as the local rabbi stood by, perplexed as to whether he could impose sanctions for this outrageous infraction of communal ordinances.

From the early fifteenth century we come across frequent mentions of card-playing, a pastime that ensnared Jews from all walks of life. There were some who made their livings painting playing cards, and at least one sixteenth-century Jewish card-maker (who was also the shammash of the synagogue) sued a rival for infringement of his monopoly. Some ostensibly irreproachable games, like chess and tennis, also became morally questionable when Jews took to placing wagers on their outcomes.

Rabbinic and belletristic writings of the time preserve several different attempts to condemn and discourage games of chance. Several individuals took upon themselves formal religious vows, or even legal contracts, that pledged them to forsake the practice for stipulated time periods, and specified the penalties that would be imposed for violation of the obligation.

At times the communities would issue official enactments to that effect, to be binding upon all residents. Interestingly, these ordinances sometimes specified exemptions for special cases, such as at festive occasions, in the sukkah, when visiting the bedridden, or on Christmas(!). Condemnations of the pastime were a standard feature of moralistic tracts – which directed their censure at winners and losers alike. When the moralists did not succeed by preaching (as they rarely did), they turned to a more potent weapon: satire. Parodies about the evils and stupidity of games of chance were a staple of Hebrew and vernacular literatures.

An Italian Jew, the impresario Leone de Somni of Mantua, evidently gambled away his garters, causing him profound embarrassment when he had to hold up his stockings with his hand while serving as doorman at his theatre.

One the most colourful Jewish figures of the Renaissance was the illustrious Italian rabbi and scholar Leone Arieh de Modena. At the age of fourteen years the precocious scholar composed a philosophical dialogue on the subject whose two protagonists, Eldad and Medad, arrived at the conclusion that games of chance, even if not absolutely forbidden by Jewish law, should be eschewed as morally reprehensible. Early in his life, Leone’s own father had had his wealth squandered by the gambling of his stepbrother, Abraham Parego, so he had personal experience of the damage that could be caused by the habit.

We can surely learn an object lesson about the addictive power of the vice’s lure by following the unfortunate fate of that illustrious anti-gambling advocate.

For in spite of all his upright ideals and convictions, Rabbi Leone Arieh de Modena never succeeded in overcoming his own passion for the practice – and in the end he was bankrupted several times on account of his own gambling.

Suggestions for Further Reading

Abrahams, Israel. Jewish Life in the Middle Ages. New York: Atheneum, 1969.

Cohen, M. R. The Autobiography of a Seventeenth-Century Venetian Rabbi: Leon Modena’s Life of Judah. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1988.

Goitein, S. D. A Mediterranean Society; the Jewish Communities of the Arab World as Portrayed in the Documents of the Cairo Genizah. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1967.

Roth, Cecil. The Jews in the Renaissance. 1st Harper Torchbook ed. Harper Torchbooks, Temple Library. New York: Harper & Row, 1965.

Schwartz, Leo W. Memoirs of My People: Jewish Self-Portraits from the 11th to the 20th Centuries. New York: Schocken, 1963.

__________

* Originally published in The Jewish Free Press, Calgary, October 29, 1998, p. 8.

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