JQR on One Foot
In the winter issue of JQR Naphtali Meshel finds the new in a familiar old tale.
JQR’s archive is more than a century deep, and much of the scholarship of the decades that precede ours remains vital. This winter’s issue of JQR features a note in which Naphtali Meshel extends a conversation started by Raphael Jospe in an essay titled “Hillel’s Rule,” which ran in our pages thirty-four years ago. (JQR 81.1 [1990]: 45–57).
Both Jospe’s essay and Meshel’s ("Measure for Measure," JQR 114.1) focus on the widely known story of the gentile who approached the first-century sages Hillel and Shammai, asking each to teach them the entire Torah while standing on one foot (bShab 31a). Shammai is offended and chases the upstart off with a stick, but Hillel is kinder. He tells the teetering seeker to love one’s neighbor as oneself, and that the rest of Torah is mere commentary on that axiom.
But is this the story all the manuscripts tell? In some the proselyte is not on one foot but rather asks to be taught with one “foot”—a word whose many meanings ricochet through the tale, ass Meshel shows.
When you look closely at this story and is variants, striking facets emerge, prompting new questions and possibilities for understanding the encounter. Combining close philology with word play and some fun, Meshel breathes new energy and mischievous humor into a very familiar scene.