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NUMBERS — 35:11 kills

NUM400 A person must be careful that his actions do not lead to someone's death. The Torah states that if someone kills another person unintentionally, he is obliged to flee to one of the six cities of refuge in Eretz Yisroel which were especially set aside for this purpose. The Chinuch (410) explains that this punishment, going into exile, can be equated with death. The manslayer, albeit his action was not intentional, has to atone for his negligence which caused the loss of someone's life. A person must be very careful while engaging in any action that could possibly harm someone. Today this is especially relevant when driving a car. A driver must devote himself entirely to driving since one careless move could easily lead to a fatal accident. When you are upset or tired, do not drive.

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NUMBERS — 35:11 unintentionally

NUM402 I have found further in Scripture that “he who kills a person accidentally” (Bemidbar 35:11) is not liable to the death penalty; that he who inadvertently violates one of the negative commandments is liable only to a sin- offering or a guilt-offering, even where its intentional violation would have made him liable to premature death, or to one of the four types of execution which the court passes sentence on. What we see from this is that there are major grounds for punishment only when both the body and heart participate in the [forbidden] act-- the heart with its intent, and the body with its activity. Similarly, [our Sages] have said that if a person performs a mitzvah but has no intention of doing it for the sake of Heaven, he receives no reward for it. Since the very basis for an act, and what it revolves around, depends on the intention and inner life of the heart, the knowledge of the duties of the heart should come before the knowledge of the duties of the limbs.

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NUMBERS — 35:12 die

NUM403 While the Torah (Leviticus 19:16) commands each Jew not to stand idly by when a person's life is threatened, the Talmud (Sanhedrin 73a), in defining various situations when this mitzvah applies, does not seem to differentiate between saving the life of a sinner or a non-sinner. In fact, it seems from the Talmud (Sanhedrin 37a) that each person, tall or short, deformed or normal, sinner or non-sinner, has a life whose value is infinite, equal to the value of the entire world. The only time a person loses his value of life is after the court has pronounced the sentence of death (Maimonides, Hilchot Rotze'ach 1:5), based on [this verse]. Prior to that, this person, even if a murderer who deserves to die, is treated like anyone else, and one may not kill him or her.

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NUMBERS — 35:12 trial

NUM405 Someone accused of a capital offence shall not be put to death before he is given a fair trial. Any capital punishment case is a very serious matter, and extreme care must be taken. Qualified judges must hear the case, and they are commanded to make every effort to find a reason to acquit the accused and save him from the death penalty, provided, of course, that they stay within the bounds of justice. Witnesses are forbidden to judge the case, for having personally seen what transpired, they might be incapable of energetic efforts to find a reason to acquit the accused, for in their hearts they already might have decided that he is guilty.

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NUMBERS — 35:19 avenger

NUM407 There are two specific scenarios in which the emotion of revenge is most natural, and the Torah allows the emotion to be acted upon, but only in a supervised manner. The first case involves witnesses to a heinous crime who see a murderer killing an innocent person in cold blood. It is very natural for anyone seeing such an act to try to avenge the innocent victim and take revenge upon that murderer. Jewish law does not allow the witness to "take the law into his own hands" and kill that murderer on the spot as an act of revenge, no matter how justified. Rather, the witness must alert the authorities and bring this evil person to a court proceeding and then testify there (Maimonides, Hilchot Rotze'ach 1:5). But the feelings of that witness are still inside. It is for this reason that when the murderer is found guilty, the Torah commands that the witnesses actually take their active revenge by being the first to kill the murderer in the court supervised execution (Deuteronomy 17:7) In describing this execution, Maimonides emphasizes how it is the witnesses who must take the lead in the execution (Maimonides, Hilchot Rotze'ach 15:1). There are often others involved in every murder case who feel an even greater desire to take revenge against the murderer--the relatives of the victim. The Torah acknowledges these intense feelings of revenge and says that under certain circumstances, the relative of a murdered person can indeed take revenge and killed a murderer [this verse]. When there is a case of deliberate and intentional murder, Maimonides rules that the relatives, those who stand to inherit, are like the witnesses and therefore at the forefront of the execution (Maimonides, Hilchot Rotze'ach 1:2) Thus, their sense of attribution can be satisfied by taking part in the killing of the person who murdered the relative.

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NUMBERS — 35:19 death

NUM408 (Continued from [[EXOD720]] Exodus 17:14 Amalek BLOCH 65). The desire to eradicate bloodshed was paradoxically responsible for the biblical tolerance of the institution of the blood-avenger. A blood-avenger was an heir of a victim of murder who considered it his duty to avenge the death of his kin by killing the murderer [this verse]. This practice most likely originated in the distant past prior to the establishment of competent criminal courts. Avenging a kin's death was a debt of honor. There were also some who believed that the victim's soul would find no rest until the killer was destroyed. Moved by such emotional considerations, a blood-avenger would neither understand nor comply with any law which attempted to suppress his right to avenge his kin's death. The Bible intimates that God took into consideration the "heat of anger" of an avenger (Deuteronomy 19:6). The practice was therefor left undisturbed by the Pentateuch, in the words of Maimonides, "in its great zeal to eradicate bloodshed" (Mishneh Torah, Hilchot Rotzeach 1:4). However, the Bible imposed limitations on the avenger's right to take the law into his own hands. Thus, while tolerating the practice, it practically illuminated it. The avenger was permitted to catch the killer, but he could not execute him until such time as the suspect was convicted by a court (Numbers 35:12). In the event that the homicide was unintentional, the killer was granted sanctuary in cities of refuge (Numbers 35:11). In time, the law of the avenger became obsolete. (Continued at [[EXOD592]] Exodus 21:24 eye BLOCH 66-7).

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