RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL:JEWISH RENEWAL:JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL:GARLIC,YERUSHALMI,SIN
RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL:JEWISH RENEWAL:JEWISH SPIRITUAL  RENEWAL:GARLIC,YERUSHALMI,SIN
 RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL:JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL:TALMUD,GARLIC,YERUSHALMI,SIN,
Shalom:
 Those that know me well, know of my love for garlic. If asked what my  favorite veggie is, I will answer 'garlic'. If pressed, I will answer "broccoli  rabe cooked with tons of garlic."
 Before I was careful in what I ate or where I are it, I would have a pizza  with freshly cut garlic piled high upon it. I would not accept minced garlic  from a jar, nor garlic powder. At home, I still can nuke an entire garlic and  let it get sweet and eat the cloves as one would eat breath mints. Needless to  say, I can only do this if I am not planning on seeing others for two days after  as the odor seeps from one's pores.
 When in San Francisco I always made sure I ate at the Stinking Rose  Restaurant which makes everything wonderfully with garlic including  dessert.
 Hence I could relate well with the Hebrews who ungratefully, bored with  manna from God, complained:" We remember the fish we freely ate in Egypt,  and the zucchini and the melons and the leeks and the onions and the garlic.  Alas, now our soul has withered; there is nothing at all beside this manna  before our eyes (Numbers 11:5-6)." Now I can  talk about the Hebrews use of  the word 'freely'' especially when they were slaves, and other words of their  delusion in these telling two pusuks, but I am stuck on garlic.
 This is the only time garlic in mentioned in the Chumash.
 However in the Talmud, we find that Ezra, during the Second Temple period  spoke of garlic for its medical properties. In Talmud Yerushalmi Tractate  Megillah 75a, Ezra decreed that men should eat garlic on Shabbat as it was an  aphrodisiac and would hence help re-populate Israel after the partial   return from the Babylonia exile. My personal experiences have shown that  eating garlic acts as a form of birth control unless one can have sexually  relations from two ends of a king size bed.
 Talmud Bavli Bava Kama 82 b gives five properties to garlic. The rabbis say  it increases semen, it kills parasites in the intestines, it warms the body, it  brightens a person's outlook, and it satiates. Other sages say that it  eliminates coveting as it makes one happy in his mind and heart.
 Because of Ezra's rule, and it was a rule and not a suggestion, Talmud  Bavli Tractate Shabbat 118a and b give recipes for Shabbat foods that one can  eat that have plenty of garlic. This they said was all part of Oneg  Shabbat, the joy of Shabbat. One such dish was lots of cloves of garlic, a large  fish and cooked beets. One of the basic rules for celebrating Shabbat is to set  aside some special food during the week to be savored on the Sabbath. Garlic was  deemed to be one of these foods.
 As we know Jews were  known to obey Shabbat and to try to make alliyah  to Jerusalem. Anyone who vowed to not do business with one who obeyed Shabbat or  moved to Jerusalem, was put in a state of not being able to do business with ANY  Jew. The third of the three type of people that one could not say he  would not do business, is one who eats garlic. If one vowed that, he also could  not do business with ANY Jew. In other words, garlic eating was a trait of  the Jews in Talmudic times just as making alliyah to Jerusalem was and  obeying  Shabbat was. (Talmud Bavli Tractate Nedarim 3:10).  
 However, as is usually the case in the Talmud, there is always ''on the  other hand.'' Even though garlic is lauded for its medical properties, being a  delicacy for Shabbat, being a "Jewish" food, and even being a ''love potion,"  the rabbis in the Talmud decried its pungent, powerful smell.
 In Talmud Bavli Tractate Sanhedrin 11a the rabbis give examples of going  out of ones way to save someone from embarrassment which is akin to murder. They  recount the tale of Rabbi Judah ha Nasi, who when teaching, smelled garlic. He  announced loudly; "Whoever ate garlic should leave," because he could not  concentrate on his lesson.
 Rav Hiyya, the best student, walked out. Every other students  followed Rav Hiyya . This left Rabbi Judah alone. The next day,  Judah's son,  Rabbi Shimon, spoke to Rav Hiyya.    "Was it you who irritated my father with your bad breath?"  Rav Hiyya  answered: "Heaven forbid, I would never do such a thing; there should be no such  thing in all of Israel. No one should eat garlic before coming to the study hall  !" ( He only left to save some younger student embarrassment).    
 Garlic comes into play with blessings before meals. We learn in Tractate  Beracoth that one who eats and doesn't bless is a ''thief.''  In Talmud  Bavli Tractate Beracoth 51a one sage was asked concerning one who ate  and drank but did not  bless before eating and drinking. ''After having  begun eating is it too late to recite the blessing normally said beforehand,  even though the meal has not been completed?'' 
 The answer given was : "If one has eaten a garlic clove such that his  breath smells, should he go and eat another garlic clove so that his breath will  smell even more?" Hence, the rabbis are saying that the  ''odor of garlic  is likened to the stink of sin''. One iniquity should not encourage a  further wrongdoing. Thus the ''person who mistakenly began to eat without  reciting a blessing should recite a blessing before continuing eating. ''
 My friend, the garlic, is used again in the Talmud in the same  manner. In Talmud Bavli Tractate Shabbat 31b the rabbis    discuss :"Do not be excessively wicked (Ecc.7:17). They wonder if it is OK to  be  a little wicked.  The rabbis pick on the garlic again. "One who  has eaten a garlic clove and therefore his breath smells, should he go back and  eat another garlic clove so that his breath will smell even worse? " They are  saying that if we commit a sin, repent. Do Teshuvah. Do Renewal.  Don't  give up, and think the Gates of Repentance, or that Jewish Spiritual Renewal are  closed to us, and throw our lives away and just continue to sin.  
 I wonder if Director Martin Scorcese was waxing Talmudic in the scene in  Goodfellows when the heads of the local Mafia were in jail, being treated   specially, and Paulie was cutting garlic so wonderfully thin, with a  razor, and sauteing it in virgin olive oil? I love that scene. 
 Oy. I am glad I am out of the bondage of Mitzraim, but I do love my  garlic.
 Shalom,
 Rabbi Arthur Segal
 Hilton Head Island, SC
 Bluffton, SC
 Savannah,Ga
 JEWISH RENEWAL:
 JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL
 ECO JUDIASM
 JEWISH SPIRITUALITY