There’s an anonymous Mishnah at Avot 5:13 that says a lot about our attitude towards property.
אַרְבַּע מִדּוֹת בָּאָדָם: הָאוֹמֵר שֶׁלִּי שֶׁלִּי
וְשֶׁלָּךְ שֶׁלָּךְ, זוֹ מִדָּה בֵינוֹנִית, וְיֵשׁ אוֹמְרִים זוֹ מִדַּת סְדוֹם.
שֶׁלִּי שֶׁלָּךְ וְשֶׁלָּךְ שֶׁלִּי, עַם הָאָֽרֶץ.
שֶׁלִּי שֶׁלָּךְ וְשֶׁלָּךְ שֶׁלָּךְ, חָסִיד.
שֶׁלָּךְ שֶׁלִּי וְשֶׁלִּי שֶׁלִּי, רָשָׁע
There are four types of people:
One who says: "What is mine is mine and what is yours is yours" —
this is a neutral quality; others say that this is characteristic of Sodom.
One who says: "What is mine
is yours and what is yours is mine" is a boor.
One who says, "What is mine
is yours and what is yours is yours" is a chasid (i.e. a really
good and kind sort person).
And one who says: "What is
mine is mine and what is yours is mine" is wicked.
Merely okay, or something better?
A midrash (Devarim Rabbah on Ekev, 3:3; Yalkut Shimoni on
Mishlei, 947) tells a story of Shimon ben Shetach that is usually a little
embellished in the telling. The Wikipedia version, slightly edited, reads like
this:
Shimon ben Shetach … lived in
humble circumstances, supporting himself and his family by conducting a small
business in linen goods. Once his pupils presented him with a donkey which they
had purchased from a gentile merchant. Using the legal formula prescribed by
the Talmud, they said "When we pay you, this donkey and everything on it
is ours." After receiving the gift, Shimon removed the saddle and
discovered a costly jewel. The students joyously told their master that he
might now cease toiling since the proceeds from the jewel would make him
wealthy—the legal formula of the sale meant that the jewel was now his
property. Shimon, however, replied that even though the letter of the law said
they were right, it was clear that the seller had no intention of selling the
jewel along with the animal. Shimon returned the gem to the merchant, who
exclaimed, "Praised be the God of Shimon ben Shetach!"
[Incidentally, in the two versions of the midrash cited above, the contract is made not by the talmidim but Shimon ben Shetach himself, and there is no mention of the use of any Talmud-prescribed formula. Moreover, the term ‘gentile merchant’ is not used. The seller is described simply as an Ishmaelite, i.e. an Arab. Another version of this tale is found in Talmud Yerushalmi, Bava Metzia, halachah 5, daf 8a. There the students of Shimon ben Shetach buy the donkey for him so that he will no longer have to earn his living by selling flax. In all three versions cited here, the jewel is not found under the saddle but is tied to the donkey’s neck].
What does this story have to do with our mishnah? Quite a
bit, since we have to ask whose jewel is the rabbi giving the merchant—his own
or the merchant’s? If the former, he is giving away what he owns and is
therefore a chasid. If the latter, he is returning it to its rightful
master and only qualifies for being an average sort of person at best.
The addition of the story that the talmidim bought the
donkey with the stipulation that its owner passes title to “the donkey and
everything on it” provides a reason for letting us say that, since the jewel
would then be gifted to Shimon ben Shetach and therefore belonged to him, by
gifting it to the merchant he was being a chasid. However, there is a
simpler way to achieve the same objective. Where a person who parts with an
object that belongs to him loses hope of recovering it, this abandonment of
hope (yi’ush) effectively renders that item ownerless—and thus capable
of being acquired by the next person who comes to possess it. On this basis the rabbi, on acquiring the
jewel through yi’ush and then returning it to the merchant, would
qualify under our mishnah as a chasid.
Is it wrong to be average?
What is so bad about just being regarded as an average,
neutral sort of person, neither favouring oneself over others nor promoting
their interests at one’s own expense? One answer is that, even if you are neither
a tzaddik nor a rasha, and indeed treat others as you would yourself, this
neutrality does not foster the positive value of love between fellow human
beings (“Love your neighbour as yourself”: Leviticus 19:18) that lies at the
very core of the Torah.
Another reason to prefer to be a chasid is that
neutrality is actually a form of fatalism: a person can believe in God but
still say: “Everything that happens in this world is the way God wants it. He
created the mazal for each of us; our fate is in the stars. If God wanted
anyone else to have my money/house/car He would have given it to them in the
first place.” This attitude, which reflects a view of a static world in which
it is impermissible for any individual to affect the material wellbeing of
another, is unacceptable in terms of Jewish thought. One might have thought
that the litmus test of a person’s human quality is not what he thinks
but what he does and that a bad attitude, in and of itself, is not as
important as how a person acts. The mishnah therefore comes to tell us
otherwise: in this case anyone who has this attitude to life is not merely
misguided: he is evil, a rasha.
Yi’ush: abandoning hope
The Malbim (Rabbi Meir Leibush ben Yechiel Michel Wisser,
in Artzot HaShalom) posits another scenario that brings this Mishnah
into the context of yi’ush. Take the case of Reuven and Shimon who are
travelling together, each with their own goods. A thief comes along and steals the property of
them both. Shimon abandons hope of ever recovering his property; Reuven however
perseveres and later recovers both his and Shimon’s goods. As a matter of halachah, Reuven doesn’t
just get his own stuff back. He is now also the rightful owner of the goods
that used to belong to the despairing Shimon. If he returns the stolen items to
Shimon, this is an example of “what’s mine is mine, what’s yours is yours” in a
positive sense. But, explains the Malbim, if Shimon seizes his former property
back by force on the basis of “what’s mine is mine, what’s yours is yours”,
even though he has said exactly the same thing as Reuven, he has demonstrated the
middah of Sodom.
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