In this week’s Torah portion, once again, we find many of the mitzvos that deal with eating kosher food. How would you answer the following true story that relates to the mitzva of eating kosher food?

Noam lived in the Israeli city of Cholon. He was inspired to help people do the mitzva of mezuza. He bought about 15 kosher mezuzas, and he walked down a main street in the city and gave out a free kosher mezuza to all of the stores that didn’t yet have a mezuza. Nearly all of the stores that he approached really appreciated his kind gesture and thanked him for his genuine kindness.

There was a Delicatessen in Cholon, owned and managed by a secular Jew, which was famous for selling delicious ham sandwiches and many other non kosher meats. The Jewish owner of the Delicatessen saw what Noam was doing, came out and asked Noam if he could have a mezuza as well to display on his restaurant.

Noam felt torn. On one hand the owner was Jewish and as a Jew had a mitzva to have a mezuza. In addition perhaps this mitzva could inspire him to connect on a deeper level to his Judaism stop selling treif meat to Jews. But on the other hand, perhaps having a mezuzah on this delicatessen may fool people into thinking this is a kosher restaurant. It might give people  the wrong idea that this was a restaurant that religious Jews could eat in. In addition, he wondered, perhaps it would be a disgrace to the mezuza to be posted on a restaurant that sold ham to Jews. He wondered what he should do. He only had a limited number of mezuzas to give out. Should Noam give him the mezuzah, or should he politely say no and give it to another store?

Answer for last week’s moral dilemma

According to the opinion Rav Yosef Elyashiv zt”l, the detective should immediately put a stop to the local store selling treif meat. One should not wait in order to make a bigger “bust” later. See Veharev Na Volume Two Hebrew Edition page 278

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