Thursday, July 2, 2026

Pinchas: Tzlofchad's Daughters, Jewish Inheritance, and Contemporary Practice, Part II

Part I considered the letter of the law, the mechanisms, chiefly the *shtar chatzi zakhar*, by which observant Jewish families have for centuries redirected inheritance toward daughters who, by the plain reading of the Torah's commandment to the daughters of Tzlofchad and the law generalized from it, would not otherwise receive a portion. However, even granting that these methods are adequate from the perspective of the letter of the law, that they are effective and that they are permissible to utilize, it remains unclear how they satisfy the will of the Torah. If, in the Torah's formulation, when there are sons and daughters in a family, the sons inherit and the daughters do not, does not the orchestration of any other result thwart the Divine intent?



There is a fundamental point of agreement among all authorities, regardless of their positions. The Divine and perfect Torah is not in need of change or modernization, nor is it to be cast as unjust or unfair, particularly in comparison with man-made systems. To some, this means no deviation from the asset distribution the Torah describes, or at least not beyond that established by early rabbinic authorities. To others, the issue is more subtle; any modification must not be presented as a conceptual or moral challenge to the Torah's mandate, nor may it confuse the understanding of the Torah's intent.


One manifestation of this, important for technical reasons as well, is the abjuring of the language of "inheritance" in any policy directing assets toward the daughters. Rather, words such as *matanah* (gift) or *chov* (debt) are used. (R. Yona Reiss notes a Biblical precedent. Abraham, while giving "all that he had" to Isaac, also gave gifts, *matanot*, to the sons of his concubines.) In this vein, statements in the Mishnah and both Talmuds hold that any claim that sons and daughters inherit equally is "not to be listened to," and such claims are associated with Sadducees and non-Jewish scholars. Following this path, R. Yitzchak Isaac HaLevi Herzog, the second Chief Rabbi of modern Israel, who proposed an enactment along these lines, emphasized that his purpose was "not God forbid to follow the non-Jewish rules out of principle, but to prevent strife within the family."


Nonetheless, the Rabbis of the Talmud did enact policies to the material benefit of daughters, even to a substantial degree. The Talmud itself (Ketubot 52b) asks the very question at hand. How could it be that the Torah decreed that sons should inherit and daughters do not, and yet the Rabbis create enactments whereby the daughters do inherit? The answer given is that the motivation is also a Torah precept, in providing for the daughters the resources to enable a marriage, citing a verse from Jeremiah, "Take wives for yourselves and bear sons and daughters, and take wives for your sons, and give your daughters to husbands."


This cannot mean the policy is Biblical in nature, since the Talmud is clear that the enactment is rabbinic; the *Lechem Mishneh* takes the citation as an *asmakhta*, an allusion connecting a rabbinic law to a Scriptural verse, answering the prior question by establishing that the enactment, even as it impacts one mandate of the Torah, serves the Torah's overall interests. This seems to be the understanding of the Netziv, who in a tentative comment ("*lulei d'mistafina*," "were I not afraid") suggests that this passage is the foundation for the later adoption of the *shtar chatzi zakhar*; the Chatam Sofer states more confidently that the document came to replace the earlier enactments once it became a better fit for the purpose.


The Talmud goes on to limit the enactment so that assets transfer from the daughter only to her sons and not her daughters, preserving the Biblical format in which sons inherit but daughters do not; here too is a functional redistribution bounded by a concern to preserve the Torah's conceptual underpinnings. R. Herzog, in formulating his own proposal, accordingly dismisses the claim of undermining the Torah, noting that the Rabbis of the Talmud had already enacted and recognized methods of modifying the inheritance process; any objection lodged against contemporary approaches, he asserts, must be levied at them as well.


**The Role of Familial Harmony**


It is clearly emphasized in much of the literature that familial harmony is an overwhelming consideration at play in this area. *Shalom* is a deeply cherished Jewish value, and its opposite, strife, is repeatedly denigrated in the sources of Jewish law and philosophy, all the more so within a family, where the consequences of discord are particularly painful and at times tragic. The sale of Joseph into slavery, the paradigmatic interpersonal offense, is traced by the Talmud to Jacob's unequal treatment of his sons, formalized there as a point of moral instruction. Historically, this referred to favoring one child over another; in a modern context, a similar result can occur through omitting the daughters, or giving a double portion to the firstborn without regard to other factors. The Rama explicitly mentions the desire to prevent strife as a motive for a father to plan the distribution of his assets.


R. Yechiel Michel Tukichinsky, in *Gesher HaChaim*, his work on issues surrounding the end of life, stresses the point through a cautionary tale. A wealthy and pious man, committed to leaving his property exactly as the Torah dictates, thereby excluding his daughters, actually bequeathed "hatred and competition and division" to his family, so much so that it was said it would have been better had he left no legacy at all. Even Torah scholars disdained his actions, he reports, noting that he had abandoned rabbinic wisdom, both the specific enactments benefiting daughters and the broader Talmudic dictum that custom must at times dictate halakhah. An earlier work, R. Aharon de Modena's *Ma'avar Yabok*, makes a similar point, connecting the spiritual to the practical. How tragic for a father's soul to bear the guilt of having caused, through his final acts, strife among his children, as against the great reward awaiting one whose foresightful instructions create an atmosphere of love and brotherhood.


However, to posit that the Torah's intent is simply set aside in favor of *shalom* is unsatisfying; aside from the problematic abandonment of a mitzvah, there is the question of why the Torah itself did not factor this consideration into the original commandment. R. Herzog offers the possibility of a decline in commitment over the generations, from an earlier point where the Torah's arrangement may have been accepted with equanimity. It could be added that in the modern era there are technical obstacles that make some modification necessary even for a father who wishes to follow Torah law exactly, since civil law generally provides for all siblings to inherit equally, and avoiding that result requires daughters and non-firstborn sons to voluntarily waive rights that they may be unaware of or unwilling to forgo (authorities are divided as to whether daughters are even obligated to waive those civil rights).


Reconciling spirit and practice here may be a two-step process. The first is to ascertain whether the exclusive inheritance of males represents a Torah ideal or is more functional, tied to societal circumstance. Rishonim differ on this. The Ralbag understood the exclusion of daughters to stem from the desire to keep property within the family, given that a daughter's marriage would remove it to a different household; the Netziv similarly posits that daughters do not feel anguish at seeing the property pass to their brothers, since the sons represent the continuation of the father's household, but where there are no sons, the daughters would be dismayed to see the property leave the family altogether, and there the Torah dictates that they inherit, precisely the scenario of the daughters of Tzlofchad themselves.


The Ralbag also writes that the Torah assumed the brothers would provide for their sisters' marriages; as a matter of halakhah, this is not left to their generosity, since the Shulchan Arukh records it as an enforceable condition of marriage that a portion of the estate be reserved for the daughters' sustenance, even at the expense of the sons. As R. Chaim David HaLevi notes, in most cases, where the estate is of average size or smaller, daughters actually benefitted more from this arrangement than they would have from an equal division, since equal division would also have left the sons with less to bring into their own marriages.


It is perhaps noteworthy that the exclusive inheritance of sons is nowhere stated explicitly in the Torah, but rather taken for granted as a starting point; the verse addressed to Moses regarding Tzlofchad's daughters simply states, "if a man dies without a son, you shall transfer his property to his daughter." The *Torah Temimah* observes that sons occupy the space vacated by their father almost automatically, which may be why their inheritance required no explicit statement. A midrashic comment on the daughters' successful petition, from the *Sifri*, makes a related point. "The mercy of man is not like the mercy of God. The mercy of man feels more for males than for females. But He who has created the world is not that way. His mercy is for both males and females," citing the verse that "God is good to all and His mercy is for all His creations." At a basic level, this conveys that the policy is functional rather than a conceptual judgment against the daughters.


One further distinction worth noting. The double portion of the firstborn may stand on different footing than the simple exclusion of daughters. The Ramban maintains that depriving the firstborn of his double portion constitutes an actual Torah prohibition, a position taken as a critique of Maimonides, who records no such transgression; if so, even a technically successful effort in that specific area may run more sharply against the spirit of the law (R. Herzog, aware of this, suggested various ways to secure a waiver from the firstborn).


A second step would be to consider whether *shalom* is a competing value or rather a component of the commandment of inheritance itself. Maimonides explains the purpose of the mitzvah as ensuring that good not be withheld from those who can and should benefit from it; the *Sefer HaChinnukh* highlights the kindness of God in allowing mortal humans to pass on what they have acquired to their families. The legacy of an intact family, however, is far more valuable than the material property left behind; were the distribution of assets to tear apart the family, that primary value would be undermined by the secondary one it was meant to serve.


**The Mitzvah to Fulfill the Wishes of the Deceased**


There is a further consideration, the assumption that allowing one's assets to be distributed according to one's own wishes is itself a Torah value. The Talmud articulates a principle, *mitzvah l'kayem divrei ha-met*, "it is a mitzvah to carry out the wishes of the deceased." Technically, this rule likely does not carry the weight of an actual reassignment of assets; most rishonim assume it applies only to property already in the physical hands of a third party, not to property still in the decedent's control, which transfers automatically to his halakhic heirs upon death. Still, R. Chaim Ozer Grodzinsky considered it feasible that a civil will, enforced by the courts, might meet this standard after the fact, and R. Chanoch Padwa suggested that the appointment of an executor under English law might likewise satisfy the requirement of third-party involvement. R. Herzog, for his part, grounded the same intuition in *dina d'malkhuta dina*, arguing that the civil enforcement of a will supplies the seriousness needed to dispel any doubt about the testator's true intent.


Even where this principle does not suffice to create an actual redistribution, it may carry conceptual weight. The Tashbetz sharpened the underlying concept by noting that a dying person does not thereby acquire some general authority over others; the principle applies specifically to the disposition of his own property, and may, he suggests, be itself built into the mitzvah of inheritance, such that fulfilling the decedent's wishes is not merely a value to be balanced against that mitzvah but conceptually bound up with it. A different rishon, the Mordekhai, frames the same principle as addressing the emotional anguish of the dying, akin to the related rabbinic enactment of *matnat schiv mera*, which allows a dying person's gifts to take effect immediately and informally, precisely to ease his mind. Later authorities, including R. Yosef Shaul Nathanson and R. Asher Weiss, root the broader value in the *chesed shel emet*, the "true kindness," of honoring the wishes of those who can no longer reciprocate; the Maharshdam likewise holds that even where the principle lacks technical force, it retains real moral weight, which R. Herzog characterizes as honoring not the letter, but the spirit, of the Torah.


This raises a related question, whether the broader mandate of *kibud av*, honoring one's parents, might itself require children to carry out a father's wishes for distributing his estate. The Talmud's rule that the expenses of honoring a parent are paid *mi-shel av*, from the father's own assets rather than the child's, would seem to cut against this, since requiring heirs to redistribute property that has already become theirs looks like asking them to spend their own money after all. R. Akiva Eiger, however, was uncertain the comparison holds, since the assets in question only reached the children because of the parent in the first place; even where the obligation is not strictly required, a child who voluntarily honors a parent's wishes is certainly fulfilling that cherished commandment.


This question resurfaced in a modern debate between two British authorities, R. Elyakim Shlesinger, who held that a civil will has no halakhic validity and that an heir who collects under it has committed theft (and that the halakhic heirs' waiver of their rights would be uninformed and thus invalid), and R. Chanoch Padwa, who countered that consent rooted in a desire to honor a parent's wishes, something the halakhah itself would regard as meritorious, should not be considered an error at all.


None of this is brought to question the widespread and sound recommendation that a proper halakhic will be executed wherever possible, which remains the most straightforward path to both halakhic certainty and family harmony. It is brought, rather, to address why such alternative distributions should not be considered an evasion of the Torah's intent, and the discussion above suggests that the intent itself may be more layered than first appears.


**Ha'avarat Nachalah: Disinheritance**


A separate complication is that the Talmud identifies a specific prohibition against *ha'avarat nachalah*, removing an inheritance from its rightful heirs; the Rabbis are described as displeased with such behavior, and the Shulchan Arukh codifies that one who instructs his assets be distributed "in the best possible fashion" is understood to mean to his heirs, since nothing is preferable to that. The Talmud explicitly extends this prohibition to transferring an inheritance from a son to a daughter, which would seem to call the *shtar chatzi zakhar* itself into question.


R. Avraham David Wahrman, the Butzchacher Rav, confronted this tension most explicitly, observing that "not even the most pious" have refrained from using the document. He resolves it by returning to the question of *ha'aramah* itself, including the *Bekhor Shor*'s position on the sale of *chametz*. A strategic maneuver is not automatically a *ha'aramah*; rather, a *ha'aramah* exists specifically where there is a disconnect between one's outward act and one's inward intent, as may be the case with the sale of *chametz*, executed in form while one's true relationship to the *chametz* remains otherwise. A father who writes a *shtar chatzi zakhar*, by contrast, acts with full sincerity, following a path paved by earlier generations of pious authorities, and should bear no such stigma. The Maharam Mintz earlier reached a similar conclusion by tying the document directly to the Talmudic enactments on whose authority it rests.


Various rationales have been suggested for why the disinheritance prohibition exists in the first place, among them the deprivation of family members of what is rightfully theirs, the implicit rejection of the Torah's intent, or the inciting of jealousy among siblings, and each generates its own set of practical parameters. Some hold that there is no concern of disinheritance so long as some portion of the estate remains to be distributed according to Torah law; the Tashbetz held that even a token sum, "four zuzim," suffices. R. Moshe Feinstein, weighing the modern equivalent of that standard, suggested that the prohibition is ultimately defined by intent. One seeking to deprive his heirs acts improperly, while one diverting assets for a worthy purpose, such as charity, may be acting meritoriously, meaning that motivations like the preservation of harmony are not so much overriding the prohibition as falling outside its scope altogether (as R. Mordechai Willig notes, a significant point for the spirit of the law more broadly).


A related approach focuses not on an amount but on categories of assets, with custom favoring the reservation of real estate or libraries of holy books for the sons specifically. The Chatam Sofer offers a distinctive explanation, observing that real estate is in fact the explicit subject of the Torah's inheritance commandment; since the Talmud permits rabbinic modification of Torah law only where the moment requires it and the modification stops short of contradicting the Torah's explicit terms, he understands the *shtar chatzi zakhar* as a rabbinic adjustment that intentionally leaves the core of the commandment, real estate passing to the sons with recognition of the firstborn's status, untouched. He stresses that this is a unique and creative explanation of an arrangement already centuries old by his time, not a license for new innovation elsewhere; crucially, the *shtar chatzi zakhar* does not violate Torah law but only produces a result at odds with the Torah's apparent intent, a distinction his entire analysis depends upon. R. Feivel Cohen notes that even these reserved categories can amount to a substantial sum capable of provoking resentment, and so advises including the daughters in those categories as well, since no actual prohibition stands in the way.


The Radbaz, addressing the rationale behind the commandment, observes that other religions have long challenged Judaism for failing to provide for daughters, and answers that the Torah understood human nature well enough to expect that brothers would support their sisters and see them married with dignity. If, in a given generation, that fraternal love proves insufficient on its own, it becomes necessary to institute the societal tools, such as the *shtar chatzi zakhar* and its variants, that are specifically designed to direct the brothers toward that very goal. As for the danger of sown jealousy, which the Tur places at the center of his formulation of the disinheritance prohibition, that concern is naturally mitigated wherever the siblings agree to the arrangement, where there is an understandable reason for any difference in treatment, or, most affirmatively, where the distribution is designed not merely to avoid offending family harmony but actively to preserve it, a result that argues strongly for its consistency with both the letter and the spirit of the law.


The question of inheritance in halakhah may be unique among the subjects of this kind, in its particular mixture of widely accepted, rabbinically encouraged practice that nonetheless seems to deviate sharply from the Torah's stated rule, and in the sheer range of halakhic considerations, both internal and external to the laws of inheritance themselves, that bear on it. It began, in a sense, with the daughters of Tzlofchad, whose claim the Torah itself records as just, *ken benot Tzlofchad dovrot*, and it has continued across the centuries as each generation has sought to honor both the letter of that commandment and the deeper concern for the dignity and unity of the family that the commandment was always meant, at its core, to serve.