Zavah: Difference between revisions

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== In rabbinic literature ==
 
According to the [[Jerusalem Talmud]], the eleven-day period between each [monthly] menstrual cycle is ''[[Halakha LeMoshe MiSinai]]''.<ref>[[Jerusalem Talmud]] (''Berakhoth'' 37a [5:1])</ref> This has been explained by [[Maimonides]]<ref>[[Maimonides]], ''[[Mishne Torah]]'' (Hil. ''Issurei Bi'ah'' 6:1–5) </ref> to mean that seven days are given to all women during their regular monthly menstrual cycle, known as the days of the menstruate ([[Hebrew]]: ''niddah''), even if her actual period lasted only 3 to 5 days. From the eighth day after the beginning of her period (the ''[[terminus post quem]]'', or the earliest date in which they begin to reckon the case of a ''zavah''), when she should have normally concluded her period, these are days that are known in Hebrew as the days of a running issue ([[Hebrew]]: ''zivah''), and which simply defines a time (from the 8th to the 18th day, for a total of eleven days) that, if the woman had an irregular flow of blood for three consecutive days during this time, she becomes a ''zavah gedolah'' and is capable of defiling whatever she touches, and especially whatever object she happens to be standing upon, lying upon or sitting upon. If blood flows during that short window when it is expected not to, that, then, is an irregular flow.<ref>Rabbi Avram Reisner (2006), [http://www.rabbinicalassembly.org/sites/default/files/public/halakhah/teshuvot/20052010/reisner_niddah.pdf Observing Niddah in Our Day], [[Committee on Jewish Law and Standards]], Rabbinical Assembly, p. 9</ref>
 
=== ''Zavah ketanah'' ===