Let My People Know

"Every new cycle of study reveals new aspects of the Torah"

 

Can Torah study ever be finished? 

"Siyyum," the ritual done when one finishes learning a tractate of Talmud, emphasizes that every such ending is not a real end but only a time out. 

The siyyum is a full stop at the end of a sentence, but not the end of the utterance.

When the study ends, it also begins.

Not only can one — as the text recited at the siyyum says — begin and finish studying other books or tractates, the siyyum is no more than a temporary break in the process of studying that very same tractate itself. 

In fact, the most important words in the siyyum text are “hadran alakh” which literally mean, “we shall come back to you” — namely, a promise to study this tractate again.

Therefore, we are called upon to repeat the study of the same tractate over and over again. 

It is not that we are asked to learn it by heart, for even if we know very well every word and letter, we are still asked to study it again.

Some of the greatest Jewish scholars, among them the Vilna Gaon (Rabbi Eliyahu son of Shlomo Zalman Kremer of Vilna, 1720-1797) and the Rogatchover (Rabbi Yosef Rozin of Dvinsk, 1958-1936), had eidetic memory; they retained each and every word and sentence they ever studied — and yet they never ceased to study.

These scholars went over the same books time and time again, because every new cycle of study reveals new aspects of the Torah, facets that can be revealed only in the second, or 100th, time.

–Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz
 
From an essay "We Will Come Back to You," Nov. 3, 2009, by Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz