Beautiful captive woman () is a term used in the Hebrew Bible for a female prisoner of war. affirms the right of an Israelite soldier to have sexual intercourse with and to marry such a prisoner providing he follows the prescribed regulations.
While some modern scholars criticize the law for legitimizing forms of rape or servitude, other modern scholars as well as rabbinic sources argue that it appears intended to minimize the abuse which women would almost inevitably suffer as a result of conquest.
states that Moses said:
The Talmud calls this law a concession to man's evil inclination, using the analogy "Better that Jews eat the meat of animals that were ritually slaughtered just before dying a natural death [an act frowned upon but not outright forbidden] rather than eat the meat of animals not ritually slaughtered at all." That is to say, a soldier's sexual instinct is strong enough that if there were no permitted way to have a sexual relationship with a female captive, he would do so nonetheless.
Although the rabbis saw the Torah's procedure as preferable to unrestricted abuse of captives, they attempted to discourage the Torah's procedure as well. Rabbis referred to following the Torah's procedure, despite its nominal legality, as "a sin which leads to another sin" (aveirah goreret aveirah), and predicted that one who takes such a wife will eventually come to hate her, and a son born of their relationship will be a wayward and rebellious son (, .). As an example of such an unfortunate end, the Talmud states that King David took in marriage a 'beautiful captive woman', from whom were born his son Absalom and daughter Tamar. Similarly, according to some rabbinic interpretations, the details of the law were intended to dissuade the captor from any sexual relationship: for example, cutting the captive's hair and growing her fingernails were interpreted as making her temporarily ugly to dissuade the captor from wanting her.
Later Jewish commentators were divided in their understandings of the details of the law. These interpretations generally assign one of three purposes to the details:
These differences are reflected in their interpretations of some of the law's details:
If, after all has been done, he still desires to take the woman as his wife, he may do so, on condition that she agrees to adopt the Jewish religion and is immersed in a mikveh. If she does not wish to convert to Judaism, she must be sent free and not sold as a slave.
Rabbinic commentaries discuss two possible instances of rape between the soldier and the captive woman: "first intercourse", which would be rape of the woman on the battlefield, and "second intercourse" once the two are married after the sheloshim (30 days of mourning). According to one opinion, "first intercourse" is forbidden, and the couple may only have sex once married. According to the alternative opinion, "first intercourse" is permitted, and the soldier may rape the captive woman a single time during war if he intends to marry her later. The 13th-century Sefer ha-Chinuch summed up the disagreement as follows:
In one analysis, after taking the woman captive, the soldier must wait at least three months before consummating the marriage, as this time is necessary to determine whether she was pregnant from her former husband.
According to the Talmud, the laws apply only to Israelite soldiers, not gentile soldiers; this is a consequence of the ruling that Gentile nations are not authorized to wage wars of conquest.
The law was limited to soldiers in a voluntary war, at a time when the people of Israel dwell in their own land and when the Sanhedrin is in authority. It was only allowed during the time of war and with a captive woman, not with other non-Jewish women. The law applied whether the captive woman was single or married, whether she was a virgin or not, and whether she was objectively beautiful or simply desirable to her captor.
According to the amora Samuel ben Nahman, this rule was only permitted during the first seven years of the conquest of Canaan. Other sources implicitly reject his opinion, by speaking of King David as having performed the laws governing a "beautiful captive woman". Johanan bar Nappaha held that these laws did not apply during the first fourteen years of conquest and division of the land, but only applied afterwards.
Rabbinic Judaism discusses the special case of a kohen (priest), as they are forbidden to marry a convert. Of those who hold that "first intercourse" is permitted in general, all permit it to a kohen. Opinions are divided over whether the priest and captive might marry; Maimonides prohibits marriage.
Harold C. Washington cites as an example of how the Bible condones acts of sexual violence which are committed by Israelites; they were taking advantage of women who, as war captives, had no recourse or means of self defense. Philosopher Jay Newman writes, "The evil inherent in slavery itselfâÂÂsexual or otherwiseâÂÂis not conveyed".
M. I. Rey argues that the passage is an endorsement of sexual slavery and genocidal rape, because the capture of these women is justified on the ground that they are not Hebrew; the women were considered war trophies, and their captors had no qualms which would have prevented them from engaging in acts of sexual violence. However, the biblical text does not specify that the enemy is non-Hebrew, and in fact the Bible describes a number of civil wars between different groupings of Israelites. In most of history, rape of captured women was seen as the inevitable result of war, not limited to ethnic conflicts.
According to scholar Shira Weiss, "the biblical command may have been an attempt to counter the wanton rape of women common during times of war in the Bible... With the acknowledgment that deeply rooted social practices cannot likely be completely eradicated, the Bible attempts to limit them as much as possible". Similarly, Alexander Rofé concludes that âÂÂthis humane ruling reflects a universal concern with limiting the soldiersâ unbridled brutality and demonstrates consideration for the feeling of captives".
Some scholars assert that the purpose of the law was to provide a mechanism by which an Israelite man could marry a woman when the normal mechanism - negotiation with the woman's guardian - was impossible as the guardian had been killed.