“Black as a raven” – Rabbi Alexandri bar Hadrin and Rabbi Alexandri Kerova57He was so called because he would serve as a prayer leader and would recite liturgical poems called kerovot (Matnot Kehuna), or simply because he would lead the congregation in coming close [karov] to God. said: Even if all of mankind would come together to whiten one wing of the raven, they would be unable to do so. Likewise, if all mankind would come together to eradicate the yod, which is the smallest of all the letters, they would be unable to do so.
From whom do you learn this? From King Solomon, who, because he sought to eradicate yod from the Torah, his accuser arose. Who accused? Rabbi Yehoshua ben Levi said: It was the yod in the word yarbeh58In Deuteronomy 17:16–17 a king is commanded not to amass [lo yarbeh] horses lest he lead the nation back to Egypt, and not to amass wives lest his heart be led astray.
Without the yod, it would just say, for example, that if one does not amass wives they will not cause his heart to stray, but that would not mean it is prohibited to amass wives. Solomon amassed horses and wives, thinking that he would avoid the pitfalls the verse warns against, but he did not avoid those pitfalls (Sanhedrin 21b). that accused. Rabbi Shimon ben Yoḥai says: The book of Deuteronomy ascended and prostrated itself before the Holy One blessed be He and said before Him: ‘Master of the universe, You wrote in Your Torah that a testament that part of it is null and void, all of it is null and void.
King Solomon seeks to eradicate a yod in the Torah.’ The Holy One blessed be He said to it: ‘Go; Solomon and one hundred like him will be null and void, and the yod in you will never be null and void.’