WHEN YOU GO OUT…

WHEN YOU GO OUT

 

This week’s Torah reading in Deuteronomy 21-25 starts with the words Kee Tey-tzey — “When you go out.”

 In the course of the Sedrah we find many different laws, dealing with situations as different as family discipline, punishment of crime, and treatment of animals. Truly a summary of standards for human behavior. Any and all of them are worth discussing.

But this time around, let’s just consider the rest of the first sentence quoted above: “When you go out to war against your enemies…” Notice that nowhere does the Torah say that you must make war, nor does it forbid war. It does not even say “IF you go out to war.” Just “when.” War happens. It is a grim fact of human life. What the Torah does tell us is how we should conduct ourselves in war.

Jewish history and tradition include three categories of warfare: KHovah, Mitzvah, R’shut — Obligatory war, Required war, and Voluntary war. 

The first category occurred just once. It was Joshua’s war to conquer the Land of Israel. The second category consists of wars of self-defense against an attacking enemy, and can be fought against an immediate danger or a distant danger — as in preemptive strikes. As to the third category, the Talmud confines it to the wars David and Solomon waged to expand their kingdoms. In all such military action, the Torah sets up definite rules for who serves and how, including deferments and exemptions. It also sets standards, in this very Sedrah, for the army camp. “Keep a spade with your weapons… cover up your waste.” That’s right, they dug latrines. The camp had to be clean ritually as well as physically, because the Divine spirit accompanied the Jewish fighters.

Here we also learn about treatment of prisoners. A conquering army of Israelites was not released to rape and plunder. In fact, this very section sets up specific rules for how a victorious soldier is to treat a female POW. “If you see among the prisoners a beautiful woman, and you desire her, you can take her for a wife.” Not a concubine. Not a “one-night stand.” A wife. But first you have to give her a month to mourn her parents. That includes shaving off her hair, pairing her fingernails, putting away the fancy clothes in which she was captured, and presumably wearing sackcloth. All of which cannot increase her sex appeal, of course. Then, at the end of the month, the soldier can take possession of her. But after that if he no longer wants her, he must release her. He may not sell her as a slave. “You may not exploit her, because you have humbled her.”

Hardly Attila’s rules of warfare. Or Assad’s.

Our world still does not know how to prevent war. Perhaps we never will. But we can learn some great lessons about wartime conduct from the Torah.

##

 

 

Posted in Baruch Cohon, Israel, Jewish Blogs, Jewish Law, Jewish Traditions, Judaism, Rabbi, Torah | Comments Off on WHEN YOU GO OUT…

SLAVERY AND DEBT CEILINGS

 

Do you like variety in your learning? You get plenty of it in the Sedrah called “R’eyh” — in Deuteronomy chapters 11 thru 16. Here we find subjects like sacrificial worship, idolatry in the family or in a whole city, dietary laws, treatment of the poor, paying tithes, the three pilgrimage festivals, the year of release. Right in the middle of all these various Mitzvos, we get into the rules about debt.

 

Debt ceilings are nothing new. Here we find directions on what to do if you reach your debt ceiling and still need money. Biblical Israel had an out that we could use today, however. Every seven years came the Sabbatical year — the year of release called “Sh’mitah” — when debts were cancelled.

 

Still someone could reach his debt ceiling in year 1 or 2. No way to survive until year 7. In that case he could become an eved ivri — a Jewish slave. He could sell himself into indentured servitude to pay off his debt. Or as the Talmud explains, the court could sell him to pay back money he stole. Maximum time his new owner could keep him? Six years. After that, as we read in Deut.15:13, “you must send him out free.” Not just send him out, but “do not send him away empty-handed. Provide for him from your flock, your threshing-floor and your wine-press wherewith G-d blessed you. And remember that you were a slave in the land of Egypt.”

 

Slavery certainly did not end with the Exodus. Not in Israel and not in many other societies. Worldwide exploitation of fellow humans lasted well into modern times, and indeed exists today. Usually the slaves were taken from other populations. For example, Arab slave traders for the last milennium or more got their victims by raids on Sub-Saharan Africa, the Caucasus, and Central Asia. Eastern Europe too. In fact the name Slavs for Eastern European tribesmen is given as the origin of the word “slave.” In the 19th century alone an estimated 11-18 million black Africans were taken across the Red Sea, the Indian Ocean or the Sahara desert by Arab slave traders. Another 9-12 million got sent to America. Reportedly, black slaves still serve some Saudi Arabian masters.

 

Greek and Roman “civilizations” practiced slavery on a large scale too. Aristotle accepted the theory of “natural slavery” — that some people are slaves by nature. Imperial Rome, of course, enslaved whole populations.

 

But back to the eved ivri of Deuteronomy. This was not an enemy soldier taken prisoner in war, nor an eved canaani to whom different rules applied. This was a man — or a woman — who had all the rights and responsibilities of every member of every tribe of Israel.

 

How could one Jew take advantage of another Jew this way? Strange and repugnant as the procedure seems to us today, ancient Israel was not the only society that enslaved its own people. Russia had 4 centuries of slavery of its own people, ethnic Russians whom Czar Ivan III in 1438 bound to their owners by law. Only in the 18th century were these slaves converted to serfs. No great improvement. They were still peasants and house servants tied to the estate.

 

By the end of the 20th century, some 27 million people were still in slavery throughout the world. The average price of a slave globally = $340.

That is how slaves in other cultures left their masters — they got a new master. No provisions from anyone’s flock or threshing-floor or wine-press.

 

What our Sedrah does also tell us, however, is that some indentured servants got to like their dependent life style. “If he says to you: ‘I will not go away from you,’ because he loves you and your house and he has it good there. Then take him to the doorpost and run an awl through his ear and into the door, and he will be your permanent servant.” Clearly the Torah associates shame with voluntary servitude. Rabban Yohanan ben Zakkai commented on this directive: “The ear that heard the Divine words, ‘for the people of Israel are My servants,’ and yet preferred a human master, let that ear be drilled.” In other words, value your freedom!

 

Posted in Baruch Cohon, Jerusalem, Jewish, Jewish Blogs, Jewish Law, Jewish Traditions, Judaism, Rabbi, Torah | Comments Off on SLAVERY AND DEBT CEILINGS

HEEL AND TOE

EYKEV

 

The third Torah reading in the book of Deuteronomy is called EYKEV — meaning a result. As a result of listening to the commandments and following them, we can expect to accomplish good things in our lives. If we don’t listen and therefore don’t carry out the Divine will, we will suffer the consequences. Cause and effect. Interestingly enough EYKEV also means heel. The imagery is unique: just as surely as the heel follows the toe, so results follow our actions.

This is the message that Moses gives the people during his farewell speeches at the end of his life.

Of course Moses was not the only leader who gave the people such messages. Just a few weeks ago in the Haftorah of Balak, we read a message from the prophet Micah: “It has been told you, man, what is good and what G-d wants from you: to do justice, to love mercy and to walk humbly with your G-d.”

Personally this is a very special week for me, because I have Yortzite this week. My father of blessed memory died on Shabos Eykev. He was a rabbi and a teacher of rabbis. The last sermon I ever heard him deliver was based on both of these texts. In fact he contrasted them. Here, in effect, was his message:

Micah stresses three ideals: justice, mercy, humility. These make the character of a religious human being.

Moses also stresses three ideals. Look at Chapter 10, verse 12: “Now, Israel,” says Moses, “what does G-d ask of you? L’YIR’OH, to fear the Lord your G-d, L’AHAVAH to love Him, V’LAAVOD, and to serve Him with all your heart and soul.”

The parallels are not hard to draw. The Biblical concept of “fear of G-d” implies reverence. Not fright but supreme respect. If we truly revere G-d we pattern our lives after the qualities we associate with Him. Justice is one primary attribute of Divinity, the MIDAS HA-DIN, the quality of justice that we recall with such drama on Yom Kippur. So reverence for G-d — Moses’ first ideal — leads to doing justice, which is Micah’s first ideal as well.

Love of G-d, Moses’ second ideal, is actualized in our lives by love of our fellow creatures. We believe that we all carry the Divine image in us. That image includes the MIDAS HA-RAHAMIM — the quality of mercy. Therefore we are taught to treat each other with kindness. Micah’s second ideal — loving mercy — is the clear result.

And serving G-d with total sincerity implies a type of attitude and a type of conduct: AVODAH is one of those Hebrew words that has two meanings — Work, and Worship. To worship G-d with sincerity requires an attitude of humility. You cannot pray honestly unless you feel a good deal less important than the Divinity you pray to. And you can’t strive to do better and better work unless you feel that you yourself are less than perfect. In other words you need to have some humility. When Micah said “walk humbly with your G-d” he meant exactly that.

So Moses and Micah really gave us parallel messages, didn’t they? Not quite.

My father went on to point out the difference between them.

In his very next sentence Moses says LISHMOR ES MITZVOS HASHEM. “Keep G-d’s Mitzvos!” That is the tool he gave us at Mount Sinai, the tool to carry out and accomplish these ideals.

Micah said nothing about Mitzvos. For a very good reason too. Micah was addressing the whole human race: ADAM — Mankind. Moses was addressing YISROEL — the Jewish people. For us, Mitzva is the key that unlocks the door of a better life.

Mitzva — commandment — is the Jewish message. But can Moses — even speaking in G-d’s name — command fear, love, worship? Of course not. All he can say is “this is what G-d wants from you.” As the Gemara Brachot puts it, “Everything is in the hands of Heaven except the fear of Heaven.” It’s up to us to accomplish our Mitzvos. The message of Eykev tells us that when we do, our personal growth will follow as the heel follows the toe.

KEN Y’HEE RATZON — So may it be.

 

Posted in Baruch Cohon, Jewish, Jewish Blogs, Jewish Law, Jewish Traditions, Judaism, Rabbi, Torah | Comments Off on HEEL AND TOE

WHO IS A GREAT NATION?

Once on an airplane I was sitting next to a man from Belgium, and we did our best to converse despite some linguistic problems. Looking at my yarmulke, he determined that I was Jewish, and then he declared:

“The Jews are very smart. You know why?”

“OK. Why?”

“They cover their heads. Keeps the brains warm.”

Well, I was able to control myself and did not laugh. His respect was sincere, for whatever reasons.

Reading Deuteronomy chapter 4, we find some other reasons — arguably far more compelling ones — for respect and admiration from the non-Jewish world. “See,” says Moses, “I taught you rules of conduct that you should observe in the land you are going to possess. Keep them and do them, for they are your wisdom and your understanding in the eyes of all the nations, who will say: Surely this great nation is a wise and understanding people.” Our principles, our “mishpatim” can earn us our neighbors’ respect, IF we use those principles to guide our lives.

And Moses continues: “For who is a great nation that has G-d so close by, like our G-d whenever we call Him?” Prophet or plebeian, Elijah or Tevye, no Jew needs an intermediary to contact the Divine.

“And who is a great nation that has laws and principles as righteous as this Torah that I set before you today?” Who indeed. Laws like “take care of the land and it will nourish you.” Principles like “the righteous of other nations have a place in the World to Come.” Rules of conduct like “you shall have honest weights and measures.”

History’s blows make us acutely aware of the outside world’s hostility. We know about anti-Semitism, prejudice, discrimination, crusades, inquisitions, pogroms, Koranic curses, Holocaust deniers. That is not the whole world.

We can lose sight of the other side of the coin. There is respect out there, even some admiration. It can come from unexpected sources. Leo Tolstoy, Mark Twain, Oskar Schindler — or my Belgian airline passenger. It can also come from an insightful pope, from pro-Israel Evangelists, or from that anonymous Gentile traveller who proclaimed that the human race is one body and the Jews are its head.

Let’s be grateful for the friends we have. We need them all.

##

 

Posted in Baruch Cohon, Jewish, Jewish Blogs, Jewish Law, Jewish Traditions, Rabbi, Torah | Comments Off on WHO IS A GREAT NATION?

CHECK YOUR CALENDAR

Want to know the date of Rosh Hashanah? Check your calendar.

You know, the Jewish calendar. If you use one from your local synagogue, or from Bnai Brith, or like the one I have from Jewish War Veterans, it shows both the Hebrew date and the civil date every day.

This month those two dates are identical. Quite unusual, but — check your calendar — there they are. The first day in the month of Av, Rosh Hodesh, coincides with the first day of August. So every day this month will have the same number on both calendars. All the way to the 30th, but that’s where it ends. August 31st will be the first day of Elul. Because, of course, the Hebrew months follow the cycle of the moon, and therefore last only 29 days, 12 hours and about 45 minutes. No 31-day months in lunar cycles.

Many centuries ago our ancestors adjusted the Hebrew calendar — or “intercolated” it if you will — to reconcile with the solar year by inserting a whole extra month 7 times each 19 years. A Talmudic sage named Shmuel reported that he knew the orbits of the sky as well as he knew the streets of his home town of Nehardea — except for comets (see Gemara B’rachot 58b), and he gets much of the credit for this adjustment. This year of 5771 being one of those leap years, we find Rosh Hashana coming out at the very end of September. But the adjustment also assures us that our calendar will coincide with the seasons. New Year in the fall. Passover in the spring. Etc.

And this year, the 9th day in Av — the fast day Tisha b’Av — falls on the 9th of August. Check your calendar.

Other calendars abound in the world. Just a few examples: the Chinese and Persian New Years both take place in the spring, and of course Chinese New Year celebrations last a week at that time and feature gala parades. The dominant Church and civil calendar of the world is the Gregorian, which replaced the older Julian calendar for technical reasons. But the Eastern Orthodox countries still use the Julian, so their holiday dates differ from the Western Christian holidays by a few days. The Samaritan calendar is also an adjusted lunar calendar like the Hebrew one, but has 11 leap years in 19, so their Passover does not coincide with the traditional Jewish observance. And most of the Muslim world uses a primitive lunar calendar that does not align with the seasons at all.

Interestingly enough, the Hebrew calendar now used by Jews throughout the world provides for the same Torah reading to be read on the same Sabbath everywhere. American visitors to Ethiopia found Jews there whose language they could not understand, and whose living conditions shocked them, but when they took out the book they used for a Torah and read the exact same passage as was scheduled in the American synagogue, they had an instant bond.

Are you Jewish? Check your calendar.

On another level, while we will start year #5772 this fall, we traditionally start counting months in Nisan — in the spring, like the Chinese!

Want to know about particularity and accommodation? Check your calendar.

And remember, this year Rosh Hashana does not come late. September is early. Anyway that’s a couple of months away. Enjoy the rest of the summer.

##

Posted in Baruch Cohon, Jewish, Jewish Blogs, Jewish Law, Jewish Traditions, Judaism, Rabbi, Rosh Hashanah, Talmud | 1 Comment