FORTY LASHES

(Devar Torah on Parashat Ki Tetze, Deuteronomy 21:10 – 25:19 given at Temple Israel on Friday evening 9/16/16)

My late mother used to say, if she or someone else made some minor faux pas, that the offending party should be punished with “forty lashes with a wet noodle.”  I looked that expression up on line and got a reference to Eppie Lederer (aka “Ann Landers”) using the phrase periodically in this way.

It seems to me no coincidence that my mother and Ann Landers were both Jewish because it seems that the expression might come out of rabbinic commentary on this week’s Torah portion.

In Deuteronomy 25: 1-3, from this week’s Torah portion, Parashat Ki Tetze, we learn:

 א כִּֽי־יִהְיֶ֥ה רִיב֙ בֵּ֣ין אֲנָשִׁ֔ים וְנִגְּשׁ֥וּ אֶל־הַמִּשְׁפָּ֖ט וּשְׁפָט֑וּם וְהִצְדִּ֨יקוּ֙ אֶת־הַצַּדִּ֔יק וְהִרְשִׁ֖יעוּ אֶת־הָֽרָשָֽׁע׃ ב וְהָיָ֛ה אִם־בִּ֥ן הַכּ֖וֹת הָֽרָשָׁ֑ע וְהִפִּיל֤וֹ הַשֹּׁפֵט֙ וְהִכָּ֣הוּ לְפָנָ֔יו כְּדֵ֥י רִשְׁעָת֖וֹ בְּמִסְפָּֽר׃ ג אַרְבָּעִ֥ים יַכֶּ֖נּוּ לֹ֣א יֹסִ֑יף פֶּן־יֹסִ֨יף לְהַכֹּת֤וֹ עַל־אֵ֨לֶּה֙ מַכָּ֣ה רַבָּ֔ה וְנִקְלָ֥ה אָחִ֖יךָ לְעֵינֶֽיךָ׃

1 When there is a dispute between people and they go to law, and a decision is rendered declaring the one in the right and the other in the wrong — 2 if the guilty one is to be flogged, the magistrate shall have him lie down and be given lashes in his presence, by count, as his guilt warrants. 3 He may be given up to forty lashes, but not more, lest being flogged further, to excess, your brother be degraded before your eyes.

For us modern readers, it would seem obvious that any sort of corporal punishment coming out of a civil or criminal case would be contrary to our contemporary values.  However, according to Rabbi Melanie Aron in a 2011 dvar torah on this topic, “[i]n ancient Israel there was no long-term imprisonment.  People were held until their case could be heard, but the choices for punishment were fines and lashes, or, in the most extreme cases, the death penalty.” [1]

(And I’ll add here, that the Talmud adds so many evidentiary requirements that it rendered the death penalty virtually theoretical.)

We often hear voices in contemporary society calling for harsh treatment of criminal offenders, for punishing prison conditions and for denial of voting rights to those who have completed their sentences.  All under the general rubric of being “tough on crime.”

However, the Torah – especially as filtered through the lens of the Talmud and later rabbinic tradition --- argues instead for compassion.  This idea jumps out at us in Deuteronomy 25:3, where the convict who is subject to flogging is pointedly referred to as “"אחיך/”achikha”/ “your brother.”  Rashi[2], citing the earlier rabbinic commentary Sifrei, comments on this verse: “All day long he has been the ‘guilty one’ but now that his flogging is over, he is once again ‘your brother.’” 

Or to put it into contemporary terms, once a criminal has paid his or her debt to society, we should work to integrate them back into society recognizing them as a fellow citizen.  (Which is why, for example, I’ve never been able to understand how it could possibly be justified to deny voting rights to ex-felons, as some states continue to do, even if such denial of voting rights has some historical precedent in common and civil law systems that predate the birth of the United States.)[3]

As for the number forty in the above passage, Nachmanides[4] says that this refers to the forty days that Moses was on Mt. Sinai receiving the Torah.  Rejecting Torah, says Nachmanides, should be worthy of death, but instead, the Torah calls for forty lashes because (according to the understanding of the early rabbis) forty days was the amount of time it took after conception for a fetus to be formed in the womb.

Actually, the Talmud rules that the maximum number of lashes should be no more than 39, lest there be a miscount and one exceeds 40 lashes.

And, moreover, the guilty party is to be examined carefully by the judge so that, if it looks like he or she might not be able to withstand 39 lashes, then fewer lashes, as low as just 3 lashes, can be given.

And, moreover, according to the Talmud’s tractate on lashes (Masechet Makkot 23a), those appointed to administer the lashes should be weak in body but strong in understanding. 

Basically, the idea is that the administration of justice should never cause us to reject the humanity of the guilty party.

I think this idea can be extended to our personal relationships, which I needn’t remind you should never include physical violence or the threat of physical violence. 

Rather, I think a contemporary lesson that we can draw from this passage in the Torah is that we should always remember that anyone against whom we may have a grievance is still a human being --- still, in the terminology of the Torah, “achikha” – “your brother” (or your sister).

The traditional blessing that precedes the bedtime recitation of the Shema includes the declaration: I hereby forgive anyone who has angered or provoked me or sinned against me, physically or financially or by failing to give me due respect, or in any other matter relating to me, involuntarily or willingly, inadvertently or deliberately, whether in word or deed […] – may no person be punished on my account.”[5]

As we approach the Yamim Nora’im/ The Days of Awe – may we be able to find it in our hearts to forgive others, and may our own transgressions be purged with no more pain that that which would be caused by forty lashes with a wet noodle.

Shabbat shalom.

© Rabbi David Steinberg (Elul 5776/ September 2016)

 

[1] http://www.reformjudaism.org/learning/torah-study/ki-teitzei/respecting-criminal

[2] https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/biography/rashi.html

[3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Felony_disenfranchisement

[4] https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/biography/Nachmanides.html

[5] See http://www.chabad.org/library/article_cdo/aid/732811/jewish/Before-Retiring-at-Night-10th-Step.htm

 

Posted on September 19, 2016 .

WORDS MATTER

(Devar Torah on Parashat Devarim given August 12, 2016)

This week we begin our annual traversal through Sefer Devarim/ the Book of Deuteronomy.    The so-called “English” title of the book, “Deuteronomy” comes from the Greek and means “Second Law.”  In Jewish tradition as well, one of the traditional nicknames for the book is “Mishneh Torah” which can be translated as “Second Law” or, alternatively, as  “Repetition of the Law.”

As for the Hebrew title, “Devarim” (דברים), like all other books of the Torah, the Hebrew name comes from the first unique word in the text.  Since the opening words are – “Eyleh ha-devarim asher diber Moshe el kawl yisrael”/ “These are the words which Moses spoke to all Israel”/ אֵלֶּה הַדְּבָרִים אֲשֶׁר דִּבֶּר מֹשֶׁה אֶל-כָּל-יִשְׂרָאֵל, the book came to be known as “Sefer Devarim”/ “The Book of Words”.    

But there’s another level to the Hebrew here. 

In Hebrew, the word “devarim” means not just “words” but also “things” or “matters”.  “Devarim” are substantive.  “Devarim” are weighty.  “Devarim” are significant.

Spoken words can give rise to hurt or embarrassment, and this is no light matter.  The Talmud teaches:  “If anyone makes his friend’s face turn white [from embarrassment] in public, it is as if he spilled blood.“ (Bava Metzia 58b). 

I often advise people that sarcasm goes over my head.  To a certain extent, I really am just dense about sarcasm.  But to a certain extent I also cultivate this density in myself.  “Devarim” are “words” but they are not “just” words.  “Devarim” are substantive “things” that matter, and, in my own life, I try not to opt in to conversation that is laced with sarcasm.

Over recent days and weeks and months, our country has been subjected to the devarim of a particular politician that are full of Islamophobia, incitement to violence, demagoguery and insult.  And in a number of these incidents, this politician has later been compelled to backtrack from such talk, claiming that the words in question were meant jokingly or sarcastically.

Our Jewish tradition doesn’t condemn joking.  Indeed, just the opposite.  A story in the Talmud  (Ta’anit 22a) recounts Elijah the Prophet visiting a marketplace and speaking with a certain Rabbi Beroka, when Elijah sees two men passing by.  Elijah remarks:

“These two have a share in the world to come! Rabbi Beroka then approached and asked them, What is your occupation? They replied, ‘We are jesters, when we see people depressed we cheer them up; furthermore when we see two people quarreling we strive hard to make peace between them.’”

But it’s no joke to encourage violence against one’s political opponents. And it’s no joke to accuse an elected leader of having been the “founder” of a terrorist organization.  And it doesn’t solve the problem to later on just dismiss such words as sarcasm or joking.

Such political discourse is unworthy of our democracy.

Debate and disputation is good.  And we hope and pray that our national politics might be elevated to the level of “makhlekot leshem shamayim” (“arguments for the sake of Heaven”[1]). 

Or, to put it in more secular terminology:  Let’s debate over the issues, using words as tools for communication and not as weapons for denigration or incitement.

It may seem a lot to ask to try to elevate our discourse in a world in which insults and hate speech are all too common. 

But, as with so many aspirations in life, half the battle is first to envision the world we want to create.

In this respect, I was moved by a commentary I came across this week concerning this week’s Torah portion. 

The opening verse of the Book of Deuteronomy, after starting out with the statement: – – “Eyleh ha-devarim asher diber Moshe el kawl yisrael”/ “These are the words which Moses spoke to all Israel”/ אֵלֶּה הַדְּבָרִים אֲשֶׁר דִּבֶּר מֹשֶׁה אֶל-כָּל-יִשְׂרָאֵל --- continues with the words:  “be’ever hayarden”   (בעבר הירדן), which means “on the other side of the Jordan.”

So we have:  “These are the words which Moses spoke to all Israel on the other side of the Jordan…”

But which side of the Jordan River is “the other side” – “be’ever ha-yarden?”

We’ve already learned, from the end of the Book of Numbers , that the Israelites at this point are encamped “b’arvot Moav”/ “on the steppes of Moab.” (Num. 36:13).  And at Deuteronomy 1:5, it’s explicitly reiterated that Moses is speaking “be’ever hayarden b’eretz moav”/ “on the other side of the Jordan, in the land of Moab.”

Chaim Potok’s commentary on the phrase “on the other side of the Jordan” in the Etz Hayyim chumash points out that “Although Moses never crossed over to the western side of the Jordan, this is written from the point of view of one already in the Land [of Israel].”[2]

The late Lubavitcher Rebbe Menachem Shneerson waxes more poetically on this.  He teaches that this phrase “be'ever hayarden” / “on the other side of the Jordan” means that they already saw themselves as being in the promised land. Their current physical location, the land of Moav could be thought of as being “on the other side” – which is to say that, in a spiritual or psychological sense, they were already in the land of Israel – and their present physical location in Moav was thus “on the other side of the Jordan.” 

Or, to put it in Rabbi Shneerson’s words:  “The message for us is that […] we should already be so focused on our final destination that it is as if we were already living in it.  […] The first prerequisite of redemption is the awareness that we belong in the redemptive state, and that the present preceding state of exile is precisely that, exile, not home.”  [3]

Let those who aspire to leadership, and all of us as well, imagine ourselves to be in a world of constructive dialogue, brotherhood and sisterhood, justice and compassion --- and we will be well on our way to making it a reality.

Shabbat shalom.

 

[1] See Pirke Avot 5:17 (“Any dispute that is for the sake of Heaven is destined to endure; one that is not for the sake of Heaven is not destined to endure [i.e., to be productive]. Which is a dispute that is for the sake of Heaven? The dispute(s) between Hillel and Shamai. Which is a dispute that is not for the sake of Heaven? The dispute of Korach and all his company.”)

[2] https://jps.org/books/etz-hayim/ (p. 981)

[3] http://www.chabad.org/parshah/article_cdo/aid/2267652/jewish/Chassidic-Insights.htm

Posted on August 16, 2016 .

HOW GOOD

Thoughts on Parashat Balak (Numbers 22:2 - 25:9)  – after Falcon Heights, Baton Rouge, Dallas and Nice.

When we enter a synagogue it is traditional to recite this verse from this week’s Torah portion, Parashat Balak:

 מַה-טֹּבוּ אֹהָלֶיךָ, יַעֲקֹב; מִשְׁכְּנֹתֶיךָ, יִשְׂרָאֵל

How good your tents are, O Jacob, your dwellings, O Israel! (Num. 24:5)

In the context of the Torah portion, this is the view of Bilam, the outsider, as he stands on a hill overlooking the peaceful Israelite encampment.

The medieval commentator Rashi suggests that what so impresses Bilam about the encampment below him is that the tents are set up on an angle from one another. Thus one family, in its own tent, could not see directly into the neighboring family’s tent.

In effect this is the requisite counterbalance to the theme of another Biblical verse that we often sing at the start of our synagogue worship from Psalm 133 ---“Hiney Mah Tov umah na’im shevet achim gam yachad”/ “How good and pleasant it is to dwell together as brothers and sisters.”

We live in community with one another – yet at the same time we give each other enough space so that we don’t end up oppressing one another.  And the balance of these qualities – the balance between “Mah Tovu Ohalekha Ya’akov” and “Hiney Mah Tov umah na’im shevet achim gam yachad” --  gives us harmony, well-being, shalom.

Parashat Balak takes its name from the evil King Balak of Moab, who hires Bilam to curse the Israelites.  Yet Bilam, his eyes open to the reality before him, instead blesses the Israelites.

And, after this scenario has been repeated several times, at Numbers 24:25 we come to what might reasonably be expected to be the conclusion of the parasha, when the Torah reports:

“Bilam rose and went and returned to his place, and Balak, too, went on his way.”

This is the world I’m sure we’d all like to see.  A world of communal friendship balanced with individual autonomy, where we care about one another but also where we “live and let live,” giving each other ample breathing space.

And yet, sadly, we would all have to be blind and deaf not to acknowledge that these recent days, weeks and months have also had their share of violence and terror totally inconsistent with the visions of “Mah Tovu ohalekha”  or “Hiney Mah Tov u mah na’im”.

Our world today – with fatal acts of police brutality against African-Americans in some localities, with targeted murder of police officers in others, with terrorist attacks by Islamist fanatics here and there, and with prejudicial animosity against peace-loving Muslims there and here --- Our world today can also be seen like the world described at the end of our Torah portion.

For after Bilam and Balak part ways at the end of Numbers chapter 24, a different scene emerges in Numbers chapter 25.  Those Israelites who had been so harmoniously dwelling together have now turned to apostasy ---- and religious zealots within their midst now engage in murder of the infidels No more “Mah Tovu Ohalekha, Yisrael”.  Instead we have a plague in which 24000 souls are lost. 

Which of these two versions of reality are preferable to us? If we read the Torah alone, we might get the impression that it’s the latter vision.  The murders are committed by the leaders of the Israelites in response to Moses’ command in response to what Moses understands to be God’s will.

Extremists of all religious traditions – be they Jewish, Christian, Muslim, Hindu, Buddhist or otherwise --- and extremists of all secular political schools – be they capitalist or collectivist --- might embrace the sort of zealotry that the Torah at first glance seems to embrace ---

The sort of zealotry that prompts Pinchas, the son of the High Priest, to skewer an interfaith couple with a single thrust of his spear at the end of our Torah portion.  Indeed, at the start of next week’s parasha, God rewards Pinchas with “brit kehunah olam tachat asher kiney leylohav” --- “the eternal covenant of the priesthood because of his zealotry for his God.” (Num. 25:13)

However, it has been Jewish tradition for the past two thousand years that the weekly Torah portion is accompanied by a “haftarah” --- a reading from the prophetic books of the bible which responds to themes in the Torah portion.

Haftarat Balak is from the Book of Micah, and Micah provides a much-needed counterpoint to the account of Pinchas’s zealotry.

He hearkens back to the language of that other vision of society earlier in our Torah portion, when Bilam had declared:  “MAH TOVU OHALEKHA” / “How fair are your tents!”

Micah in the Haftarah (6:8) echoes back:

  הִגִּיד לְךָ אָדָם, מַה-טּוֹב; וּמָה-יְהוָה דּוֹרֵשׁ מִמְּךָ, כִּי אִם-עֲשׂוֹת מִשְׁפָּט וְאַהֲבַת חֶסֶד, וְהַצְנֵעַ לֶכֶת, עִם-אֱלֹהֶיךָ. 

It has been told to you, O Mortal, what is good, and what does the Eternal seek from you: only to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with your God. 

Justice must be tempered by mercy.

Zealotry must be tempered by humility.

And cynicism must be tempered by hope.

Shabbat shalom.

© Rabbi David Steinberg (July 15, 2016/ 10 Tammuz 5776)

 

Posted on July 15, 2016 .

LOOK WHO'S BACK

Dvar Torah for Shabbat Vayikra/ Shabbat Zachor 5776/2016

(Leviticus 1:1 - 5:23; Deuteronomy 27: 17-19)

I delivered this Dvar Torah at Temple Israel on Friday evening 3/18/16, a couple of days before the start of the annual policy meeting of the American-Israel Public Affairs Committee in Washington, D.C.

  מַה-גָּדְלוּ מַעֲשֶׂיךָ יְהוָה;    מְאֹד, עָמְקוּ מַחְשְׁבֹתֶיךָ.

"How great are your works, Adonai! How profound your designs!" (Psalms 92:9)

Those words from Psalm 92, the Psalm for the Sabbath Day, strike a powerful chord within us.  

We surely know that when we’re dealing with questions of faith and spirituality, our words are inadequate to the task.  The mere fact of existence boggles the mind.  The grandeur of the universe, the interconnectedness of all life --- “Mah Gadlu”/ How great is all this!  “Mah Nora”/ “How awesome!

You really can’t put that all into a little box.

You really can’t put that all into a little ritual.

But, our ancestors tried to do this nevertheless.  They were only human.  And we do so as well.  For we too are only human.

I think that’s the sort of mind-space we need to be in as we enter the Book of Leviticus, opening chapters of which comprise this week’s Torah portion.

א וַיִּקְרָא, אֶל-מֹשֶׁה; וַיְדַבֵּר יְהוָה אֵלָיו, מֵאֹהֶל מוֹעֵד לֵאמֹר.  ב דַּבֵּר אֶל-בְּנֵי יִשְׂרָאֵל, וְאָמַרְתָּ אֲלֵהֶם, אָדָם כִּי-יַקְרִיב מִכֶּם קָרְבָּן, לַיהוָה--מִן-הַבְּהֵמָה, מִן-הַבָּקָר וּמִן-הַצֹּאן, תַּקְרִיבוּ, אֶת-קָרְבַּנְכֶם.

 1 The Eternal called to Moses and spoke to him from the Tent of Meeting, saying: 2 Speak to the Israelite people, and say to them: When an individual from among you presents an animal offering to the Eternal, their offering shall be from the herd or from the flock..

The remainder of the first chapter of Leviticus talks in particular about the details of a particular category of offering called in Hebrew “olah” and includes a number of ritual specifications.  But the defining detail is found in verse 13 of the chapter:

וְהִקְרִיב הַכֹּהֵן אֶת-הַכֹּל, וְהִקְטִיר הַמִּזְבֵּחָה--עֹלָה הוּא אִשֵּׁה רֵיחַ נִיחֹחַ, לַיהוָה.

The priest shall offer up the entirety of the animal , turning it into smokeon the altar. It is a “burnt offering” (Hebrew: “olah”), an offering by fire, of pleasing odor to the Eternal.

The early Greek translation of the Bible known as the Septuagint translated “olah” as “Holocasten”.

The website “The Free Dictionary” notes further:

Totality of destruction has been central to the meaning of holocaust since it first appeared in Middle English in the 1300s, used in reference to the biblical sacrifice in which a male animal was wholly burnt on the altar in worship of God. Holocaust comes from Greek holokauston, "that which is completely burnt," which was a translation of Hebrew 'ōlâ (literally "that which goes up," that is, in smoke). In this sense of "burnt sacrifice," holocaust is still used in some versions of the Bible.[1]

Actually, nowadays you’d have to search quite a bit to find any contemporary English Bibles or Torah commentaries to find “olah” translated as “holocaust.”  The word “Holocaust” is so explicitly associated in our minds with the Nazi’s genocide against our people during World War that it would be jarring to continue to use it as a translation for olah in the Book of Leviticus, even if it was good enough for the Septuagint and some early English versions circa 1600 or earlier. The Jewish Publication Society translation used in our Plaut Torah commentary translates “Olah” as “Burnt Offering”.

Indeed, many contemporary Jews prefer not to use the term “Holocaust” to refer to the Nazi genocide of the Jews of Europe because of that early connection of the term with the olah offering described in Leviticus 1.  The preferred term is “Sho’ah” a Hebrew term meaning “catastrophe.”  For the genocide of one third of the world’s Jews less than a century ago was no pious offering to express our awe of God and our desire to be closer to God. Rather, it was a catastrophe for which our response must be: “Never Again!”

******************

This Shabbat of Parashat Vayikra (the Sabbath of the opening portion of Sefer Vaykra/ The Book of Leviticus) is also a special Shabbat on the Jewish calendar known as Shabbat Zachor.

Shabbat Zachor gets its name from the first word of the additional reading that we do on a second Torah scroll tomorrow morning.  From Deuteronomy chapter 25, the reading begins “Zachor et asher asah lekha Amalek!”  (“Remember what Amalek did to you!”).  We include this reading each year on the Sabbath immediately preceding Purim because tradition says that Amalek was an ancestor of Haman – both genealogically as well as in his evil nature.

The Maftir passage from Deuteronomy 25 concludes with the admonition “Timcheh et zecher Amalek mitachat hashamayim – lo tishkach”  (“You shall blot out the memory of Amalek from heaven – do not forget!”.)     

It can seem paradoxical to say --- on the one hand – Remember what Amalek did to you;  but on the other hand – blot out the memory of Amalek….

But I think the true sense of the passage is that we are charged with blotting out all manifestations of Amalek-like behavior in our world.

Genocide is certainly the epitome of Amalek-like behavior. And, indeed, Hitler, yimach shemo(“may his name be wiped out”), has often been compared to Amalek.  But the terrible truth is that there have indeed been new Amalek’s in the decades since the Shoah -- most prominently in Cambodia in the 1970’s and in Rwanda in the 1990’s.  

This week, the Islamic State, otherwise known as ISIS or ISIL or Da’esh, was officially designated by the United States government as a perpetrator of genocide.

As the New York Times reported yesterday:

Secretary of State John Kerry declared on Thursday that the Islamic State is committing genocide against Christians, Yazidis and Shiite Muslims who have fallen under its control in Syria and Iraq.  The militants, who have also targeted Kurds and other Sunni Muslims, have tried to slaughter whole communities, enslaved captive women and girls for sex, and sought to erase thousands of years of cultural heritage by destroying churches, monasteries and ancient monuments, Mr. Kerry said. The Islamic State’s “entire worldview is based on eliminating those who do not subscribe to its perverse ideology,” he said.[2]

This action by our government is an important step, even if it’s largely symbolic.  A clear line connects the deeds of Amalek to the deeds of ISIS.

But there is also another important teaching we get from the Shabbat Zachor maftir.  Specifically, we get this teaching from the Torah’s description of the condition of our people when Amalek attacked us:

אֲשֶׁר קָרְךָ בַּדֶּרֶךְ, וַיְזַנֵּב בְּךָ כָּל-הַנֶּחֱשָׁלִים אַחֲרֶיךָ--וְאַתָּה, עָיֵף וְיָגֵעַ

“how, he surprised you on the march, when you were famished and weary, and cut down all the stragglers in your rear.” (Deut. 25:18)

Two key translation points here:  First, the Hebrew word “karkha” is translated above as “he surprised you” but the word “kar” also means ”cool” or“cold” in Hebrew.  And Rashi notes that one of the possible interpretations of “asher karcha” is that the Amalekites “cooled” us.  

For Rashi, what this meant is that the attack by Amalek made our people seem more vulnerable to additional, future attacks by other potential enemies.

However, to my mind (and I’m sure I’m not the first to suggest this interpretation), Rashi’s linguistic analysis instead leads me to the interpretation that Amalek made us “cold,” “insensitive”, “unfeeling” towards the “necheshalim” (translated above as “stragglers”) among us.   

(Many commentators and scholars see the Hebrew word “necheshalim” as synonymous with its anagram “nechelashim”  -- meaning enfeebled or stumbling.)

In other words, if we hadn’t been “cold” towards the “enfeebled” among us, Amalek would not have been able to cut them down.

And this brings me to Donald Trump.

Mr. Trump is scheduled to speak Monday evening in Washington, D.C. at the annual convention of AIPAC – the American Israel Public Affairs Committee.

AIPAC considers itself to be a non-partisan organization whose mission is [and I quote here from their website]

“to strengthen, protect and promote the U.S.-Israel relationship in ways that enhance the security of the United States and Israel.”[3]

To that end, they routinely invite all of the major party’s presidential candidates to speak.  Hillary Clinton, Ted Cruz, John Kasich and Donald Trump are all scheduled to speak next week.  Bernie Sanders was invited but declined the invitation. (AIPAC didn't give him the opportunity to speak by videocast so he ended up giving the speech he would have given to AIPAC in Salt Lake City where he was campaigning in advance of the March 22 Utah primary)

In recent days, both the Reconstructionist movement and the Reform movement have gone on record with their concerns about Mr. Trump.

The Reform movement, in a joint press release with the Central Conference of American Rabbis states:

As a religious movement, we do not endorse or oppose any candidates – and we do not do so now. We have often listened to and, more importantly, engaged with candidates and officeholders whose views sharply differ from our own; such interactions are the essence of our political system. But Mr. Trump is not simply another candidate. In his words and actions, he makes clear that he is engaging in a new form of political discourse, and so the response to his candidacy demands a new approach, as well. The Reform Movement and our leaders will engage with Mr. Trump at the AIPAC Policy Conference in a way that affirms our nation's democracy and our most cherished Jewish values. We will find an appropriate and powerful way to make our voices heard.

And the Reconstructionist movement statement says:

The leadership of the Jewish Reconstructionist movement urges the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) to rescind its invitation to Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump to speak at its annual gathering next week. At a minimum, we call on AIPAC to clearly affirm that Muslims are welcome in the United States and to condemn all racist statements. The AIPAC gathering, which is the largest annual gathering of American Jews, should not be a platform for espousing hateful rhetoric and racist policies.
 
We understand that AIPAC invited all presidential candidates and that an invitation is not an endorsement. However, when the values a candidate espouses are inimical to both the lessons of Jewish history and our Jewish ethical values, we must avoid any misunderstanding. This invitation confers an unwarranted legitimacy on Donald Trump’s positions, which include the outright banning of all Muslims from entering the United States.

I know a number of rabbinic colleagues who will be attending the AIPAC meeting next week.

Apparently, some are planning to walk out when Trump begins speaking, others intend to hear what he has to say, others plan to protest outside the venue.

My sister even texted me from Florida today asking me --- what do you think about all this and I texted her back saying funny you should mention that because I’m in the middle of writing a dvar torah on that very topic!

So, here’s my two shekels:

Trump is not Hitler.

The brutal murderers who call themselves the Islamic State, as Secretary of State Kerry affirmed this week, are the ones who are the perpetrators of genocide.

As such, I’d say that ISIS is a much more direct analog to Hitler.

But, Donald Trump still has something in common with Amalek – whom on this Shabbat we are commanded to remember and whose memory on this Shabbat we are commanded to blot out.

ISIS is a group of murderous terrorists.  But Trump’s lumping together of them with the hundreds of millions of peace-loving Muslims of the world is racist, dangerous to our society, and inimical to Jewish values.  Indeed, the refugees fleeing war-torn Syria and the surrounding region are for the most part analogous to “hanecheshalim”  -- the enfeebled stragglers who were the direct victims of Amalek.  And Trump, like Amalek, seeks to make us “kar”/ “cold” – “unfeeling” and “unsympathetic” to them.

Let Trump speak.  But let AIPAC and all of us make our arguments in response.

Shabbat shalom.

(c) Rabbi David Steinberg 5776/2016      

[1] http://www.thefreedictionary.com/holocaust

[2] http://www.nytimes.com/2016/03/18/world/middleeast/citing-atrocities-john-kerry-calls-isis-actions-genocide.html?_r=0

[3] http://www.aipac.org/en/about/mission

Originally posted on March 23rd, 2016

Posted on April 13, 2016 .

DVAR TORAH FOR TEMPLE ISRAEL ANNUAL MEETING DEC. 13th 2015

Originally posted Tuesday, December 15th, 2015

This week’s Torah portion is Vayigash (Genesis 44:18 – 47:27), in which the story of Joseph and his brothers reaches its climax.  It starts out with Judah pleading to Joseph on behalf of their youngest brother Benjamin.  This heartfelt plea is the final straw that leads Joseph to reveal who he is to his brothers and that leads to their reconciliation. 

After this, Pharaoh urges Joseph to encourage his whole family to settle in Egypt, where food supplies are plentiful in the midst of worldwide famine.  And the entire family does indeed settle in Egypt, unaware that this safe haven will later become a place in which they will be enslaved.

For those of us whose Jewish ancestors came to this country from Europe,  America was seen as the “Goldene Medina”  --- The Golden Land --- a land that promised economic opportunity and freedom from oppression. But still it was, and always has been a complicated balance.  How can we best adapt our Jewish traditions to a country in which we are a small minority so that we can be accepted as full members of society?

That was probably the most critical question two or three generations ago.

In more recent times, the more critical question for American Jews has been how we can retain our distinct religious and cultural identity when we are so successfully assimilated into American society that many of us have lost the sense of Jewishness that can only come from Jewish education and from having immersive experiences of Jewish life and practice.

The Passover Haggadah recounts that it was in Egypt that the extended family of Jacob became the nation of Israel, in part because they dwelt apart and they didn’t change their names. 

In contemporary times we recognize that identity is a not a simple either-or scenario.  Rather, we have multiple identities within each of us.  Identities related to religion, to gender identity, to sexual orientation, to ethnicity, to race, to socioeconomic status, to political philosophies, to occupation, to physical and mental health.

Our Temple is at one level a place for the transmission, cultivation and celebration of Jewish tradition.  Our active involvement in it and our support of it is critical to Jewish life in our region.

And our Temple is also the sum of its people, with all of our diverse backgrounds, outlooks, experiences and aspirations.  And we know that when we come together for prayer, study, fellowship and social action, we are more than the sum of our parts.  When we unite as a kehilah kedoshah/ a holy congregation --- we experience the fulfillment of God’s commandment in Exodus 25:8--  וְעָ֥שׂוּ לִ֖י מִקְדָּ֑שׁ וְשָֽׁכַנְתִּ֖י בְּתוֹכָֽם/ “ve’asu li mikdash veshachanti betocham”  (“They shall make for me a sanctuary that I might dwell among them.”)

In addition to taking care of the official business required by State law and by our bylaws, our Annual Meeting is also a time to express our thanks to one another for all of our ongoing efforts to maintain and deepen our mutual fellowship.  May we, with the help of God who dwells within us and among us, go from strength to strength in the coming year, and may we be a force for peace, justice and compassion in our neighborhood and in our world, motivated and informed by our highest Jewish values.

Posted on April 13, 2016 .

RABBI'S REPORT TO TEMPLE ISRAEL ANNUAL MEETING ON DEC. 13th 2015

Originally posted Tuesday, December 15th, 2015

Dear Temple members,

In this, my sixth year as your rabbi, I continue to feel blessed and privileged to be able to walk with you on our Jewish journeys.  We’ve continued to celebrate simchas together and to support one another in times of loss.  The synagogue is for us an anchor, a home port, a place of connection.  A place for expressing and cultivating our Jewish identities, and a place from which to exercise our efforts on behalf of tikkun olam.  Demographically, our congregation appears to be thriving:  We’ve had five babies welcomed and named in our Temple so far this year --- and one more to go next Shabbat.  And we’ve had three new Jews by choice complete their conversion studies with me this year – and one more to do so in the next few days.  And new and returning member families continue to join us, motivated in no small part by the sense of welcome and caring to which we dedicate ourselves at Temple Israel.

My work (as I suppose is the case for most congregational rabbis) is rewarding and varied.  For the moment I’ll just highlight some of the ways in which I’ve served as a representative of our congregation and as a teacher of Judaism in the Twin Ports community at large in 2015.  Highlights of this involvement include:

  • Leading a “Talkback” session at the College of Saint Scholastica last January following a lecture by Georgetown University Professor Jacques Berlinerblau, a Jewish scholar who spoke on “Why America Needs More Secularists;”
  • Speaking at a College of Saint Scholastica program in March on “Being Jewish in Duluth” which was organized by the student chaplaincy office there.
  • Participating in an interfaith panel discussion at the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Duluth in April for Earth Day.
  • Welcoming the wider community to our Temple home turf for the CHUM Spring Assembly in May and for the Central Duluth Interfaith Thanksgiving Service in November.
  • Speaking at the Oreck-Alpern Interreligious Forum “Religion and Science” group in June.
  • Speaking at the Bell Ringing Vigil at St. Mark’s AME in June in memory of the victims of the Charleston AME Church shooting, and
  • Meeting with the cast of a local theatre production of a Jewish-themed play (“Hardball”) at Douglas County Historical Society in September.

In general, in my work of being (as it says on my RRC diploma) a “Rabbi and Teacher in Israel” I have wonderful and committed partners among you. 

Two of them deserve particular mention: 

Our Youth Education Director Andrea Buck is an inspiration to me because of her profound dedication to our children’s Jewish studies.  We are lucky to have her as part of our professional leadership at Temple Israel.

She is always striving to plant seeds of Torah in our youth that will blossom as they grow older, and she continually works to develop her own Jewish learning and pedagogical skills.  And I’m glad for her support as I involve myself with teaching five teens in confirmation class and two “tweens” in trope class.  Our fine religious and Hebrew school teaching staff members are also indebted to Andrea for her thoughtful supervision and guidance.

And our Temple President, Chris King, is a true partner in my work as well.  She carries the title not only of President but also that of Rabbinic Aide, which means that I can (and do) look to her to assist in liturgical leadership and pastoral coverage in my absence.  Of course, Chris is not the only such Temple member who does so, as our talented cadre of service leaders, musicians, Torah readers, and general “mitzvah-doers” attests.  Thank you to the many skilled individuals who have led services and/or Torah study during this past year when I have been away at conferences or on vacation.  And thank you to Casey Goldberg and Danny Frank for their musical assistance at various Shabbat services throughout the year.  I know that as the congregation prepares for my six-month sabbatical starting a year from now, Chris and others in the congregation will be well-situated to keep the ship running smoothly. 

On a day to day level, it continues to be a pleasure to work with our fine Temple staff, including Andrea Buck, Barb Kritzman, Mona Cheslak, Marko Jukic and Lainie Ribnick. 

And on a Tishri to Tishri level, it has continued to be a joy to work with Mike Grossman in his coordination of the High Holiday services, and a delight to make sweet sacred music with Erin Aldridge and the singers and featured instrumentalists of our Temple Choir.  Some of you may know that Mike is hoping now to transition out of his High Holiday committee leadership role.  He will be a tough act to follow but we are fortunate that Ben Yokel is willing to transition into it as we plan for 5777.

I have no outgoing board members to thank as everyone on the board is staying put for another year! 

Nevertheless, my deep thanks to all of them for their continued service, and especially to Debbie Freedman and Janet Rosen as they begin new terms on the Board. 

Happy Chanukah and may we all be granted good health and success in our worthy endeavors in 2016.

L’shalom,

Rabbi David Steinberg

Posted on April 13, 2016 .

ESAU'S TORAH: A DVAR TORAH FOR NEW MEMBER SHABBAT

Originally posted Thursday, November 19th, 2015

I shared this Dvar Torah at this year's New Member Shabbat service on Friday evening, November 13, 2015/ 2 Kislev 5776.  At the time we were gathered together to celebrate Shabbat and welcome new members of our congregation, we had not yet heard about the terrorist attacks that were taking place virtually simultaneously in Paris. May the memory of the victims of terrorism be for a blessing, and may we overcome the scourge of terrorism by all means necessary.

Thoughts on Toledot(5776/2015)

(Gen. 25:19 – 28:9)

Early on in this week’s Torah portion, Toledot, God addresses Rebecca as she suffers through a rough pregnancy.  God tells her that she will have twins, each of whom will be the leader of a nation.  Esau (also known as “Edom” because of his “Admoni” or “Reddish” complexion) comes out first. And Jacob (or Ya’akov from the Hebrew word “Ekev” meaning “heel”) follows immediately afterward “וְיָדוֹ אֹחֶזֶת בַּעֲקֵב עֵשָׂו” / v'yado ochezet ba’akeiv Eisav (“with his hand grasping Esau’s heel.”) (Gen. 25:26)

The rivalry between the two is thus established right from the start.  As the parasha progresses, we read about Jacob conniving to purchase Esau’s birthright in exchange for a bowl of lentil stew, timing the transaction to take place when Esau is faint with hunger.

And, later on, we read of Jacob tricking their father Isaac into bestowing the blessing of the first born on Jacob rather than Esau. 

***************

I think the most poignant part of Parashat Toledot is the exchange between Isaac and Esau after they both realize that Jacob has stolen the blessing of the first born.

As we read in Genesis 27: 34-38 ---

34 When Esau heard his father's words, he burst into wild and bitter sobbing, and said to his father, "Bless me too, Father!" 35 But [Isaac] answered, "Your brother came with guile and took away your blessing." 36

[Esau then throws in a Hebrew pun ---]

וַיֹּאמֶר הֲכִי קָרָא שְׁמוֹ יַעֲקֹב, וַיַּעְקְבֵנִי זֶה פַעֲמַיִם

Vayomer hachi kara shemo Ya’akov, va-ya’keveini zeh fa'amayim

[Esau] said, "Is he not rightly called Jacob (Ya’akov) that he might supplant me (Vaya’ekeveini) these two times? First he took away my birthright and now he has taken away my blessing!" And [Esau] added, "Have you not saved a blessing for me?" 37 Isaac answered, saying to Esau, "But I have made him master over you: I have given him all his brothers for servants, and sustained him with grain and wine. What, then, can I still do for you, my son?" 38 And Esau said to his father, "Have you but one blessing, Father? Bless me too, Father!" And Esau raised his voice and wept.

הַבְרָכָה אַחַת הִוא-לְךָ אָבִי

Haverachah achat hi lekha avi?!

“HAVE YOU BUT ONE BLESSING, FATHER?!”

For a guy denigrated as an uncouth lout in classical midrash, Esau’s heartfelt challenge teaches us some profound Torah. 

Of course!  Each of us has more than one blessing to give!

And Isaac does indeed hear Esau’s plea and find inspiration in his heart to bless him as well.

The blessing is ambiguous and ambivalent and bodes continued future struggle and heartache.  But it’s a start….

And as for us, we call upon God --- OUR divine parent ---- whose presence is the source of manifold blessings in our lives. 

As the Sim Shalom prayer in the Shacharit Amidah expresses it --- Barcheinu Avinu Kulanu K’echad b’or Panekha --- Bless us, our parent, all of us as one, in the light of your presence.”

Just as Isaac really did have more than one blessing to give, so do we understand that the divine force that fills and rules over the world bestows an infinite multitude of blessings upon us and upon all humanity.

And each one of us is, in turn, a blessing – each in our own individual ways.

Within our congregation, we find those who are adept at prayer, those who are adept at organizing projects, those who are adept at financial management, those who are adept at teaching young and old, those who are adept at giving emotional support, those who are adept at cooking communal meals, those who are adept at fixing boilers, those who are adept at warm embraces, those who are adept at uplifting smiles, those who are adept in leading us in dance.

Each of us is blessed with a unique spirit and soul.

Our life is about how we learn to discern those gifts.

Our life is about how we find the capacity to share those gifts.

Our life is about how we discover how to make ourselves open to receiving the gifts of others that come our way.

This Kehillah Kedoshah/ this sacred community, is a place where we seek to nurture one another in the light of God’s presence, in the light of Jewish tradition and in the light of the blessings that each of us brings.

Tonight especially, we give thanks for the blessing of the presence of the new members of our congregation.

It’s a bit of a shiddach/ a bit of a matchmaking project when newcomers join a synagogue. 

So, I’ll conclude with the opening words of the Jewish wedding liturgy because I believe these words reflect our appreciation for you, our new members:

Beruchim haba’im bshem Adonai.

Beyrachnuchem mibeyt Adonai

Blessed are you who have come here in the name of God.

We bless you from this House of God.

 

Shabbat shalom.

 

(c) Rabbi David Steinberg 5776/2015

Posted on April 13, 2016 .

AFTER THE DEATHS

Originally posted Thursday, September 24th, 2015

(Sermon for Yom Kippur Morning 5776)

September 23, 2015

Our Torah reading this morning from Leviticus 16 begins with an understated reference to tragedy:

א  וַיְדַבֵּר יְהוָה, אֶל-מֹשֶׁה, אַחֲרֵי מוֹת, שְׁנֵי בְּנֵי אַהֲרֹן--בְּקָרְבָתָם לִפְנֵי-יְהוָה, וַיָּמֻתוּ.

1 Adonai spoke to Moses, after the death of the two sons of Aaron, when they drew near before Adonai, and died….

 

Last week during the two days of Rosh Hashanah, we had read two stories about two brothers who ALMOST died. 

On the first morning of Rosh Hashanah we read about Ishmael, who had been banished along with his mother Hagar from their home by Abraham on the urging of Sarah.  Ishmael almost dies of thirst in the midst of the desert.

We can blame Sarah or Abraham – or God for telling Abraham to listen to Sarah .  But, ultimately Ishmael survives to become the father of the Arab peoples.

And all that is certainly the subject for another sermon for some other time.

On the second morning of Rosh Hashanah we read about Ishmael’s brother Isaac, whom Abraham had almost slaughtered as a sacrifice to God.  Ultimately this turns out to have been only a test ----- a very sick, twisted, perverted, insane test if you ask me. 

We can blame God or we can blame Abraham for misinterpreting God.  But Isaac also survives to become the second of our Jewish patriarchs.

And all that is certainly the subject for another sermon for some other time.  

Those two brothers, Isaac and Ishmael, reconcile and reunite many years later to bury their father at the Cave of Machpelah.[1] Similarly, not just each High Holiday season but throughout the year as well, we hope and pray for the full reconciliation of the modern state of Israel with the Arab States around it and with the Palestinian Arabs currently under its jurisdiction.

And all that is certainly the subject for many sermons, just not this morning.

 

**************************

Isaac and Ishmael survive their fearful brushes with death.

But Nadav and Avihu, the two oldest sons of Aaron and Elisheva, drew near before the Eternal and they died.  And now, on this Yom Kippur, as every year on Yom Kippur, we gather together “Acharei Mot Sheney Benei Aharon”/ “After the death of the sons of Aaron”.

During the yearly Torah reading cycle, the Shabbat of Torah portion Acharei Mot doesn’t come until six chapters  --- and two or three weeks of Shabbat Torah readings ---  after Nadav and Avihu’s deaths take place in Leviticus Chapter 10.  The intervening chapters of Leviticus are taken up with dry, unrelated legislation about kosher and unkosher foods, skin diseases and household mold…. 

It takes a while for the Torah to do that double-take – finally to refer back --- even obliquely and understatedly – to those two tragic deaths of Nadav and Avihu.

Perhaps we can make a comparison here to the world’s current focus on the over 200,000 deaths that have occurred during the Syrian Civil War.  The war has been going on over four years but only now is its urgency finally being recognized by the world at large, as a refugee crisis unparalleled in our generation has emerged out of that conflict. 

Amidst these huge numbers of dead and displaced, as is often the case,  one family’s tragedy among myriads of tragedies has finally shaken us awake. 

It’s also about the death of two brothers.

In Unetaneh Tokef we ask:  “Mi va esh u’mi va mayim?”/ “Who by fire and who by water?”  For Aaron’s sons Nadav and Avihu it was fire.  They offered “eysh zarah”/  “strange fire” and were in turn consumed by fire.[2]

For Abdullah Kurdi’s sons, 3-year-old Aylan and 5-year-old Kadip, it was water. They and their mother Rehan drowned off the coast of Turkey earlier this month during the family’s failed attempt to make a sea crossing in a flimsy rubber raft to Greece.  They had been attempting to make their way to Sweden after efforts to be admitted to Canada had proved unsuccessful.   

The photograph of Aylan’s lifeless body, washed ashore on a Turkish beach, galvanized the world. 

But the Kurdi’s were only one family among the four million Syrians who are now fleeing as refugees from their shell of a country.  HIAS, the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society, reports that there are 60 million people in the world who are currently displaced by conflict or persecution, comprising a global refugee population larger than at any time since World War II.  Eleven million are Syrians who have fled their homes because of war: 7 million are displaced within Syria and over 4 million are refugees.   Over 90% of Syrian refugees are in Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey, which have been good host countries, but don’t have the funding to provide for such an overwhelming number of people. This has resulted in a lack of job opportunities and limited access to medical care and education. The United Nations High Commissioner on Refugees has only received 37% of the funding it requested to meet the needs in these areas. The World Food Programme had to cut food assistance to one third of its recipients due to a lack of funding.

Earlier this month I listened in on a conference call convened by HIAS on the topic of the Syrian refugee crisis. Melanie Nizer, HIAS’s Vice President for Policy and Advocacy had visited refugee camps in Jordan earlier this year.  She told us on the conference call that many folks there were feeling broken down and dejected.  But that NGO’s like HIAS were bringing some hope to them by providing assistance that the host countries did not have the capacity to provide.  HIAS is trying as best as it can to resettle as many refugees as it can but far more of them are simply “voting with their feet” and joining the mass migration to Europe.  

Mark Hetfield, HIAS’s President and CEO, told us on the conference call that his organization’s main focus right now is engaging in advocacy to get the United States to “step up to the plate” alongside other nations. 

Germany alone has committed to taking in 800,000 refugees this year.[3] 

The United States so far has accepted just 1500 Syrian refugees this year, as part of a total commitment of 70,000 refugees from the world at large.  However, HIAS and other refugee relief agencies are asking the U.S. to take in 100,000 Syrian refugees over and above that 70,000.  Just this past Sunday, Secretary of State Kerry announced that President Obama had committed to raising the U.S. commitment to a worldwide limit of 85,000 for this year and 100,000 for next year. 

The very next day, HIAS President Mark Hetfield responded that “Increasing the total number of refugees from 70,000 to 85,000 for next year and to 100,000 for the year after is a nice symbolic gesture. It is a baby step in the right direction. But it is not leadership.”

And Rabbi Jonah Pensner, head of the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism likewise declared “The new admission numbers remain insufficient considering the scope of the crisis at hand.”[4]

Meanwhile, some in Congress and among the contenders for the Presidency have argued that this is just a European problem.  But there are countering views as well, like that of Republican Senator and Presidential nominee Lindsey Graham.  Graham declared at a National Press Club luncheon earlier this month that “we might as well tear down the Statue of Liberty” if we don’t do more to help bring Syrian refugees to the United States.[5] 

Some voices in Congress and among the candidates for the Presidency have warned about the danger of Islamist terrorists infiltrating into the US amidst this tide of refugees.  But Mark Hetfield said on the conference call that to oppose their entry would be just as erroneous as when German Jews were barred from coming to the US during the holocaust because, as Germans, they were considered potential enemies even though it was Germany that was terrorizing them. Rather, argues Hetfield, the Syrians whom HIAS wants to help are the ones who are FLEEING from ISIS, not ISIS members themselves.

********************************

This afternoon during our Yom Kippur martyrology service we will remember, among all the martyrs of Jewish history, our Jewish brothers and sisters who died in the Shoah.  It’s important to keep in mind that the entire structure of the international refugee resettlement system grew out of the aftermath of the Holocaust.  The Syrian refugee crisis is, of course, not identical to the plight of the Jews who were attempting to flee Hitler.  But the images coming out of Syria and Europe today are close enough to be chilling.

Our Yom Kippur afternoon Torah reading later today includes the imperative “Al ta’amod al dam re’ekha” / “Don’t stand idly by the blood of your neighbor.”  The Torah’s message resonates in the face of the current crisis.

The tangled mess of opposing forces in Syria today are challenging to sort out.  Indeed, that’s also worth dealing with as the subject for another sermon for some other time. 

But meanwhile, the simple humanitarian need should rise to the fore.

Please check out the HIAS website --- www.hias.org  --- for more information about the Syrian refugee crisis, to donate tzedakah towards their efforts on behalf of the refugees, and to sign a petition calling upon the Obama Administration to do more to help those seeking refuge from the violence in Syria.

Let me conclude by sharing with you the words of a statement issue by HIAS entitled “A Yom Kippur Call to Action in Support of the World’s Refugees”. 

******************

“Today, as we reflect on our lives and the world in which we live, our thoughts turn to the world’s refugees – people whose faces we see now in the daily news.   In this moment, we recall the familiar refrain: 

“U’teshuvah, u’tefilah, u’tzedakah ma’avirin et-ro’ah ha’gezeirah –  Repentance, prayer, and charity temper judgement’s severe decree.” 

“U’teshuvah.  We return to the story of the Jewish people. Persecuted for our faith, we fled from Pharaohs, crusaders, and communist regimes.  We turn our attention and open our eyes to the stories of those now persecuted in Syria and in the Congo, in Eritrea and in Colombia, who have fled their homes in search of protection.  Let us answer their cries.  

“U’tefilah.  We pray that they will find places of refuge and, ultimately, the opportunity to live in freedom.   We pray that we will have the moral courage and perseverance not to turn away from their plight but instead to turn toward them with an open heart. 

“U’tzedakah.   So let us take action and ask our government to be a leader amongst the world’s nations.    Let us give generously so that those who have fled have access to food and shelter, education and medical care.   Let us commit to helping them rebuild their lives in safety and with dignity. 

“This Yom Kippur, may our teshuvah, tefilah, and tzedakah call us to help change the course of history so that all people can live free from fear and have a place to call home.”[6]  

***********************

May our efforts “acharei mot” – after the deaths of Nadav and Avihu --- and “acharei mot” after the deaths of Aylan and Kadip and all the others who are dying amidst warfare or in the course of seeking refuge from it ---- help to bring comfort to the afflicted on this day in which we afflict our own souls and bodies through fasting and prayer.

Gmar Chatimah Tovah/ May we all have a good sealing in the Book of Life on this Yom Kippur as we pray for all who are in distress and for ourselves as well.

 

© Rabbi David Steinberg September 2015/ Tishri 5776

 

[1] Gen. 25:9

[2] Leviticus 10: 1-2.

[3] http://www.cnn.com/2015/09/13/europe/zakaria-germeny-redemption/index.html

[4] http://www.jta.org/2015/09/21/news-opinion/united-states/hias-reform-rap-obama-administration-for-lowballing-syrian-refugees

[5] http://blogs.rollcall.com/wgdb/lindsey-graham-floats-emergency-supplemental-for-syrian-refugee-crisis/

[6] http://www.hias.org/resources-for-rabbis

Posted on April 13, 2016 .

THE THIRD CATEGORY OF SIN

Originally post Thursday, September 24th, 2015

(Sermon for Kol Nidre Night 5776)

September 22, 2015

One of my favorite aphorisms is the one that says “There are two types of people in the world – people who divide the world into two types of people --- and everyone else.”  At least that’s the version I first learned.

The original version is apparently by the American humorist Robert Benchley (1889-1945) who wrote in the February 1920 issue of Vanity Fair:

“There may be said to be two classes of people in the world; those who constantly divide the people of the world into two classes, and those who do not. Both classes are extremely unpleasant to meet socially, leaving practically no one in the world whom one cares very much to know.” [1]

And of course, there have been a slew of variations on this theme ever since:  My new favorite that I just came across last week is the anonymously authored quip: 

"There are only 10 kinds of people in the world: those who understand binary, and those who don’t."[2]

Judaism is filled with binary classifications --- that’s the very nature of the Havdalah (“separation”) ritual with which we end Shabbat and major holidays.  When we conclude Yom Kippur tomorrow evening we’ll be evoking:

Hamavdil beyn Kodesh lechol – The One who separates between the holy and the everyday;  beyn or lechoshekh/ between light and darkness, beyn yisra’el le’amim/ between Israel and other peoples; beyn yom hashevi’I lesheshet ymei hama’aseh/ between the seventh day and the six days of creation….

And this evening just before we chanted Kol Nidre, we read the famous Mishnah from Masechet Yoma which invokes the classic rabbinic binary classification:  

averot beyn adam lamakom/ transgressions between a person and Godversus averot beyn adam lechavero / transgressions between one person and another person. 

As the Mishna teaches: 

עבירות שבין אדם למקום יוה"כ מכפר עבירות שבין אדם לחבירו אין יוה"כ מכפר עד שירצה את חבירו

(Yoma 8:9)

“For transgressions between a person and God, the Day of Atonement atones; but for transgressions between one person and another, the Day of Atonement does not atone unless the wrongdoer has first become reconciled with the person wronged.”

It’s no doubt helpful in life to be able to separate things into this or that, one thing or the other….

But binary classifications don’t cover all possibilities. 

The terms “day” and “night” fail to cover that liminal time between day and night.

Indeed, in Hebrew the word “erev” (“evening”) literally means “mixture”

And dusk, those minutes after the sun has set but before it has gotten dark, is known in Jewish tradition as “beyn ha-arbayim” (literally – “between the evenings”).  

The dichotomy beyn yisra’el le’amim/ between Israel and other peoples is tempered by the presence of individuals who are very much of a part of the community but who have not formally converted ---  a status hinted at by the Biblical category of “ger toshav” (“resident alien”).

And even such seemingly binary categories as “male” (zachar) vs. “female” (nekeyvah) were recognized in the Talmud as being only two ends of a spectrum of six gender possibilities that includes four intermediate categories of individuals with mixed gender characteristics.[3] 

So, it’s no stretch to think that Jewish tradition might be oversimplifying things when it divides types of deeds into just the two categories of beyn adam lamakom/between a person and God vs. beyn adam lechavero/ between one person and another.

Actually, we already see Jewish tradition backtracking on too rigid a distinction between these categories.

The Torah reports (Exodus 34:29) that Moses carried two tablets of the law with him when he descended from Mt. Sinai (and by the way, Rashi says that this descent took place on the 10th of Tishri, Yom Kippur). 

Tradition teaches that the first tablet with the first five commandments  (which contain explicit references to God, such as “You shall not take the name of Adonai Your God in vain”) belong in the category of Beyn adam lamakom

And the second tablet with commandments 6 through 10, which don’t explicitly mention God (e.g., “You shall not steal”), belong to the category of Beyn Adam lechavero. 

However, number 5 represents a transition point with elements of both:

  כַּבֵּד אֶת-אָבִיךָ, וְאֶת-אִמֶּךָ--לְמַעַן, יַאֲרִכוּן יָמֶיךָ, עַל הָאֲדָמָה, אֲשֶׁר-יְהוָה אֱלֹהֶיךָ נֹתֵן לָךְ.  {ס}

Honor your father and your mother, so that your days may be long upon the land which Adonai your God gives you.

(Exodus 20:11)

Indeed, there are elements of both categories here.

“Honor your father and mother” seems like a beyn adam lechavero type of rule (between people) but it’s on the “beyn adam lemakom”  tablet and it invokes God as well as one’s parents.

In Tractate Kiddushin of the Babylonian Talmud we learn:

It is said, “Honor your father and your mother” (Ex. 20:12) and it is also said, “Honor the Eternal…” (Proverbs 3:9).  Thus the Torah equates the honor due to parents to that of God […] Our rabbis taught: There are three partners in humans: God, the father, and the mother.  When a person honors his father and his mother, God says, “I credit them as though I dwelled among them.”    (Kiddushin 30b-31a)

(And let me give a “shout out” to those of you who are here in synagogue tonight because you know that your parents would want you to be here.  You’re living out the mixed nature of this mitzvah by joining in our communal prayers to God as a way of giving honor to your parents.)

But let’s get back to the more general question of what’s missing when we try to rely too much on the simple dichotomy of “beyn adam lamakom” vs. “beyn adam lechavero.”  Here’s what the writer Jeremy Benstein has to say:

“Today we need a new category [in addition to “beyn adam lamakom”/”between a person and God” and “beyn adam lechavero”/between one person and another]  This is not to suggest inventing new mitzvot or halachot out of whole cloth, but rather regrouping and focusing existing concepts and values to facilitate our engagement with them. We need to begin speaking in Jewish language of our moral and ethical obligations to the Earth --- these actions that have never been grouped together before – as mitzvot bein adam le’olam, ‘between people and the world’”[4]

Benstein has advanced degrees in rabbinic literature and environmental anthropology and is a founder and associate director of the Tel Aviv – based Heschel Center for Sustainability.  He wrote those words in 2006.  But they are very much in the zeitgeist now.  Just two months ago Pope Francis issued an important new encyclical on environmental issues entitled “Laudato Si” (“Praises to You”).[5]  In a section of the encyclical entitled “The Gospel of Creation,” the Pope writes: 

"66. The creation accounts in the book of Genesis contain, in their own symbolic and narrative language, profound teachings about human existence and its historical reality. They suggest that human life is grounded in three fundamental and closely intertwined relationships: with God, with our neighbour and with the earth itself. According to the Bible, these three vital relationships have been broken, both outwardly and within us. This rupture is sin. The harmony between the Creator, humanity and creation as a whole was disrupted by our presuming to take the place of God and refusing to acknowledge our creaturely limitations. This in turn distorted our mandate to “have dominion” over the earth (cf. Gen 1:28), [and] to “till it and keep it” (Gen 2:15). As a result, the originally harmonious relationship between human beings and nature became conflictual (cf. Gen 3:17-19)."

Later in “Laudato Si,” In a section entitled “The Message of Each Creature in the Harmony of Creation,” the Pope writes: 

"84. Our insistence that each human being is an image of God should not make us overlook the fact that each creature has its own purpose. None is superfluous. The entire material universe speaks of God’s love, [God’s] boundless affection for us. Soil, water, mountains: everything is, as it were, a caress of God. The history of our friendship with God is always linked to particular places which take on an intensely personal meaning; we all remember places, and revisiting those memories does us much good. Anyone who has grown up in the hills or used to sit by the spring to drink, or played outdoors in the neighbourhood square; going back to these places is a chance to recover something of their true selves."

Just this past Shabbat morning, when the religious school students were up on the bima with me for the Amidah, I asked them if there were special places where they particularly felt God’s presence.  I asked this question as a way of encouraging them to think about the quotation in the Amidah from the Book of Ezekiel 3:12

 

יב  […]  בָּרוּךְ כְּבוֹד-יְהוָה, מִמְּקוֹמוֹ.

12 […] Blessed be the glory of the Eternal from [God’s] place';

We got some great answers from the kids, including one child mentioning “Lake Superior” and another mentioning her family’s cabin in Minnesota’s north woods.

Pope Francis’s environmental message brings to mind the classic rabbinic Midrash in Exodus Rabba:

”Even things you see as superfluous in this world -- like flies, fleas, and mosquitos -- they are part of the greater scheme of the creation of the world, as it says (Gen. 1:31), ‘And God saw all that God has created, and behold it was very good.’  And R. Acha bar R. Chanina said, even things you see as superfluous in this world -- like snakes & scorpions -- they are part of the greater scheme of the creation of the world.”  (Exodus Rabbah 10:1)

With glaciers melting, climates changing, wildfires burning, and species going extinct …. The papal encyclical Laudato Si’s warning is most timely.  Pope Francis writes:

"161. Doomsday predictions can no longer be met with irony or disdain. We may well be leaving to coming generations debris, desolation and filth. The pace of consumption, waste and environmental change has so stretched the planet’s capacity that our contemporary lifestyle, unsustainable as it is, can only precipitate catastrophes, such as those which even now periodically occur in different areas of the world. The effects of the present imbalance can only be reduced by our decisive action, here and now. We need to reflect on our accountability before those who will have to endure the dire consequences."

As we gather here this evening, the Pope is in Washington, DC to meet with President Obama.  And later this week he’ll be speaking to Congress and before the United Nations General Assembly.  I have no doubt that his inspirational message about our moral duty to protect the environment will be part of the message he brings with him.

As for us, we might add to our “al chet” confessional litany of sins a few new ones from Benstein’s suggested category of averot beyn adam la-olam/ transgressions between people and the world:

Here is a Yom Kippur litany composed by Rabbis Danny Nevins and David Seidenberg:[6]

"Eternal God, You created earth and heavens with mercy, and blew the breath of life into animals and human beings.

"We were created amidst a world of wholeness, a world called “very good,” pure and beautiful, but now your many works are being erased by us from the book of life.

"Not by our righteousness do we make our pleas before You, Adonai our God, for we have sinned, ruined, destroyed.

"May it be Your will that You help us overcome and make atonement: For the wrong of filling land and ocean with filth, toxins and garbage;

"And for extinguishing forever wondrous species which You saved from the waters of the flood;

"For the wrong of razing forests and trees, valleys and mountains, 

"For the wrong of turning the atmosphere into a chastening rod,

"And for making desolate the habitats that give life to every living soul.

"Open our eyes to see the majesty of Your creation, and we will praise You, as it is written: “How manifold are Your works, Adonai!  You made them all with wisdom; the earth is filled with what you hold.” (Ps. 104:24)

"Please Adonai, protect them all, in the shade of your wings give them refuge.

"Renew the face of the earth, please, save the weave and fullness of life.

"Please Adonai, remove the heart of stone from our flesh,  and set within us a heartof flesh, that we may behold the Godly there.

"Grant us wisdom and courage to heal and watch over this garden of life, to make it thrive under the heavens."  

Here in the United States, and here in Minnesota, environmental protection concerns are sometimes attacked as being in conflict with economic concerns.  In particular, environmentalists are sometimes derided as being insensitive elitists who don’t care about the needs of working class folks for the jobs and economic input that dangerous fossil fuel extraction industries can provide. We see that vividly here in northern Minnesota with the debates over Polymet and the Sandpiper Pipeline, as well as in nearby states over the Keystone XL Pipeline.

I don’t personally have any easy solutions to offer.  But there has got to be a way to support the economic survival of residents of mining towns without destroying the planet. 

The Mishnah from Tractate Yoma that we recited before Kol Nidre tonight continues beyond where the excerpt in our machzor leaves off.  It concludes by comparing God to a mikvah.  We have many metaphors for God:  Parent, sovereign, shepherd, military commander --- but how breathtaking it is to conceive of God as a mikvah – a natural body of mayim chayim/living waters.

Lake Superior would certainly qualify, as would the Boundary Waters. 

And so I invite you to envision the beautiful waters of "Gichigami" or the streams of the Boundary Waters in these words of the Mishnah:

“For transgressions between a person and God, the Day of Atonement atones; but for transgressions between one person and another, the Day of Atonement does not atone unless the wrongdoer has first become reconciled with the person wronged. Rabbi Akiva said: happy are you, O Israel! Who is it before whom you become purified? And who is it that purifies you? Avichem Shebashamayim/Your parent who is in heaven, as it is said (in Ezekiel 36): ‘I will sprinkle pure water upon you and ye shall be purified. And it further says: The Mikvah of Israel is Adonai.  Just as the Mikvah renders pure the impure, so does the blessed holy one purify Israel.” (Yoma 8:9)

This Day of Atonement calls upon us to care for the living waters, the land, the air and the biodiversity of our planet as part of our teshuvah --- as part of our return to God. 

Barukh oseh ma’ashe vereysheet/ Blessed is the maker of the work of Creation….

May we be resolute in preserving God’s creation from our own destructive tendencies.

Gmar chatimah tovah.  May we be inscribed and sealed for a good year – a year of peace and blessing for us, for all of humanity, for all living creatures and for our planet.

 

(c) Rabbi David Steinberg/ September 2015/ Yom Kippur 5776

 

[1] http://quoteinvestigator.com/2014/02/07/two-classes/

[2] Ibid

 

[3] http://blogs.rj.org/rac/2015/02/05/gender-diversity-in-jewish-tradition/#comments

[4] Jeremy Benstein, PhD, The Way into Judaism and the Environment, Jewish Lights Publishing, 2006 (p. 89)

[5] http://www.cruxnow.com/church/2015/06/18/read-the-encyclical-for-yourself-laudato-si/

[6] http://www.neohasid.org/stoptheflood/environmental_al_chet/

Posted on April 13, 2016 .

PLANTING AN ESHEL

Originally posted Thursday September 24th, 2015

(Sermon for First Morning of Rosh Hashanah, September 14, 2015)

When people ask me why I moved from Burlington, Vermont to Duluth, Minnesota five years ago, I sometimes reply that Vermont wasn’t cold enough. 

Of course, that’s not a totally serious response.

Just as I’m not being totally serious right now when I tell you that I fret that our Rosh Hashanah morning service isn’t long enough. 

Yes, I know, Duluth gets cold enough and Rosh Hashanah shacharit is long enough.  Still, slimming our service today down to approximately three hours requires omitting many beautiful and thought provoking traditional elements.  And, yet I hope and trust that our time together is lengthy enough for us to be able to immerse ourselves in the spirit of the holiday. 

One specific omission from our machzor[1] that I want to lift up now for consideration is the conclusion of the traditional Torah reading for the first morning of Rosh Hashanah.   We read [past tense] this morning Genesis 21: 1-21, the story of the birth and weaning of Isaac, the rivalry between Isaac’s mother Sarah and Ishmael’s mother Hagar, and God’s promise that, though the Jewish people would descend from Isaac, yet Ishmael would also become a great nation. 

However, the traditional reading found in Reconstructionist, Conservative and Orthodox machzorim continues through the end of Genesis 21.  In this section, Genesis 21: 22-34, the Torah portrays our patriarch Abraham as a diplomat negotiating a treaty with a potentially hostile neighboring people, namely the Philistines of Gerar, under their King Abimelekh:

22 At that time Abimelech ([accompanied by] Phicol, chief of his troops), said to Abraham, "God is with you in everything that you do. 23 Therefore swear to me here by God that you will not deal falsely with me or with my kith and kin, but will deal with me and with the land in which you have sojourned as loyally as I have dealt with you." 24 And Abraham said, "I swear it."

25 Then Abraham reproached Abimelech for the well of water which the servants of Abimelech had seized. 26 But Abimelech said, "I do not know who did this; you did not tell me, nor have I heard of it until today." 27 Abraham took sheep and oxen and gave them to Abimelech, and the two of them made a covenant. 28 Abraham then set seven ewes of the flock by themselves, 29 and Abimelech said to Abraham, "What mean these seven ewes which you have set apart?" 30 He replied, "You are to accept these seven ewes from me as proof that I dug this well." 31 Hence that place was called Be’er-Sheva (meaning “well of the oath”), for there the two of them swore an oath. 32 When they had concluded the pact at Be’er-Sheva, Abimelech and Phicol, chief of his troops, departed and returned to the land of the Philistines. 33 [Abraham] planted a tamarisk at Be’er-Sheva, and invoked there the name of the Eternal, the Everlasting God. 34 And Abraham resided in the land of the Philistines a long time.

Why is this story part of the traditional Torah reading for the first day of Rosh Hashanah?  I suppose the prosaic answer would be that we just want to keep going to the end of chapter 21 so that we can pick up tomorrow with the binding of Isaac story that starts immediately thereafter at the start of Genesis chapter 22.  However, I’d like to think that this story has more significance than being just “filler.” 

We see so many instances in the world in which differing religious and cultural beliefs and traditions can cause conflict.  And so, the story of potential adversaries Abraham and Abimelekh establishing peaceful relations through diplomacy is a counter-narrative to the narrative of violent religious fanaticism that mars our contemporary world.

Abimelekh and Phicol are not exactly identical with the leaders and negotiators of the Islamic Republic of Iran. And Abraham and his retinue are not exactly identical with the negotiating teams of Russia, China, France, the United Kingdom, the United States and Germany (the so-called P5+1).  Nor is Abraham exactly identical with the contemporary State of Israel and its Sunni Arab neighbors like Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia and Yemen, all of whom are threatened by Iran’s nuclear development efforts and by Iran’s sponsorship of terrorist groups around the region.

Still, in both the Abraham-Abimelekh diplomacy and the Iran nuclear deal diplomacy, memories of past conflicts have an effect on present outlooks. 

In an earlier incident, recounted in Genesis chapter 20, Abraham and Sarah had gone to Gerar seeking food in the midst of a famine.  Abraham nearly brought a plague upon the Gerarites because of his mistaken belief that the Gerarites would murder him if they knew that Sarah was his wife and not his sister.  As the story plays out, Abraham ends up admitting to Abimelekh that he, Abraham, had erroneously assumed that אֵין-יִרְאַת אֱלֹהִים, בַּמָּקוֹם הַזֶּה; וַהֲרָגוּנִי, עַל-דְּבַר אִשְׁתִּי.  “eyn yirat elohim bamakom hazeh vaharagumi al dvar ishti” / “surely there is no fear of God in this place, and they will kill me because of my wife.” (Gen. 20:11) 

That episode ends amicably, but surely Abimelekh hasn’t forgotten it when he approaches Abraham in the last section of the traditional first day of Rosh Hashanah Torah reading.

As for contemporary Iran, its leaders have certainly not forgotten how the United States (supported by Great Britain) engineered the coup that in 1953 overthrew Iran’s democratically elected president. That 1953 coup had resulted in the Shah of Iran assuming repressive, dictatorial powers for the next quarter of a century until the Islamic Revolution of 1979.

So, in the recent negotiations over the Iran nuclear deal, officially called the “Joint Common Plan of Action,” we can be sure that the Iranians were continuing to remember the CIA sponsored military coup of 1953. 

At the same time, we Americans were of course continuing to remember the hostage crisis of 1979 when Iranian militants, with the support of the new Islamic Republic government, held American diplomats hostage for 444 days.  And the British remember the attack on their embassy in Tehran in 2011.  And Israel, not a party to the nuclear deal negotiations yet so affected by them, remembers --- as do all of us --- Iran’s ongoing hostility to the very existence of the Jewish state.

Indeed, just last week, Supreme Leader Ayotallah Ali Khamanei declared in a widely publicized speech:

“After nuclear negotiations, the Zionist regime said that they will not be worried about Iran in the next 25 years. I am telling you, first, you will not be around in 25 years’ time, and God willing, there will be no Zionist regime in 25 years. Second, during this period, the spirit of fighting, heroism and jihad will keep you worried every moment.”[2] 

The debates over the JCPOA received lots of media coverage in recent weeks and months.  At this point, however, it’s a “done deal.”  That’s because last Thursday a vote to end the Democratic filibuster against having an up or down vote on the bill failed to get the necessary 60 votes.  This means that a Congressional resolution expressing disapproval of the JCPOA won’t even come to a vote.  Had it come to a vote, a bipartisan majority of both Houses of Congress would have voted to disapprove the deal.  President Obama would have then vetoed that resolution. And then the veto would have been sustained because less than two thirds of the members of both Houses had planned to vote to override the veto. 

If this all seems procedurally complicated, that’s no coincidence.  How this debate got to Congress is an interesting study in and of itself. The U.S. Constitution requires that treaties concluded by the executive branch be approved by two-thirds of the votes of the U.S. Senate.  However, the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action was characterized by the Obama administration as an executive agreement, not a treaty. The reason for this was explicitly political.  As Secretary of State Kerry testified[3] to members of Congress in July, the administration had presented the JCPOA as an executive agreement because it had determined that it didn’t have the votes to have it approved as a treaty.  As a result, the JCPOA is not legally binding on the United States and any future President can unilaterally withdraw from it.  

Indeed, originally, the administration had claimed that Congress had no right even to review the agreement.  But in May, a bipartisan piece of legislation known as the “Iran Nuclear Agreement Review Act of 2015” gave Congress an opportunity to issue a resolution disapproving the agreement. As of now, however, no such Congressional resolution will be voted on at all because such action has been filibustered in the Senate.

Though the Iran Deal will now go into effect, it has been and continues to be a source of profound disagreement in American society.  Polls have shown that the majority of American Jews favor it[4], but the majority of Israeli Jews oppose it.[5]  Polls show that the majority of the American population as a whole opposes it[6] as does the majority of the members of Congress. And in the midst of all this disagreement, the two main American lobbying groups on Israeli issues, AIPAC and J-Street, staked out opposing positions, with J-Street supporting the deal and AIPAC opposing it.

As far as I can figure it out, it all ended up boiling down to three main issues:

First: Supporters were happy that the deal delayed the possibility of Iran acquiring nuclear weapons for a few years.  But opponents mainly worried that the deal made it all the more likely that Iran WOULD acquire nuclear weapons AFTER a few years.

Second: Opponents found the deal unsatisfactory because it didn’t address Iran’s support of terrorist groups around the Middle East and, moreover, that the release of frozen Iranian assets and the removal of trade sanctions would help Iran to further fund terrorist groups even more than it does now.  But supporters counter argued that the deal was not meant to cover any issues other than the nuclear threat.  (Of course, that counter argument was undermined by the fact that, at the eleventh hour, the deal DID evolve to include such non-nuclear provisions as an end to an embargo on arms sales to Iran in year 5 and the end of an embargo on ballistic missile sales to Iran in year 8.)

And third: Both sides argued over whether the JCPOA arrangements would prevent Iran from being able to cheat on the deal.  Supporters said yes.  Opponents said no.

On the merits of the agreement, ultimately I found myself agreeing with Representative Ted Lieu (D-California) who stated his position in a lengthy press release that he posted on his website on Sepember 9th.[7]   Congressman Lieu acknowledged that it was a close call and that reasonable people could differ.  But he concluded that, even with no Iranian cheating, the deal would cause more problems than it would solve. 

He wrote: 

[..]I look at what the JCPOA allows Iran to do and then I assume Iran does it.  For example, when the ban on testing multiple advanced centrifuge machines expires at year 8.5, I assume Iran will start testing multiple advanced centrifuge machines.  When the cap on centrifuges expires in year 10, I assume Iran will start spinning a lot of centrifuges.  When the cap on uranium enrichment expires in year 15, I assume Iran will enrich a lot of uranium.  I do not believe Iran bargained for these sunset dates with no intent of taking advantage of the benefits.       

Later in his press release, Rep. Lieu summarizes his position when he writes:   

"I wanted to support the JCPOA, wanted to find a path to yes, but couldn’t get there based on the totality of the information I considered.  I believe the JCPOA will result in more regional wars and conflict in the Middle East, along with more US entanglement, in the short term; and increase the chances of a lengthy, difficult, and more deadly war with Iran in the long term.”

In the 23 pages of his Representative Lieu’s press release the words “Israel” or “Netanyahu” or “Jewish” or “AIPAC” or “J-Street” never appear. 

However, if we who are gathered here ask the proverbial question, “Is it good for the Jews” – even though I think I agree with Lieu’s analysis – I end up coming out grudgingly supporting the JCPOA.  Not because it’s a great deal.  I don’t think it is.  But rather because Israel’s most important strategic asset is its strong relationship with the United States.  And this relationship was being threatened by the opposition of Prime Minister Netanyahu and his supporters.

A number of Israeli defense analysts and military and political leaders made this very point. For example, in a July 19th New York Times op-ed, American-born Israeli defense analyst Chuck Freilich observed:

Over decades, Israel has built a unique alliance with the United States. This partnership has provided Israel with extensive aid, turned the Israel Defense Forces into one of the world’s most advanced militaries and safeguarded Israel’s interests in hostile international forums. Without America, the I.D.F. would be an empty shell, and Israel would be isolated and sanctioned.

Part of being a junior ally is knowing when to say, “Enough, we have made our case, time to be a team player.” Nothing is more important for Israel’s security than the vitality of its relationship with the United States — which Israel will still need in order to deal with Iran in the future.[8]

Last month, the Union for Reform Judaism, wisely I think, declared that it would neither support nor oppose the Iran Deal.  On August 19th the URJ issued a policy statement[9] noting that the JCPOA had both significant positive and negative aspects and that reasonable people could differ on its merits.

Rather, the URJ statement declared:

Whether the JCPOA is approved or defeated, there will be a day after.

“It is essential that this debate not be allowed to create a lasting rift between Israel and the U.S., between North American Jews and Israelis, or among American Jews”

And the URJ statement went on to say:

“We call upon the Israeli leadership, the U.S. Administration and members of Congress, and those on all sides of this debate to tamp down their rhetoric. If the debate is allowed to weaken the U.S.-Israel alliance, or further sharpen partisan divides over what it means to be “pro-Israel,” Israel will be less secure. And on the day after the vote, as on the day before, Israel will need the United States’ continued military and political support, bilaterally, in the United Nations, and more broadly on the world stage.

“Our Movement believes in vigorous debate. But that discourse must be civil and constructive, which has too often not been the case. There must be an open and welcoming tent as we continue to debate not only the future of this agreement, but also the very nature of what it means to be pro-Israel.”

For me personally, I can honestly say that I feel very fortunate and blessed to be a part of our Temple Israel community.  When I compare the atmosphere here in Duluth to what I have heard from my rabbinic colleagues in other parts of the country, it seems to me that we are actually pretty good at embracing diversity of opinion.  Not just in our Jewish theologies and practices but in our political views as well, including on issues that affect Israel.  This is something for which we should be thankful.  And this is a value that we should continue to nurture.

*************************

And so, Abraham and Abimelekh entered into a covenant at Beer-Sheva, ensuring peaceful coexistence.  

Let us hope and pray that, with diligent enforcement, the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action will at least begin to do the same between Iran and the rest of the world. 

Of course, a generation later, the Torah reports in Genesis chapter 36 that Abraham’s son Isaac ends up fighting with the same Gerarites over the same wells.  And ultimately Isaac negotiates a new treaty with the same King Abimelekh.

Similarly, I suspect that the current deal with Iran will not be the end of the matter.

In a certain way, international peacekeeping is like our High Holiday liturgy. 

In the traditional prayers of the machzor we pray for the well-being of ourselves and the world not for eternity, but, rather, just for one year at a time. 

And, similarly, in international affairs, we recognize that the messianic era, as it were, is a long way off….  but that day by day, year by year, treaty by treaty, negotiation by negotiation --- we can gradually, incrementally, painstakingly, establish peace and justice in our world.

לג  וַיִּטַּע אֶשֶׁל, בִּבְאֵר שָׁבַע; וַיִּקְרָא-שָׁם--בְּשֵׁם יְהוָה, אֵל עוֹלָם.

33 Abraham planted a tamarisk-tree in Beer-Sheva, and invoked there the name of Adonai, the Everlasting God.

According to a classic midrash, the tamarisk that Abraham plants at Beer-Sheva symbolizes the value of hospitality.  That’s because the word for tamarisk in Hebrew is Eshel – spelled with the three Hebrew letters Aleph, Shin and Lamed.  The midrash teaches that the word Eshel is an acronym for three things a conscientious host or hostess should provide to his or her guests:  “achilah”/food, “shtiyah”/drink and “levayah”/accompaniment – meaning making sure that one’s guests arrive and depart safely.  (Though others say that the lamed stands for “linah” meaning “lodging”.) 

The Talmud teaches that Abraham’s invocation of Adonai as “El Olam”/”The Everlasting God” comes about BY MEANS OF the Eshel, that is to say, by means of his hospitality to all whom he would encounter:

As we learn in Tractate Sotah:

 “And he invoked there the name of Adonai, the Everlasting God.”  Resh Lakish said: Read not (“Vayikra”) (“And he invoked”) but rather (“Vayakri”) (‘’and he caused to be invoked”) thereby teaching that our father Abraham caused the name of the blessed holy one to be uttered by the mouth of every passer-by. How was this? After [travelers] had eaten and drunk, they stood up to bless [Abraham]; but, he said to them, 'Did you eat of mine? You ate of that which belongs to the God of the Universe. [Instead you should] thank, praise and bless the One who spoke and the world came into being'.  (Sotah 10a-10b)

Ideally, this is the way that all humanity should engage with one another.

Barukh Sheamar vehayah ha-olam.  Blessed is the One who spoke and the world came into being. 

May our faith, just like the faith of people of all religious traditions, inspire us towards deeds of hospitality, reconciliation, and friendship.   And may there be peace for us, for all Israel, for the Palestinians, for the Iranians, the Syrians, the Iraqis, the Yemenites, for all the peoples of the Middle East, and for all the world in this new year 5776.    

L’shanah tovah tikateyvu/ May we all be inscribed for a good year.

 

 

© Rabbi David Steinberg 5776/2015

           

 

[1] Special prayer book for Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur (plural: “machzorim.”  By contrast, the regular prayer book for the rest of the year is called a “siddur” (plural: “siddurim”).

[2] http://www.nytimes.com/2015/09/10/world/middleeast/iran-ayatollah-khamenei-israel-will-not-exist.html?ref=todayspaper&_r=0

[3] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bpfj5Pr2sEM

[4] http://www.irandealfacts.org/content/polling

[5] http://www.timesofisrael.com/most-israeli-jews-say-iran-deal-existential-threat-poll/

[6]http://www.cnn.com/2015/08/20/politics/iran-deal-poll-majority-americans-disapprove/

[7] https://lieu.house.gov/jcpoa

[8] http://www.nytimes.com/2015/07/20/opinion/a-good-deal-for-israel.html

[9] http://blogs.rj.org/blog/2015/08/19/reform-jewish-movement-response-to-iran-deal-address-important-concerns-focus-on-the-day-after/

Posted on April 13, 2016 .