Monthly Archives: June 2007

Scouting Out the Land

Before I let go of last week’s Torah portion – in which Israelite scouts are sent into Canaan to observe the land and its inhabitants – I thought I’d share a more recent “scouting report.” The excerpt below comes from “Like All the Nations,” a pamphlet written in 1930 by Rabbi Judah Magnes, the venerable first Chancellor of Hebrew University in Jerusalem. Magnes’ legacy is worth exploring for many reasons – not least of which is that he was one of the very few pre-state Zionist leaders who fully grasped the moral challenge presented by the indigenous Arab population in Palestine. I find the power and prescience of his words simply breathtaking:

What I am driving at is to distinguish between two policies. The one maintains that we can establish a Jewish Home here through the suppression of the political aspirations of the Arabs, and therefore a Home necessarily established on bayonets over a long period – a policy which I think bound to fail because of the violence against us it would occasion, and because…the conscience of the Jewish people would revolt against it. The other policy holds that we can establish a Home here only if we are true to ourselves as democrats and internationalists, thus being just and helpful to others, and that we ask for the protection of life and property the while we are eagerly and intelligently and sincerely at work to find a modus vivendi et operandi with our neighbors. The world – not in Palestine alone – may be bent upon violence and bloodshed. But will not my opponent agree that there is a better chance of averting this tendency to bloodshed if we make every possible effort politically as well as in other ways to work hand in hand – as teachers, helpers, friends – with this awakening Arab world?

Just You, Just Me…

Another post apropos of nothing…

…for an instant cheer-up, just click above!

(OK, who knows what comedy classic this clip comes from?)

Nix on Pix

mypicture.jpgYou may have noticed that I’ve reverted back to my old PR head shot rather than this more recent one I first posted a few weeks ago. Feedback on the new pic was overwhelmingly negative (and was even, apparently, a major subject of discussion at a recent JRC committee meeting.) The final straw was when my always supportive wife Hallie admitted, when pushed, that she wasn’t too crazy about it either…

So I’ve decided to put an end to the congregational and familial upheaval. Let it never be said of me that I don’t know how to take a hint: we’re back to clean-cut for now.

Life Behind Walls

In this week’s Torah portion, Parashat Shelach Lecha, Moses sends scouts into Canaan, charging them to observe the land and its inhabitants and report back to the Israelites. Ten of the scouts bring back a discouraging report:

“(The) people who inhabit the country are powerful, and the cities are fortified and very large…We cannot attack that people, for it is stronger than we…We looked like grasshoppers to ourselves, and so we must have looked to them.” (Numbers 13:28-33)

While the Torah’s portrayal of the conquest of Canaan teaches us nothing about appropriate attitudes toward indigenous peoples (as I regularly comment to aghast Torah Study students), this particular episode does offer profound psychological insights on collective fear and the ways it can impact upon our view of the world. Many commentators point out, for instance, that the spies’ negative assessment of the land and its inhabitants is based upon decidedly skewed and mistaken assumptions about what they actually saw in Canaan. According to Rashi:

“How were they (the scouts) to know (the Canaanites) strength? (By looking at their cities) – were they walled or fortified? If they live in unwalled cities, they are strong and trust in their own strength. If, however, they live in fortified cities, they are fearful and insecure.” (Rashi on Numbers 13:28)

A powerful rejoinder for a post 9/11 world: it is only a weak and fearful people that builds fortifications between itself and the outside world; a truly strong people doesn’t need to hide behind walls.

It Was 40 Years Ago, Today…

soldiers_western_wall_1967.jpgAnyone notice the the media is currently overflowing with reminiscences, analyses, etc. about two very different milestones that are marking their forty year anniversary this month? I’m referring, of course, to the Six Day War (June 5, 1967) and the release of “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band” (June 1, 1967). Indeed, it’s been hard to avoid the ever-increasing perspectives on these oddly juxtaposed, yet undeniably world-changing moments: Israel’s euphoric, if Pyrrhic military victory and the Beatles’ iconic masterpiece that may or may not be their best album.

Still, amidst the plethora of recent articles, I’ve yet to see anyone attempt to somehow find a connection between these two auspicious moments in history. So here’s a try: a sampling of “Sgt. Pepper’s” lyrics that might well be read as commentary on a six-day Mideast war that has since stretched into a tragic forty-year occupation:

“I’ve got to admit it’s getting better, a little better all the time. (It can’t get much worse…)” (Getting Better)

images.jpg“And it really doesn’t matter, if I’m wrong, I’m right, where I belong, I’m right, where I belong…” (Fixing a Hole)

“We were talking, about the space between us all, and the people, who hide themselves behind a wall of illusion, never glimpse the truth, then it’s far too late…” (Within You, Without You)

OK, so that was pretty glib, even for me. Here are two more interesting pieces: a recent article from the Jewish Forward and a lovely childhood Pepper-memory by singer/songwriter Aimee Mann.

JRC Construction Diary #16

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The workers have begun the process of putting plywood on the exterior of the building, which will be the first layer of its “outer skin.” The second pic from the bottom shows the installation of the rear stairs, which began Friday and will continue into next week.

As for our neighbors foliage (see last diary entry): alas, the entire tree needed to be cut down. Thankfully, as the pic on the bottom indicates, our third floor view is still quite lush.

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Racism and Infection

hands.jpgAs this week’s Torah portion opens, Aaron and Miriam unexpectedly disparage their brother Moses:

When they were in Hatzerot, Miriam and Aaron spoke against Moses because of the Cushite woman he had married: “He married a Cushite woman!” (Parashat Beha’alotecha, Numbers 12:1)

Moses’ siblings’ comment is confusing on a number of levels. In the first place, it’s not quite clear who this “Cushite woman” actually is. Cush is commonly understood to refer to ancient Ethiopia (in Genesis 10:6 we read that the Cushites descended from Ham, the son of Noah.) However, the text makes it clear that Moses’ wife Zipporah is a Midianite, not a Cushite. As Rashi would say, what’s the deal here?

Commentators have handled this discrepancy in different ways. Some suggest that Zipporah and the Cushite woman are the same person. (Many point out that Habbakuk 3:7 refers to a Midianite tribe named Cushan). Other Biblical scholars posit that the reference to the Cushite wife is a fragment of a larger (essentially lost) literary tradition. These theories are interesting as far as they go, but in the end they fail to address the most troubling dimension to this episode: namely, the patently racist nature of Miriam and Aaron’s words.

Indeed, whatever else might be going on in this strange Biblical narrative, it seems clear that it is, at least in part, an anti-racist polemic. Though Miriam and Aaron later indicate their anger at Moses also stems from their resentment of his being chosen by God to lead the Israelites, the text judges their prejudiced words with undeniable harshness. It is notable that after disparaging their brother for marrying a black woman, Miriam is stricken with tzara’at – the infamous Biblical skin disease that manifests itself with “snow-white scales.” (12:10) In a sense, God seems to be saying to Miriam: “You like white, I’ll show you white!”

Classical Jewish commentators famously understand tzara’at to be a physical manifestation of the sin of lashon harah – negative speech, or gossip. This interpretation is less compelling as theology (i.e. illness understood as divine punishment) than it is as a metaphor for the virulent nature of harmful words. Taking our cue from the rabbinic commentators, we might well extend this insight to address the radically infectious nature of hate speech and racism.

Indeed, just like a virus or infection, racism has the very real potential to spread through society if left unchecked. This is no less a reality for us today, centuries after these Biblical words were written. To be sure, the infectious nature of racism has “mutated” in new and frightening ways as we enter the 21st century. As former UN Secretary General Kofi Annan has remarked:

Despite decades of efforts to eradicate it, the virus of racism continues to infect human relations and human institutions in all parts of our globe. Today, the old strains of this disease, such as institutionalized discrimination, indirect disadvantage, racist violence, hate crimes, harassment and persecution, are compounded by new forms of discrimination, seemingly defying many of the gains we have made. The Internet is used for the propagation of racism, the number of victims of human trafficking is growing, xenophobic arguments in political discourse are on the rise, and innocent people are “racially profiled” in the name of distorted notions of security. Even anti-Semitism is once again rearing its ugly head, six decades after the liberation of extermination camps in which the entire world saw the barbaric extremes to which racism, if not confronted, can lead.

As we learn this week, our penchant for racism and intolerance has been with us from time immemorial, even as it finds ever new and more insidious forms of transmission. What will we do to address the pandemic?

What are your favorite anti-racism initiatives/organizations? I encourage you to click “Comments” below and share!