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Monday, September 12, 2016

Parashat Ki Tetzei War and Peace


Echoes of Eden
Rabbi Ari Kahn
Parashat Ki Tetzei
War and Peace

From a moral perspective, one of the most difficult laws in the Torah is the law of the captive wife. Matrimony by force with any woman, and even more so with a member of an enemy nation who is plucked from the battlefield, shocks our sensibilities on so many levels. And lest we consider this an instance of modern sensibilities taking offense with the mores of ancient society, we should note that the Talmud deemed this law “a concession to the evil inclination.”[1] For thousands of years, Jewish ethicists and religious leaders have been troubled by the fact that the Torah allows this seemingly-antinomian “concession.” The consensus among rabbinic commentaries on this law is that its purpose is to forestall the type of behavior that is an all-too-common aspect of warfare, even today: “Taking” women in battle proffers upon them all the rights and privileges of a wife. Women captives may not be abused; there can be no “heat of the battle” excuses for soldiers’ bad behavior.

Even if this is so, we might ask an additional question: How can a vanquished enemy become a spouse?  How can a member of a foreign nation suddenly appear to be “marriage material?” War has an ideological component; how does romance spring up between a person who is willing to risk their life to protect the ideals for which the nation has gone to war, and a member of the enemy camp?

A law that is taught in the preceding parashah, Shoftim, may have far reaching ramifications for our present inquiry: Before engaging in battle, the Israelite army must first attempt to achieve peace: “When you approach a city to wage war against it, you must propose a peaceful settlement.”[2] If possible, war is to be avoided; yesterday’s enemy may be tomorrow’s partner.

Perhaps these overtures of peace impact the mindset of the men who go into battle: Rather than suffering from the tunnel vision that often besets people in wartime, they no longer see the enemy in absolute terms. When a non-violent resolution is the first option, absolute annihilation is not the only end-game in town. The Torah seems to be encouraging us – even in times of conflict - not to think in absolutes, in black and white categories.

On the other hand, the Torah does not place pacifism as a virtue above all else. In order to achieve a non-military resolution, an understanding must be achieved: The enemy must accept the right of the Jewish People to the Land of Israel, must accept Jewish sovereignty over their land, in addition to accepting the basic morality encapsulated in the Seven Noachide laws. If these conditions are not met, we must fight - secure in the knowledge that we have done everything possible to avoid bloodshed without compromising the moral integrity of our homeland.

With this in mind, we gain new insight into another law that appears at the end of this week’s parashah – a law that has been the cause of much debate and soul searching: The commandment to destroy Amalek.[3]

There is some debate as to whether this law is absolute, whether the commandment to annihilate Amalek[4] regards each and every member of the nation, or, alternatively, if the commandment pertains only to the king and other leaders of the Amalekite nation.[5] In either case, though, the commandment to expunge Amalek should be reconsidered in light of the requirement to extend a hand in peace before going to war.

According to some rabbinic authorities, the commandment to invite our enemies to make peace pertains only to “permissible wars,” those waged for purposes of territorial or economic expansion; no such requirement exists regarding “obligatory” or existential wars.[6] Other authorities, though, regard the obligation to invite the enemy to engage in peaceful, non-violent conflict resolution as an obligation in respect to all wars.[7] Rambam[8] goes even further, and qualifies the battle against Amalek as one that is waged only when a peaceful solution cannot be achieved. In the Jewish tradition, Amalek represents the epitome of evil - and even in this case, Rambam’s understanding is that the Torah legislates eradication of the evil but not the eradication of evil-doers. A fascinating dialectic emerges: We are commanded to eradicate evil from the world by stamping out evil ideologies and practices, but at the same time we must do our utmost to save the people who are currently engaged in these behaviors and beliefs. We are to hate evil, but we must not see it as absolute, or as an all-consuming and defining trait of individuals or peoples - even our enemies.

This underlying approach helps us understand the complexities with which the Jewish warrior must contend as he prepares for battle: The emotional and spiritual dialectic created by Torah law informs our approach to other nations and religions, be they friend or foe. And if today’s enemy can undergo the requisite ideological metamorphosis that allows him or her to become tomorrow’s ally, the leap to becoming “marriage material” may be far shorter than it first seemed. A battle that began with the possibility of peace, may give rise to emotions based on the potential for camaraderie, friendship, and even possibly love.


[1] Talmud Bavli Kedushin 21b.
[2] Devarim 20:10.
[3] Devarim 25:19.
[4] See, for example, the comments of Rav Chaim Paltiel, a member of the Tosafot school, on this verse.
[5] See Ibn Ezra’s, Sh’mot 17:14; Ha’amek Davar, Devarim 25:19.
[6] Rashi, Devarim 20:10.
[7] Ramban, Devarim 20:10.
[8] Laws of Kings, Chapter 6:1,4.

For a more in-depth analysis see:

New Book!
A Taste of Eden
(More) Torah for the Shabbat Table







Echoes of Eden

Sunday, September 11, 2016

Essays and Audio on Parashat Ki Tetze 5776

Essays and Audio on Parashat Ki Tetze 5776


Essays:
Echoes of Eden Project  -
War & Peace

Another Brick in the Wall

Abuse

Of Love and Hatred

Dysfunctional Relationships

To Be As One

Going to War

Amalek: A Question of Race?

Audio:

Give Peace a Chance

When a Millstone is NOT a Millstone - (Suspected sexual symbolism in the parasha)

Consequences


Pretty Woman

Parshat Ki Tetzi / Captive Wives Rebellious Sons and Palace Intrigue

When great soldiers go to war

YETZER HARA

Repentance

Thorns and Thistles


Remembering and Understanding the war against Amalek

Tuesday, September 6, 2016

Parashat Shoftim 5776 -Just Justice

Echoes of Eden
Rabbi Ari Kahn
Parashat Shoftim
Just Justice

A healthy society must have a functioning court system; this, to paraphrase popular wisdom, is what keeps people honest. A holy society, on the other hand, requires something more: A holy society is based upon the active pursuit of justice.

The Torah describes these two spheres with two very enlightening terms: The court system is generally referred to in terms of mishpat, a word that connotes judgment. Society cannot be maintained without judges - and the authority vested in the system of judgment to enforce its decisions. The Torah goes to great lengths to stress that without honest judges and fair laws, brutality and chaos will create an evil society whose continued existence is not justifiable. Yet even when the basic requirements of the legal system are in place, there is no guarantee that justice, in the larger sense, will be served: Law has a very pronounced procedural element, and often adherence to legal procedure produces an unjust result. Legalities have a way of blurring truth, and a ”legal truth” is whatever the law may or may not find to be true, nothing more and nothing less. Upholding the law often causes a contravention of justice – an unfortunate but all-too-familiar scenario, even given the best intentions.

The word for justice is tzedek, and this word is closely related to tzedaka, often translated as “charity,” as well as tzadik (or tzadeket)–- for lack of a better translation, a righteous person. Tzedek is not related to procedure; it concerns itself with results. The “righteous person” who always fails in their attempts to help, may not be all that righteous – they are merely good intentioned.

This week’s Parasha is aptly called Shoftim, judges. Both the word and the general concept are direct derivatives of the word mishpat, as both the word and the concept lie at the core of the justice system. It is here that the Torah commands us to install judges, and a justice system, in our cities:

Appoint judges and officers of the law for your tribes in all your settlements that the Almighty your God is giving you, and make sure that they administer honest judgment (tzedek) for the people. Do not bend justice and do not give special consideration [to anyone]. Do not take bribes, since bribery makes the wise blind and perverts the words of the righteous. Tzedek tzedek tirdof - Pursue perfect tzedek (or, constantly and relentlessly pursue tzedek), so that you will live and occupy the land that the Almighty your God is giving you. (Dvarim 16:18-20)

The language Moshe uses in these verses is complex, nuanced, even slightly opaque, and not simply because he was waxing poetic. The juxtaposition of the roots of mishpat and tzedek conveys a strong message to the careful reader: In and of itself, the creation of a legal system does not guarantee a just outcome. Appointing judges – even honest, upstanding judges – is not enough. We must do more than uphold the law and insure the proper functioning of the legal system: Our society must be one in which the quest for justice is both constant and uncompromising.

Judaism’s quest for justice goes back to its very earliest roots, to our patriarch Avraham. His behavior both in the interpersonal and the religious spheres share the pursuit of tzedek as their guiding principle. Thus, Avraham gets involved in a war between four kings and five opposing kings, and pursues them (the word to describe Avraham’s activity is the same root as the word that appears in our current parashah, tirdof) to a place called Dan (which means judgment). Avraham’s involvement in the geopolitical machinations of the kings had one overarching purpose: the pursuit of tzedek (see Bereishit 14:14).

The pursuit of tzedek is more than just an admirable trait; it is, in fact, the bedrock of the nation that God promised would emerge from Avraham and Sarah. In fact, the pursuit of tzedek is part and parcel of the promise itself:  

God said, 'Shall I hide from Avraham what I am going to do? Avraham is about to become a great and mighty nation, and through him, all the nations of the world will be blessed. I know him for he will command his children and his household after him, and they will keep God's way, doing tzedaka and mishpat. God will then bring about for Avraham everything He promised.  (Bereishit 18:19)

Avraham is informed that he and Sarah would have a son; there will be continuity, a nation will emerge that will carry forward into the world the great messages that Avraham and Sarah had worked so hard to spread. These verses offer us a rare glimpse into “God’s thoughts.” He tells us why Avraham was chosen, and, by extension, why Avraham’s descendants are the “Chosen People:” Avraham’s dedication to kindness and acts of charity (hesed and tzedaka) is coupled with a simultaneous dedication to justice (mishpat) - and the combination of these elements is tzedek - justice. God knows that Avraham will instill these values in his descendants. 

Incredibly, in the very same verse in which God reveals this decision and its motivation, Avraham displays a stunning example of his commitment to true justice – justice that combines mishpat and tzedek (and, perhaps, his commitment to hesed as well). Avraham hears, directly from God, that Sodom and Amorah will be eradicated because their society has become so corrupt, so wicked, that its continued existence is unjustifiable. We would do well to recall that Sodom was the antithesis of everything Avraham stood for, yet he does something that is almost unthinkable: He challenges God, and accuses Him of injustice! But it is precisely this challenge which illustrates what God already knew, and why Avraham was chosen: Rather than applauding the eradication of an evil society that was the antithesis of his own life’s work, Avraham argues that this form of justice is only partial: Real justice – certainly Divine Justice, should not have “collateral damage.” God must have the capacity, Avraham argued, to mete out tzedek for both the wicked and the righteous.

Sadly, there were not nearly as many righteous people (tzadikim) to be found as Avraham imagined. Apparently, this is another trait of the righteous: They do not think they are special. They believe there are many others like themselves. That is what happens when you judge people favorably. Avraham came to learn what God already knew: Sodom did not have 50 or 45, or 40 or 30 or 20 or even 10 righteous people. Avraham was unique. Had the people of Sodom been told that Avraham and his family were to be killed, we suspect that no protest would have been raised. Business would have carried on as usual. Perhaps they may even have enjoyed a sense of satisfaction upon hearing that Avraham, and all he stood for, would no longer be a nuisance to their way of life.

God Himself attests that Avraham’s uncompromising pursuit of tzedek will be passed on to his descendants, and in Parashat Shoftim we are commanded to bring to fruition this element of our spiritual DNA: We must create a system of courts and judges, but we must go beyond the constraints of legalism. We must nurture and develop our deep desire, our need, for justice. We must pursue justice; we must aspire to the perfect justice that Avraham saw with clarity: Tzedek tzedek tirdof.

For a more in-depth analysis see:
  

Echoes of Eden