A Taste of Torah in honor of Shabbat
from Rabbi Avi Weiss
Parshat Vaetchanan 5760
August 11-12, 2000/11 Av 5760
THE CHALLENGES
OF LIFE IN EXILE
This week's portion presents a grim
forecast of the Jews' fortune. God says that following their entry
into the land of Israel, the Jews would sin resulting in their exile.
The Torah then states: "And there you shall serve gods, the work
of men's hands, wooden stone, which neither see nor hear, nor eat, nor
smell." (Deuteronomy 4:28) This sentence may be descriptive of
further sins the Jewish people would commit once driven out of Israel.
Yet, one could also look at it another way; not as a description of sin, but
as part of the initial punishment Am Yisrael would bear.
Abrabarnel describes the punishment as follows. Once exiled the Jews
would worship idols. Although they would be aware of the false nature
of these idols, they would be forced to serve them in order to protect
themselves and save their lives. To paraphrase Abrabarnel, this is not
mentioned as a sin but a punishment. Despite their recognition in
their hearts of their true God, they would have no choice but to pray to
idols and lie about their true belief, a tortuous punishment indeed.
Biur agrees that the sentence is descriptive of punishment, yet sees the
punishment differently than Abrabarnel. Briur suggests that in exile
we would find ourselves in a foreign culture imbued with a value system
contrary to Torah. To restate Biur, there is no greater punishment
than the soul drowning in the abomination of sin from which one cannot
escape. There is no worse soulful pain and punishment than recognizing
the evil of one's actions but not being able to withdraw-having become so
accustomed to committing this sin (hergel aveirah).
Nechama Leibovitz points out that these
two commentators reflect the challenges of their respective generations.
Abrabarnel lived in Spain in the latter part of the 15th century during the
period of the Spanish Inquisition. It was then that the Catholic
Church demanded that Jews worship their man-god, otherwise they would be
killed. Hence, he sees the punishment here as descriptive of what his
generation was experiencing. At the risk of being killed, Jews had no
choice but to outwardly leave their faith.
Biur of Devarim was Hertz Hamburg who
lived in the 18th century in Western Europe. The challenge of his
generation was the enlightenment which ensnared the Jewish people and caused
rampant assimilation. The threat was not physical but spiritual.
For Biur, our Torah speaks of Jew who leave the faith, not because
their lives are threatened, but because they have been swept up in the
temper of the times.
In Truth, Abrabarnel and Biur speak of the physical and spiritual tasks that
we face throughout history. What both of these challenges have in
common is the promise which immediately follows in the text that somehow
against all odds we would extricate ourselves from that exile and return to
God-in fulfillment of God's covenant with the Jewish people. As the
Torah states, "and from there you will seek the Lord your God."
(Deuteronomy 4:29)
The season of Tisha B'Av not only commemorates our being forced into exile,
but it forces us to focus on the low points and tragedies we have
experienced as a people in the diaspora. With this seasonal backdrop,
the challenges brought forth in this parsha become frighteningly clear.
And so, the Torah gives us a most appropriate reading for Shabbat Nahamu,
the Shabbat of comfort-a portion that describes reality, yet emerges with
the promise of seeking out God and returning to a path of connection and
holiness.
Shabbat Shalom!
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Rabbi Avi Weiss, Hebrew Institute of Riverdale
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