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Title:BAGELS and other things of Jewish interest
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Created:Mon Feb 03 1986
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823.0. "In the beginning G-d created Zionism" by BMT::STEINBERG () Sun Nov 05 1989 00:41


SHABBAT SHALOM:  B'raishit 
by Shlomo Riskin

    Efrat, Israel -- Rashi, the 11th century rabbi from Worms, is
considered  the  most  important of all Biblical commentators. In
fact, the first Hebrew book ever  printed  in  1475  was  Rashi's
commentary  on  the Torah. Thus, one could reasonably expect that
when we turn to the  first  Rashi,  we're  not  only  getting  an
explanation  to  questions  raised  by the opening verse, "In the
beginning, G-d created the  heaven  and  the  earth..."  (Genesis
1:1),  but  we're  also  getting  an  entire approach to life, to
Torah, to Israel, to Judaism.
    Rashi asks why the Torah begins  with  the  creation  of  the
world  instead of the first commandment given to the Jews:  "This
month shall be the head month to you." (Exodus 12:1)  The  answer
is,  if  the nations ever accuse Israel of having stolen the land
from the original seven nations who inhabited the land of Canaan,
the  Jews  will then be able to answer that since G-d created the
entire world, He can give portions of it to  those  He  considers
worthy in His eyes.
    Generally, this Rashi evokes two responses -- one affirmative
and one skeptical. Some find in Rashi's words a powerful message,
a script applicable throughout the ages when we are confronted by
our accusers; we can always refer to the first Rashi claiming G-d
gave this land to us. In the beginning, G-d  created  the  heaven
and  earth...and  the Zionist dream. Others find it ironical that
the most universal phrase in the entire Torah -- G-d  as  creator
of  the  universe  --  is  being used for such a particular, even
chauvinistic, message.
    Let us examine Rashi's  words  in  depth.  At  first,  he  is
concerned  that  since  the  Torah  is  the  source  of  the  613
commandments, the significance of law  in  Jewish  life  may  get
buried under so many chapters dealing with remote times. Thus, we
ought to begin with the first commandment to make it  clear  what
the purpose of the Torah is all about.
    But is the Torah, first and foremost, a  book  of  laws?  The
word  Torah itself comes from the root yrh (yud,raish,haih) which
means to teach, or direct.  The Torah is nothing less than life's
direction,  life's  teaching.   And since the body of the text is
called Torah -- by the Torah itself -- and not  "A  Tale  of  613
Commandments"  or  "The  Jewish Book of Laws", it is obvious that
this text was never intended to be only a compilation of do's and
don'ts.  Rather, the Torah is a complete philosophy of life.  And
the first seven words most significantly tell us that there is  a
Creator  of  this  universe;  our  world  is  not  an accident, a
haphazard convergence of chemicals and exploding gases - it is  a
world  with  a  beginning,  and  a  beginning  implies  an end, a
purpose, a reason for being.  Without the creation of heaven  and
earth, could we have survived for an instant?  Our very existence
depends on the Creator, and in return for creating us, He has the
right  to  ask  us  to live in a certain way and follow His laws.
Thus, this first verse in the Torah sets the foundation  for  all
that follows.
    Furthermore, in the opening verse, we see  that  G-d  created
the  entire  world,  and  one of the major themes of the Torah is
that the universe is ruled by one and only one G-d.  This  is  in
contrast to other works of ancient peoples whose annals begin and
end with their own nations (the Greek mythologies or the Egyptian
Book  of  the  Dead).   But in the Torah, twenty generations pass
before we get to Abraham, the first Jew.  The genealogies of Esau
and   Ishmael  are  right  along  side  the  genealogies  of  the
Israelites.  Subsequent books of the Bible, particularly  in  the
Prophets and the Writings, expand the universal realm in Judaism,
stressing such elements as the ancestress of the  future  messiah
having  been  born  a  Moabite,  or  Jonah  being  called upon to
prophesy to  the  Assyrians,  arch-enemy  of  the  Jews.   Wasn't
Jeremiah  thrown  into  prison for speaking G-d's word concerning
the requisite ethical and religious behavior  necessary  to  hold
onto  the land?  It all fits because G-d is ultimately the G-d of
the entire world.
    However, to better understand our Rashi, we should  not  only
look  at  what  he  says,  but  at  what  he doesn't say as well.
Rashi's words are not a blank check to those of us who believe in
Zion.  If we read the words carefully, he doesn't write, "All the
world is G-d's and He gave it to Israel," but  rather,  "All  the
world  is  G-d's  and He gives it to whomever is righteous in His
eyes."
    The seven nations were driven off by the  Israelites  because
they  were  not  morally worthy of staying on the land.  When G-d
informs Abraham that the eventual return of  his  descendants  to
this land will have to wait until the fourth generation "...since
the Amorites' sin will not  have  run  its  course  until  then."
(Gen.15:16),  we  are really being told that the nations who live
there cannot be removed unless they become unworthy of living  on
the land -- they have to commit the full number of sins.  And the
Jews too, will be allowed to live  on  this  land  conditionally,
dependent  upon  their commitment to G-d's Torah.  Otherwise "...
the land will vomit you out." (Lev. 18:25)
    The one promise we can count on is that eventually we will be
worthy  of  the land and it will be returned to us for all times.
This is a promise of the prophets to the Jewish nation  never  to
lose hope; in the end we will become worthy of it.
    In other words, it is not enough to tell the nations that  we
suffered  for  2000  years  culminating in the Holocaust and then
turn around and do what we please in this land.   There  is  only
one  answer  we  can give to the nations:  all the world is G-d's
and  He  gives  and  takes  away  depending   on   the   nation's
righteousness  in  His eyes.  And throughout the Bible, the basic
message is that those who live on the land, since this is a  very
special  land, will have to be worthy of it morally, religiously,
ethically, otherwise we will again be driven into exile.  Indeed,
this  concept is developed by the Ramban (ad locum) who sees this
as the reason why the Genesis chapters include the  tale  of  the
Garden  of  Eden:   the Torah wants us to know that from the very
beginning, built into the very fabric of creation, is the idea of
exile.   Just  as  Adam  and  Eve were exiled from the Garden for
their sin, we Jews will also be  exiled  if  we  prove  ourselves
unworthy of this land.
    Rashi could very well be saying  that  the  creation  of  the
world  and  the creation of the land of Israel are both universal
acts because this is one land whose bounty  will  not  depend  on
might  or  power  or  history alone.  It is a land whose laws are
universal ones -- morality, ethics, justice.  Rashi's answer  may
be  implying  that  the  world was created because of one special
place which will ultimately transform the entire world.
    At first glance, Rashi's answer to the nations appears naive.
After  all,  if they want us off this land, will they really care
about the first verse in Genesis?  Perhaps the deeper message  of
this first Rashi is in the beginning, G-d created the heavens and
the earth, but in the end, when the nations point their  accusing
fingers,  we  will  answer  the  only  answer we can:  this world
belongs to G-d -- G-d can give it to  whomever  He  wants,  which
means,  to  whomever is worthy of it.  If the nations will listen
to us, it will truly mean that we are standing in the doorstep of
redemption.   After  2000 years, we have returned to this land of
Israel.  May it be G-d's will that through our proper actions  we
remain  worthy  of  keeping  it.   According to Rashi, we have no
other choice.

SHABBAT SHALOM!

Copyright Ohr Torah 1989.
This essay is distributed by Kesher --the Jewish Network. For information 
regarding its use, contact the Kesher BBS at 312-940-1696.
 
For more information, call (212)496-1618.
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
823.1Parashat Teruma - Rabbi RiskinSUBWAY::STEINBERGAnacronym: an outdated acronymWed Feb 28 1990 23:20189
    
    
    I haven't reposted Rabbi Riskin's articles from s.c.j lately, mainly
    because they're not posted there in a timely fashion. His expose on
    Teruma arrived on time this week, and I believe it contains a fresh
    and inspiring message. If anyone would like a copy of his articles
    on other weekly portions, please let me know by email.
    
    Jem
    
    
Article 13571 of soc.culture.jewish
Path: riscy.dec.com!shlump.nac.dec.com!decwrl!elroy.jpl.nasa.gov!usc!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!pacific.mps.ohio-state.edu!tut.cis.ohio-state.edu!mailrus!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!utgpu!watserv1!watmath!att!cbnewsk!alu
From: [email protected] (Alan Lustiger)
Newsgroups: soc.culture.jewish
Subject: D'var Torah: Terumah: Rabbi Riskin
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Date: 26 Feb 90 20:21:57 GMT
Reply-To: [email protected] (Alan Lustiger)
Organization: AT&T Engineering Research Center
Lines: 164

SHABBAT SHALOM:  Teruma 
by Shlomo Riskin

        Efrat,  Israel  --  A  word  in  this   week's   portion,
"cherubs", has left a deep mark on western art and consciousness,
rough images of winged, angelic  creatures,  with  the  faces  of
human infants, so that by now, "cherubic" is one of the strongest
superlatives for describing a  beautiful,  exquisite  face.   But
there are more to cherubs than meets the Western eye.

        When we turn to Rashi's comments on the cherubs mentioned
in  this  week's  portion, Teruma, and those mentioned in Genesis
when Adam and Eve are exiled from the Garden of  Eden,  we  find,
amazingly  enough,  virtually contradictory descriptions of these
winged creatures.

        What  do  such  polar  opposites  in  Rashi's  commentary
signify?

        In looking at the  Torah  selections  for  the  last  few
weeks,  we  see  a certain progression.  The Ten Commandments are
given on Sinai, shattering  all  previous  conceptions  of  G-d's
relationship  to  humans.   After  this rarefied concentration of
energy, the  Torah  instructs  the  Jewish  people  in  the  more
familiar  elements of civil and criminal legislation.  This week,
Parshat Teruma, the Torah is ready for the stage  of  creating  a
moveable  Sanctuary until the settling of the Promised Land takes
root and it will be possible to build a permanent Temple in "that
place which G-d will choose".

        In giving shape to the infinite, ritual objects are to be
built,  starting  with  the  Holy  Ark where the Ten Commandments
shall be kept.  The Ark's cover  itself  will  include  a  unique
addition.

        "Make two golden cherubs, numbering them out from the two
ends  of  the ark-cover.  One cherub shall be on one end, and one
cherub on the other.  Make the cherubs  of  one  piece  with  the
ark-cover from the same piece of gold as the cover itself, on its
two ends.  The cherubs will spread their  wings  upward  so  that
their  wings  shield  the  cover...I will commune with you there,
speaking to you from above the ark cover, from  between  the  two
cherubs that are on the Ark of Testimony...(Exodus 25:18-22).

        In  this  week's  portion,  Rashi  tells  us  that  these
hammered figures had the faces of infants.  The Siftei Chachamim,
based on a passage in Tractate Chagiga,  13b,  explains  that  in
Aramic,  the word for child is "rabia", so that the word "kruvim"
(cherubs) is really  composed  of  the  noun,  "rabia"  (infant),
preceded  by  the  letter  "kof", whose linguistic function is to
signal similarity between different objects.  Thus,  "kruvim"  in
this etymology, means "like a child".

        But, if this is so in Exodus,  we  find  the  cherubs  of
Genesis  radically  different.   There we read "So He drove out a
man, and He placed  at  the  east  of  the  Garden  of  Eden  the
Cherubim,  and the flaming sword which turned every way, to guard
the path of the Tree of Life." (Gen. 3:24)

        Obviously, there must be a deeper element going on here.

        I'd like to offer two ways of looking at these  concepts.
If we think about it, an angelic winged creature with the face of
a child must be the prototype  of  a  certain  kind  of  absolute
perfection.   Indeed,  when we gaze upon our own child, even more
than we experience the breathtaking beauty of life just beginning
to  take  on  a  unique  form, we perceive through the infant the
miraculous extension of ourselves into the future.  Just  as  the
cherubs  on  the  Ark  give "shape" top G-d's infinite voice, our
child gives "shape" to the infinity in the human  soul,  for  who
can ever know the potential generations present in the "wings" of
the infant I am holding?   But  this,  Rashi  would  seem  to  be
saying,  can be a double-edged sword.  What happens if the child,
upon growing older, trades in his wings for swords  of  flame  to
become an "angel of destruction".

        No one is born with a perfection-label  attached  to  the
lining.   A  child's  direction  often  depends  on a very simple
factor.  Placed near the Holy Ark, he will become  a  ministering
angel, protecting the Torah.  But, if we put a revolving sword in
his hand, he will become an angel of destruction.

        And  sometimes  it's  not  even  necessary  to  put   the
revolving  sword in his hand.  Since nature abhors a vacuum, it's
not enough that he is not given a Torah education for the  onrush
of  empty  glittering  cultural  artifacts  to take over; lights,
camera, action; faster than a speeding bullet is  the  insatiable
appetite for elegantly destructive toys.

        And Jewish  education  begins  even  before  birth.   The
Talmud  is  filled  with  instructive,  Aggadic  tales  about the
mothers of scholars and tzaddikim recognizing the need to educate
their  children  even  while they were still in their wombs.  The
mother of R. Meir, for example,  came  to  the  Bet  Midrash  the
moment  she  felt  a  stirring  in her womb so that the sounds of
Torah would be part of her child's life from the  very  beginning
of its existence.

        Rashi's teaching is a "thunderous  whisper":  it  emerges
without  spelling  anything out and providing two interpretations
on the same word, forcing us  to  look  deep  into  the  text  to
discover why there is no contradiction.

        The second interpretation emerges out of  the  experience
of  confronting  the  reality of daily life in Israel.  The first
distinction we suggest was based on whether or not the child  was
placed near the Ark.  Now, however, I might offer the possibility
that we are speaking about one and  the  same  child  -  what  is
different is not the location but the occasion.

        Blessed to live in times of peace, our children  will  be
able  to  study Torah and guard the Holy Ark, the true meaning of
the adjective "cherubic".

        But sometimes the children of Israel must take  revolving
swords  into  their hands to protect the Garden of Eden, guarding
the Jewish people and the land of Israel.  These  protectors  are
no  less angels than those sitting above the Holy Ark, only their
mission, for the moment, is different.  Thus, the  image  of  the
child-faced cherub and the flaming swords merge into one.

        Virtually all the students I've taught during the years I
have  lived  in  Israel serve in the army.  As head of a yeshiva,
it's the accepted custom to visit one's former students on  their
bases.

        Recently, I was in Gaza to teach a group of soldiers.   I
arrived  late   at  night  to  give the class. As I approached, I
heard a group of  soldiers  studying,  guns  on  the  side,  some
holding  copies  of  the  Talmud.  They were absorbed in Tractate
Bava Kama, and the person leading the group was a former student.
It  seemed that only yesterday he was running from class to class
in our yeshiva.  Although everyone was in complete gear, it still
looked  as if they were back in high school, gesturing with their
hands, talking with great animation, throwing out  questions  and
answers, the passion of Talmudic logic embracing everyone.

        There are armies where eighteen year olds are turned into
seasoned  vets and hardened toughs, old men with revenge and hate
between their brows.  But these students, by virtue of their love
for  the Torah, were still children, innocent, naive, a mere five
years since their  Bar-Mitzvahs.   Although  they  all  possessed
revolving  "flaming  swords"  with  the  ability  to  destroy  if
necessary, they still seemed to be angelic creatures with  child-
like faces.

        May it be  G-d's  will  that  all  our  children  can  be
ministering  angels   near  the  Holy  Ark  and  that  "...nation
will not lift sword against nation, and mankind  will  not  learn
war any more, and the knowledge of G-d will fill the world as the
waters fill the seas." 

Shabbat Shalom!
 
Copyright Ohr Torah 1990.
This essay is distributed by Kesher --the Jewish Network. 
 
For more information, call (212)496-1618.

-- 
               		Alan Lustiger
    |_ | |             	AT&T Engineering Research Center
     /   |( 		Princeton, NJ
			attmail!alustiger or att!pruxk!alu