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Shmini 5766
By Rabbi Dr. Barry Leff
www.neshamah.net
Congregation B’nai
Israel
Toledo,
OH
Is it possible for a
human being to understand Divine justice?
In this week’s Torah
reading, Aaron’s sons, Nadav and Avihu, are killed by God for a seemingly
minor infraction.
The Torah tells us that
each of them took his incense pan, put fire and incense in it, and offered
aish zarah, strange fire, before the Lord. They offered
something that had not been commanded or requested. Not necessarily
something that they had been specifically told NOT to bring. But they
did something they shouldn’t have. And what was the penalty for this
act of volunteerism?
“And there went out fire
from the Lord, and devoured them, and they died before the Lord.”
This is one of those
many troubling passages in the Torah. How does the punishment fit the
crime?
Punishment that seems
beyond any logical measure is an issue we grapple with on a holiday that
begins Monday night: Yom Hashoah, Holocaust Remembrance Day. This
week’s Torah portion, Shmini, often falls right around Yom Hashoah, and this
has led several commentators to observe a similarity between the parsha and
Yom Hashoah: like Nadav and Avihu, many of the six million Jews who perished
in the Shoah were consumed by fire.
But I would suggest the
real similarity between parshat Shmini and the Shoah is NOT the fire –
rather it is the theological challenge to our sense of justice. Nadav
and Avihu did not do anything that seems to merit a death sentence.
Neither did the Jews who perished in the Shoah. Both this week’s
parsha and the remembrance of the Shoah challenge our understanding of God’s
justice.
Many of the rabbinic
commentators on this week’s parsha go looking for additional sins that Nadav
and Avihu had committed which add to the severity of their crime. Some
say that they were too eager to take over from Moses and Aaron, that they
were plotting against the leadership. Others say, based on the fact
that a warning to priests to stay away from wine or strong drink before
serving in the Temple comes right after the account of their deaths, that
they were drunk when they were offering this “strange fire,” and that was
their crime.
No one has tried to say
that the victims of the Shoah were sinners—at least, not in this life.
However there are those who say they were sinners in previous lives.
In September 2000, while I was living in Israel, former Sephardi Chief Rabbi
Ovadiah Yosef created a huge stir when he gave a sermon in which he said
"The six million Jews, all those poor people who were lost at the hands of
those evil ones, the Nazis, may their names be blotted out - was it all for
nothing? No. This was all the reincarnation of earlier souls, who sinned and
caused others to sin and did all sorts of forbidden acts. They returned in
reincarnation in order to set things right, and received, those poor people,
all those torments and troubles and deaths under which they were killed in
the Holocaust. They were all reincarnated souls. This is not the first time
in their lives that their souls have appeared. They came to do
atonement for their sins."
What Rav Yosef said is
perfectly in keeping with teachings from the Jewish mystical tradition,
Kabbalah, which does hold with reincarnation and the idea of a later life
atoning or fixing something that went wrong in an earlier life. But
the idea of saying that there was that level of sin among the victims is
completely abhorrent. There was a huge public outcry in Israel against
this very hurtful teaching of Rabbi Yosef.
The Holocaust forces us
to reexamine our theology. Richard Rubenstein – a Conservative rabbi,
scholar, and former university President wrote “The thread uniting God and
man, heaven and earth, has been broken. We stand in a cold, silent,
unfeeling cosmos, unaided by any purposeful power beyond our own resources.
After Auschwitz, what else can a Jew say about God?” As you’ll see, I
disagree with my distinguished colleague and I still believe in a God Who
cares, despite Auschwitz. But Rabbi Rubinstein’s book “After
Auschwitz,” published in 1966, was one of the earliest scholarly works to
point out that the Shoah forces us to examine what we believe.
There is a long standing
tradition in the Jewish tradition to blame ourselves for disasters that come
our way. The Talmud says that when Nebuchadnezzar destroyed the Temple
the first time, in the 6th century BCE, he was “the rod of God,”
punishing the Jews for their lapsing into idol worship and abandoning the
ways of God.
When the Romans
destroyed the
Temple a second
time a bit over 600 years later, the rabbis didn’t see a level of sin that
would have justified such a punishment. So they developed the idea we
talk about on Tisha b’Av, that the Temple was destroyed because of sinat
chinam, because of gratuitious hatred between Jews.
I don’t think I could
have a personal relationship with a God who would use the Nazis as a tool
for punishing Jews who had sinned in an earlier life. I wouldn’t want
to have anything to do with such a God. How could I possibly pray to a
God who would do such a thing? How could I possibly rely on such a
God? How could I call God my fortress, or my rock, my savior?
Instead, I take comfort
in the theology of Maimonides. Rambam said there are three kinds of
evil or suffering in the world. The first are bad things that happen
as a side effect of the way God created the world – this would include
things like earthquakes and cancer. The second type of evil is the
evil people do to each other—like wars and murder. The third type of
evil are bad things people do to themselves – abusing drugs, eating too
much, etc.
So for Rambam, the evil
of the Holocaust is a by-product of free will. God does not create
evil. This kind of evil happens because God gave us this wonderful
incredible gift of free will, which gives us the opportunity to choose.
Sadly, too many people choose to follow an evil, wicked path, and hurt or
kill other people.
This does not mean that
the good guys bear no responsibility at all – I think the rabbis of old were
on to something important when they sought meaning in disasters. But I
think we have to understand the connection more metaphorically than
directly.
When we say the Temple
was destroyed the second time because of baseless hatred between Jews, in a
way that very well may be an accurate statement. Not in the sense that
the story of Kamtza and Bar Kamtza would have it, that baseless hatred led
to someone turning someone else in to the Roman authorities and so on.
But rather on a historical basis: there was a huge amount of distrust –
perhaps even hatred – between opposing camps among the Jews in the days of
the revolt against Rome. The zealots insisted on trying to take on the
Roman government; many other, wiser heads, thought that was a bad idea.
There was no unity within the Jewish community. There were many
different sects and groups, each with their own ideas on what to do.
Perhaps if there had been greater unity among the Jewish people at the time,
calmer heads would have prevailed and the revolt would never have happened
and the Temple would never have been destroyed.
Hitler succeeded because
no one stopped him. Not the millions of Germans who accepted his
demands for blind obedience – Goerring said “I have no personal conscience;
Adolf Hitler is my only conscience.” And not the British, whose Prime
Minister Neville Chamberlain kept thinking the Nazis would be content with
Austria—or
Poland, or Czechoslovakia. Not even the Americans. We all
remember
America’s
role in beating the Nazis. Less remembered is that two days after
Britain, France, Australia and New Zealand declared war on Germany in
September, 1939, the United States declared itself neutral. It took
another two years before the United States decided to enter the fray – in
September, 1941, American ships and planes started firing on German war
vessels. Three months later the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor – and a
few days after that, Germany declared war on the United States. How might
history have turned out differently if
America
had joined the war in 1939 instead of in 1941? How many millions of
lives might have been saved?
One of my teachers from
rabbinical school, Dr. Zev Garber, says “The message of the Shoah for the
generation after and for future generations is not survival alone.
There is something more important than survival, and that is preventing
moral bankruptcy.” As long as children anywhere in the world are being
taught to be morally bankrupt, to blindly follow demagogues into the
cesspool of hate, our children’s and grandchildren’s future is not secure.
In this analysis, the
sinners aren’t the people who died – it’s the people who lived, and didn’t
stop Hitler. People who would judge those who perished – like Rabbi
Yosef – should perhaps instead be judging themselves and the ones who didn’t
take action to stop what was going on in Germany in the 1930s.
Hitler, of course, was
not the first one to kill Jews. But Hitler had a frightening new
twist.
In the past, when Jews
were persecuted, they were generally offered a way out at the same time:
convert. When Ferdinand and Isabella took control in Spain, they
offered the Jews three choices: convert, leave, or die. Most left,
some converted, a few died.
In medieval Europe, the
oppressors were continually trying to get the Jews to convert to
Christianity. Some Jews took the easy way out and converted. But most
Jews refused. The majority were proud to be Jews, and they insisted on
staying Jewish, sometimes even dying rather than eat a piece of pork.
Hitler’s twist was to
take the conversion option away. He didn’t care what you believed.
If you had a Jew too close in your family tree you were destined for the gas
chambers. Even people who had converted to Christianity – or whose
parents had converted to Christianity – were killed for being “Jewish.”
For someone to die
rather than convert is a death that we call a “Kiddush Hashem,” a
sanctification of God’s name. The people that the Nazis murdered
weren’t even given the opportunity to die a death of Kiddush Hashem.
They weren’t given any choice. The ones who would have converted to
Christianity died right next to the ones who would have chosen to die rather
than to let a piece of pork touch their lips. The dignity of being
able to give one’s life for Kiddush Hashem was taken away from the poor
unwilling martyrs of the Shoah.
This is one reason to
prefer using the Hebrew term Shoah over the Greek-derived term Holocaust.
Holocaust is the Greek word for a burnt-offering, a sacrifice that was
completely burned on the altar. Shoah, on the other hand, means
“catastrophe,” or “calamity.” The victims of the Shoah did not
willingly offer themselves as sacrifices, as the Midrash says Isaac offered
himself when Abraham raised the knife to take his life. Willing or not
they were killed. They weren’t given a choice.
There is no
theologically satisfactory answer to the issues raised by the Shoah.
After all, even if we say that evil comes from people, there have been times
when God has chosen to intervene miraculously to save us. Just last
week we told the story of the Exodus at Passover, when God redeems a bunch
of powerless slaves from mighty Egypt; the Maccabees defeated the far more
powerful Seleucids; many hold that Israel’s victory over the Arab armies in
1948 and 1967 was also nothing short of miraculous. How does God
choose when a situation deserves a miracle and when it doesn’t?
There are those who say
that the Shoah was the price we paid for the State of Israel. In the
decision of the Knesset to establish the 27th of Nisan as The Day
of the Shoah and Ghetto Revolt Remembrance Day, Mordecai Norouk, in the name
of the House Committee of the Knesset said “perhaps by the merit of their
blood spilled like water, we achieved a state and the beginning of
redemption.”
But somehow tying
together the Holocaust and the State of Israel—with the implication of
suffering and reward—is also unsatisfying on many levels. Who asked
the six million—who asked us?—if it was worth the price?
There are some
theological questions that we can wrestle with and wrestle with but can
never come up with a completely satisfying solution. When we wear
ourselves out from trying to make sense of the senseless, the only response
we are left with is the same response that Aaron had when he was told of the
death of his sons.
Vayidom Aharon.
And Aaron was
silent.
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