Karl Marx, you are right.

Karl Marx once famously wrote :

Religion is the sigh of the oppressed creature, the heart of a heartless world, and the soul of soulless conditions. It is the opium of the people.

Rabbi Aron Moss has this response (See here for the article

Question
I think religion is a crutch. G-d is for the weak and the needy. Don't you have the independence to get through life on your own?

Answer
You're right. Religion is a crutch, a sign of human weakness. And to be honest, religion is not my only crutch. I am so weak, I need a whole array of support mechanisms to prop me up and keep me going.

I need food. As embarrassing as it is to admit, I am totally dependant on eating. Without food, I would probably not have the strength to do much at all. My body
We need to be fed, we need to be loved and we need shoes.
does not nourish itself. It needs outside help. So I eat.

I have an emotional crutch too. I need other people. If it weren't for the support of my family and friends I certainly wouldn't be where I am today. And while we are on the subject, I am also quite dependent on my shoes. My feet would be really sore without them.

The human is a fragile being. We are not self-sufficient. We depend on external sources for our survival. We need to be fed, we need to be loved and we need shoes. I thank G-d every day, for it is He who provides me with food, family and footwear.

But above all, I thank Him for giving my life purpose. Just as I can't nourish myself without resorting to the outside, I can't give my life real meaning without seeking beyond myself.

Maybe that makes me weak. But I think it gives me strength. Even if I'm hungry, lonely or barefoot, as long as I have Divine purpose, I can face any challenge.

 

A great picture

From the The Brisker Rav (By Shimon Yosef Meller)

Chabad Theology – The nature of the Soul

The following is from the book "Kabbalah and Meditations for the Nations" by Rabbi Yitzchak Ginsburgh

The nature of the soul

In order to understand why God gave these seven specific commandments – the Laws of Bnei Noach – to all humanity, we must first briefly explain how the human soul functions.

The human soul has both a Divine and a physical, or animal aspect. In Hebrew these are referred to as the Divine soul (nefesh Elokit) and the animal soul (nefesh behamit) as defined in the Tanya, by the Chassidic Master, Rabbi Shneur Zalman of Liadi. All human beings posses a Divine spark. The difference between one human and another lies in the extent to which the spark has entered and plays an active role in his or her psyche. (We use the term “physche” to refer to both the conscious and unconscious planes of the soul).

When the spark fully enters the psyche it is known as a Divine soul. And so we speak of Jews as possessing a Divine soul. With regard to a non-Jew, the Divine spark hovers above the psyche (not entering it even on the unconscious plane). A righteous gentile (that is, a non-Jew who fulfils the seven laws of Bnei Noach) is one who senses the presence of the Divine spark and is inspired by it to walk along the path of God fitting for all people as outlined in the Torah. On the other hand, a non-Jew who has not yet become a righteous gentile is unaware of the Divine spark hovering above.

To use the language of Chassidut, the Divine spark (or soul) of a Jew is considered an inner light (or pnimi), meaning that it is directly experienced and makes for part of his or her psychological makeup. The righteous gentile’s non Jew’s spark of Divinity is described as a “closely surrounding light” (or makif karov), meaning that it is psychologically experienced only indirectly. The Divine spark of a non-Jews who are not considered righteous gentiles is akin to a “distantly surrounding light” (or makif rachok), meaning that it plays no conscious role in that person’s experience as a human being.

Even in this third case, due to the refinement of character that results from life’s trials and tribulations, and due to the Divinely ordained meetings between non-Jews and Jews which introduce the beauty of the Torah to the non-Jew, the “distant” spark may grow “closer” and the “close” spark may even desire to convert to Judaism. It is because of this latent potential innate in every non-Jew that we speak of all non-Jews as possessing a Divine spark. Indeed all of God’s creations are continuously brought into being by means of a Divine spark, but, only a human being, even if born a non-Jew, is able to convert in his present lifetime and become a Jew.

(Kabbalah and Meditations of the Nations, Chapter 3 “The Mystical Symbolism of the Seven Laws of Bnei Noach, pg 55-56)

Haskama for Steinsaltz Edition of Talmud by Rav Moshe Feinstein

Hat tip to Ishim Vshitot

Oath to Sin (Part 1)

There was a recent post on the Hirhurim blog entitled “Swearing in Court ” that got me contemplating some contemporary usage of "oaths" in our religion. Off the cuff here are a couple of interesting items that I have come up with:

•    The famous “Three Oaths” are a major corner stone of the theological debate between those who support and those who oppose the establishment of the medina. (See the discussion in Rav Shlomo Aviner's "Do not ascend like a wall ")

•    Using oaths as a mechanism of creating “mitzvahs” to solve issues of egalitarianism. [See the post “Voluntary Obligations ” where Prof Joel Roth proposes that oaths can be used by woman to give them the same halachic obligations and rights as men]

However it got me thinking, can Oaths be used to create obligations to sin? As a case in point, what of the episode of Jepthah and his daughter?

29 Then the spirit of the LORD came upon Jephthah, and he passed over Gilead and Manasseh, and passed over Mizpeh of Gilead, and from Mizpeh of Gilead he passed over unto the children of Ammon. 30 And Jephthah vowed a vow unto the LORD, and said: 'If Thou wilt indeed deliver the children of Ammon into my hand, 31 then it shall be, that whatsoever cometh forth of the doors of my house to meet me, when I return in peace from the children of Ammon, it shall be the LORD'S, and I will offer it up for a burnt-offering.' 32 So Jephthah passed over unto the children of Ammon to fight against them; and the LORD delivered them into his hand. 33 And he smote them from Aroer until thou come to Minnith, even twenty cities, and unto Abel-cheramim, with a very great slaughter. So the children of Ammon were subdued before the children of Israel. 34 And Jephthah came to Mizpah unto his house, and, behold, his daughter came out to meet him with timbrels and with dances; and she was his only child; beside her he had neither son nor daughter. 35 And it came to pass, when he saw her, that he rent his clothes, and said: 'Alas, my daughter! thou hast brought me very low, and thou art become my troubler; for I have opened my mouth unto the LORD, and I cannot go back.' 36 And she said unto him: 'My father, thou hast opened thy mouth unto the LORD; do unto me according to that which hath proceeded out of thy mouth; forasmuch as the LORD hath taken vengeance for thee of thine enemies, even of the children of Ammon.' 37 And she said unto her father: 'Let this thing be done for me: let me alone two months, that I may depart and go down upon the mountains, and bewail my virginity, I and my companions.' 38 And he said: 'Go.' And he sent her away for two months; and she departed, she and her companions, and bewailed her virginity upon the mountains. 39 And it came to pass at the end of two months, that she returned unto her father, who did with her according to his vow which he had vowed; and she had not known man. And it was a custom in Israel, 40 that the daughters of Israel went yearly to lament the daughter of Jephthah the Gileadite four days in a year.

(Judges Chapter 11, verses 29 – 40)

Another example, is this din in the Mishna Torah (Hilchot Shavuot 5:17). "If a man swore to harm himself, eg he swore to wound himself, even though it is not permissible to wound oneself, if he did not harm himself, he is guilty because of Shavuat Bituy". 

The above scenarios seem to create a "Catch 22". On the one hand you made an oath to do x, but on the other hand that x is a sin. Quite clearly killing your daughter or harming yourself is sin. So how can it take effect? Also how would a person get out of it? Imagine going to the beis din and saying "Rabbis I made an oath to kill my daughter, but had I known its a sin I wouldn't have done it" – Muttar lach, muttar lach, muttar lach, they all respond. It just seems quite ridiculous. Any thoughts from some of the more learned readers?

To be continued….

 

Tikkun: Peace among mankind

Orthodox Jews & African American’s Picnic Together At Crown Heights Unity Fair

1st Precinct Community Council hosted its 15th annual Family Day Picnic Sunday at Lefferts Park, bringing together all the residents of Crown Heights to a fun and family-oriented event.

The event started with a parade along Empire Boulevard, culminating in a picnic in Lefferts Park in Crown Heights.

Entertainment included diverse acts from local elementary public schools, Jewish Hasidic rappers, and a puppeteer telling a story about “How the Elephant Got Its Trunk.”

The children also enjoyed arts and crafts, face painting, moon bounces, horseback rides for children and a Kosher BBQ.

See here for the article and pictures

Musical Interlude: The Crystal Method feat Matisyahu – Drown In The Now

New release by Matisyahu – interesting film clip. Enjoy!

Tikkun: Ordination renewed at Hildesheimer Yeshiva

(IsraelNN.com) For the first time in over 70 years, two rabbinical students were ordained at a German seminary that was closed by the Nazis in 1938. Zsolt Balla and Avraham Radbil received their ordination at the Hildesheimer Rabbinical Seminary in Berlin on Tuesday.

 See here for the full story

Chabad Theology: Conversations with R’Tzvi Freeman On Tanya (Part II)

See here for Part 1. What follows is my response to the email and then R'Tzvi Freeman's reply

========

Rabbi Freeman,

Thanks for your response, it was most thoughtful. Your answer satisfies me on one level, but still leaves with more questions.

1) I found a letter online from the Rebbe on this issue {http://www.sichosinenglish.org/books/letters-rebbe-1/53.htm}. The letter is essentially a whole list of references to books that I do not have. Is the Rebbe basically giving the same answer that you gave?

2) This is a topic that has bothered me before, below is an excerpt from a letter I wrote to someone (unfortunately I never received a response from them). If you could respond to this part of the letter I would be most appreciative. Essentially the real issue is not so much about the ideological / theological underpinnings of how we view the gentile (althought very important), but how this attitude gets manifested in our daily behaviour and in our halachic practice. If you could provide me an answer to this question, in reference to the issues raised below, I will be eternally grateful.

"The issue of the gentile and the "other" in our religion (whether ideas, philosophies, religions, "mada") strikes a very sharp painful cord in my heart. The severe contrast between the the ethical maxisms "Man is created in G-d's image'", "Love your neighbour as yourself" and as eloquently put by the Prophet Micah "He has told you, O man, what is good, and what the Lord demands of you; but to do justice, to love loving-kindness, and to walk discreetly with your God" and the laws relating to the gentile are very very differcult to reconcile. No one put it better than Rabbi Yaakov Yechiel Weingberg "The Seridei Aish"in a letter to a friend  (source Torah U Maddah article by Marc Shapiro)

"The spiritual state in all circles brings sadness and hopelessness. I have bitter thoughts about the very existence of the nation an its hope for the future. The entire world hates us. We assume that this hatred is due to the wickedness of the nations and no one stops to think that perhaps we also bear some guilt. We regard all the nations as similiar to an ass. It is forbidden to save a gentile, it is forbidden to offer him free medical treatment, it is forbidden to violate the sabbath to save his life, his sexual intercourse does not render a woman forbidden to her husband according to R. Tam because "their issue is like the issue of horses". Can the nations resign themselves to such deprivations of rights? It is permitted to deceive a gentile and cancel his debt as well as forbidden to return his lost object. What can we do? Can we uproot our torah teaching with apologetic formulae or clever deceptions. God knows that I have written this the blood of my heart, the blood of my soul.

Also:

"Does not their Talmud say, and do not their rabbis write, that it is no sin to kill if a Jew kills a heathen, but it is a sin if he kills a brother in Israel? It is no sin if he does not keep his oath to a heathen. Therefore, to steal and rob, as they do with their usury, from a heathen is a divine service. For they hold that they cannot be too hard on us nor sin against us, because they are of the noble blood and circumcised saints; we, however, are cursed goyim. And they are the masters of the world, and we are their servants, yea, their cattle…

"Should someone think that I am saying too much, I am not saying too much, but much too little. For I see in their writings how they curse us goyim and wish us all evil in their schools and their prayers.
"Martin Luther, 1543 "Von den Juden und Ihren Lugen"

(For actual sources of laws against gentiles see websites www.talkreason.org under Historical notes and counter apologetics, the website www.come-and-hear.com and Jewish History, Jewish Religion: The Weight of Three Thousand Years by Israel Shahak)

No non jew today fulfiles the criteria of the Rambam (well 99.99% at least) to be considered a bnei noach so the majority of the non jewish population is not up there (exception maybe meiri and the tiferet yisrael who would hold different). But what about the hindu, the buddist, and members of any other religion, is there no salvation for them at the end of the tunnel after all there hard years of work, faith and devotion, do they not all suffer have moments of happiness have families, etc? I think a comment by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle summarises my position in the story entitled, "The Adventure of the Veiled Lodger. It is about a woman who always wears a veil over her face because she was horribly disfigured by a lion. Upon hearing her story, Holmes exclaimed, "Poor girl! Poor girl! The ways of fate are indeed hard to understand. If there is not some compensation hereafter, then the world is a cruel jest."

Regards,

Rael Levinsohn
Sydney, Australia

 

=========

 

My apologies once again for taking so long. I managed to steal some time now and push this out. It may sound a little disjointed considering that I wrote it piecemeal whenever I could grab a moment. But your comments will certainly be welcomed:
—-
Rael,

1. Whatever I wrote, I gleaned from the Rebbe's writings, but in my own style and words. Originality of thought is not my forte.

A common theme in the Rebbe's writing on the subject is that everything that exists is vitalized by a divine spark. Nothing is inherently evil, other than the temporary form it takes on.  When we say that a soul or an animal or an act receives its vitality from "the powers of tuma"–we don't mean that tuma gives life to anything. Tuma, evil and such are no more than artifacts of the concealment of the Divine life that flows into each thing.

(This idea is really inherent in the teachings of the Arizal and it is remarkable that Leibniz, who was well-acquainted with such when he wrote his Theodicy, was unable to accept this.)

2. I also read this quote from the Sridei Aish and it struck a chord with me. I believe this is a tempestuous struggle that every thinking Jew who identifies with our mesorah must face head on.

First, a few crucial quick points. I wish I had time for more, but I am forced to be terse by the restraints of time:

a. The Rambam seems to consider Moslems to be Bnei Noach. My Rosh Hakollel, Rav Izac Schwei, olov hasholom, told us clearly that we must consider the typical non-Jew in Canada/US today a BN. Which means, he said, that we are commanded to sustain his life and provide him a job and medicine if needed.

b. The educated, thinking Hindus I am familiar with are monotheists. So are many of the Buddhists, if we define the term loosely enough. Those who are not educated are not truly ovdei avodah zara—they are just blindly following traditions.
I am not a rav and Halacha is not my forte, however I have been told such by several rabbonim.

c. Luther's comment: Aside from the untruths concerning the sin of murder, etc., I am reminded of one of the vichuchim of the medieval period. After the priest proudly displayed that their Christian universal ethics were so superior to the ethics of the Jew, the Jew lashed back admonishing the Christians that, yes, perhaps your ideals are very great–but what of them do you keep? When you see a stranger, he accuses, you rob him of the shirt off his back and leave him dead in the forest. We, on the other hand, feed the starved, clothe the naked and welcome the stranger, whether he be Jew or stranger.

And this is the fact: Look at reality, not theory, and you will see that there is no people as tolerant, giving and compassionate as our own. Who fought for American Civil Rights? Who joined the Peace Corps? Who built all these hospitals in America and Canada, along with so many of the other charitable institutions?

An elderly chossid I know told of his experience in a forced labor camp in Siberia. He was wilting away in the camp's hospital, suffering malnutrition and exposure when he heard the pleas from the bed next to his. It was a "Subotnik" (I believe those are something like Dukobours) and he was pleading for water. Without a thought, the chossid gave him his ration of water.

When I heard the story, not being much of a chossid myself, I naively asked, "Is that the halacha?" The reply? "Probably not. But it's hard to do otherwise."

As they say, in theory there is no difference between theory and practice–but in practice there is. (See also my article at this site on slavery for the Rambam on this– http://www.chabad.org/ 305549). I think what concerns both of us foremost is practice, not theory.

d. We can reduce the Arizal's presentation of the matter to the following: The human being is essentially Divine. However, at present, the vast majority of humanity is stuck in a destructive modality that is completely out of synch with his purpose of being and in acrimony with the entire Creation. The exceptions are those "righteous gentiles" who are keeping the Noahide code and Jews at the time that they are not involved in acts forbidden by the Torah.

Concerning the first part of this summary, I believe I wouldn't have much trouble getting a lot of social workers, psychologists, environmentalists, etc. to immediately agree. Personally, I would like to believe that things are not as hopeless as all this sounds. That perhaps now, 500 years after the Reformation and with the universal acceptance of values of peace, equality, human dignity and social responsibility, the human race has become more liberated than in the Arizal's times–certainly more than in Talmudic times.

And perhaps they are. In his last years, the Rebbe stated often, "Esau has been purified. Even the gentile world is ready for moshiach."

But then, why is it that when you gather together the representatives of all the nations of the world into one building, their entire preoccupation is with condemning Israel? Why does the bigotry persist? Why can’t anti-Semitism go away? The Rebbe saw the big picture. Sadly, from our perspective, the Ruach haTuma still covers the earth.

Am I satisfied with this? Problem is, I am not. The struggle between the philanthropist within me and the empiricist—that I can settle with my reading of the Arizal. To some degree, it helps with my reading of chazal, as well. However, I also need a concept of progress and adaptation in Torah. I can’t accept that I should have the same attitude as we ascribe to the Tannaim who lived in the Roman era.

I addressed this issue of adaptation and change in two articles. One, the piece on slavery which I referred to above. Another is my article on “Women in the Synagogue” http://www.chabad.org/ 444101

Something I didn’t write into those articles: It strikes me that we Jews tend to think of books as more real than people. What I mean is that if the Rambam would walk into the room and start arguing with a typical rosh yeshiva, he would probably ask one of his talmidim to “bring me the Rambam.” It doesn’t matter that the Rambam is standing in front of him—the real Rambam is the book. Just as the real Moshe Rabenu is not the flesh and blood tzadik who lived 3300 years ago, but the Moshe Rabenu who appears every week in the Torah we read in shul.

What I mean to bring out from this is that, in concert with the post-moderns, to us, the word—and therefore the interpretation—is everything. And this it turns out is a very powerful mechanism to adaptation. It means that we do not have to concern ourselves with the original intent of the authors, whether they be rishonim or tannaim. Our concern is with the meaning of the text. That’s where we believe Hashem’s Divine Spirit rests, as the Beis Yosef would write, “This is the mishna speaking in my mouth.” Or as the prophet said, “The spirit of Hashem speaks within me and His words are on my tongue.”

I am saying that we are permitted to reinterpret chazal as time progresses and as the people around us begin to conform to the morals they have gleaned from our Torah. I don’t think this is heresy—I think this is what we have been doing all along.

This all deals with the apparent disgust (and worse) in chazal towards the nations.

Concerning equality: Let me reduce our question to the following: One the one hand, the concept of human equality is rooted in the Torah. On the other hand, our own chazal, not only in theology but in practical Halacha, seem to undermine that equality.

The  response to this is that of R. Eliezer in the Zohar, echoed in the Kuzari: That the entirety of humanity is a single body of which the Jewish people is the heart. The heart, they both continue, is a delicate organ and must be treated differently than say the foot or the hand—or even the liver.

It seems this is an argument against Kant’s categorical imperative which implies a single universal law for all people. Torah certainly does not accept such an axiom. As often stated, equality does equal sameness. Neither does it imply an abandoning of protocol.

I’m dropping off here simply because if I don’t, I never will. I’m interested in your comments on the above. Perhaps these will help me better clarify the issue for myself.

———-
Let me know if this helps. Don't forget to use the link above to get back to me.

— Rabbi Tzvi Freeman for Chabad.org
______________________________

____________________
"Every person counts"

 

Chabad Theology: Psak of R’Shlomo Aviner on placing letter in Igros Kodesh

Q: When some Chabad Chasidim have a question, they open the Rebbe's collection of letters and find the answer on that page. Isn't this prohibited on account of "consulting the dead" (Devarim 18:11) or "Do not engage in sorcery" (Vayikra 19:26)?

 
A: The commentators of the Shulchan Aruch (Yoreh Deah 179:4) mention that it is permissible to open a holy book and find an answer, and this is even called a "minor prophecy" (see Shach ibid.). This means that there is no prohibition. There is a similar method of opening the Tanach, and locating verses which answer particular questions. This is called "Goral Ha-Gra" – the lottery of the Vilna Gaon. There is the famous story about the Tzadik of Jerusalem – Reb Aryeh Levin – in which he used the "Goral Ha-Gra. During the Israeli War of Independence, a group of thirty-five soldiers was sent to provide additional defense for the Gush Etzion Settlements. All in the group were tragically killed. After the war, the bodies were discovered but the Chief Rabbinate of Israel was unable to identify twelve of the corpses. Reb Aryeh Levin used the Goral Ha-Gra – which involves using a particular format of the Chumash, flipping the pages back and forth until eventually a particular verse is chosen. In each case, the verse chosen clearly identified a fallen soldier with a particular body (See "A Tzaddik in Our Time: The Life of Rabbi Aryeh Levin," pp. 111-117).
 
The "Goral Ha-Gra" was also used by Ha-Rav Aharon Kotler when he wanted to immigrant to Israel from Russia, but Ha-Rav Moshe Feinstein was greatly urging him to come to America in order to strengthen Judaism there. The verse which came out in the "Goral" was "Hashem said to Aharon: Go meet Moshe in the desert" (Shmot 4:27). He understood this to mean: "Hashem said to Aharon" – this was a hint to his name Ha-Rav Aharon Kotler. "Go meet Moshe in the desert" – Go meet Ha-Rav Moshe Feinstein who is in the spiritually desolate desert of America. Ha-Rav Kotler indeed went to America and established the yeshiva in Lakewood, New Jeresy, one of the largest yeshivot in the world today (see the book "Ha-Gaon," p. 1118 by Ha-Rav Dov Eliach). There is therefore no prohibition in acting this way, but that does not mean that it will work. Reb Aryeh Levin and Ha-Rav Aharon Kotler were Torah giants and holy individuals. It depends on who performs it.
 
It is possible to ask any question in the world through the "Igrot Kodesh" but that does not mean that everyone will receive a true answer. Although this is a minor prophecy, not everyone is suited to receive it. Therefore, someone who acts this way does not perform a transgression, but this is not the way of the Torah. If you want to know the answer to a question you have to exert effort or take counsel with a Torah scholar.