April 25, 2024
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The Jewish Obsession: Parshat Devarim/Shabbat Chazon

The popular media often accuses the Jewish people of an obsession. Some accuse us good-humoredly of an obses­sion with food. Others maliciously accuse us of being obsessed with money. I agree that there is a Jewish obsession. I maintain that it is justice with which we are obsessed.

I define an obsession as an idea that dom­inates our thinking even when there are other important concerns that we need to address. Thus, the person who is truly obsessed with a particular idea cannot ignore that idea even when he is busy working, playing, or attend­ing to other personal needs. Naturally, this can reach the stage where the obsession is patho­logical and actually interferes with the neces­sary functions of life. But the Jewish obsession with justice is not at all pathological.

One example of a Jew obsessed with jus­tice is Rabbi Moshe Rivkish, who lived in the late 17th century. His name is certainly not a “household name,” even among individuals who are familiar with the heroes of Jewish his­tory. Students of the codes of Jewish law may know the name of his major work because it adorns the margins of every edition of the Shulchan Aruch. The name of his work is Be’er HaGolah, but not everyone who consults his work regularly knows the author’s identity. Many more are likely to be familiar with the name of his distinguished mov grandson, Rab­bi Elijah, the Gaon of Vilna.

Be’er HaGolah is not a commentary in the usual sense of the word. It is a refer­ence tool, in which the author supplies the sources in the Talmud for the statements found in the code. Occasionally, but rarely, the author allows himself a phrase or brief sentence of commentary. Inevitably, these few comments express Rabbi Moshe’s “ob­session” with justice.

Here is one example of such a com­ment: “I write this for all future genera­tions, because I have seen people who have grown wealthy from monies they derived from cheating non-Jews in business. Ulti­mately, they were unsuccessful and their properties deteriorated so that they left no blessing behind. On the other hand, I have seen many who have sanctified God’s name and returned profits derived from non-Jew­ish customers who mistakenly overpaid for merchandise. Ultimately, they were suc­cessful, became materially wealthy, and left a significant inheritance to their offspring.”

What do we know about the personal con­cerns of this individual who was “obsessed” with justice for non-Jews? Based upon the preface to his work, we learn that he was driv­en, not once but several times, from his home­town of Vilna in Lithuania. Each time, he was a victim of fanatically anti-Semitic non-Jews, and each time he left with just the clothes on his back and his personal diary, forced to abandon all of his possessions, including his painstak­ingly accumulated library of holy books.

His critical personal concerns did not interfere with his fundamental obsession: justice for all human beings, even those at the hands of whom he suffered greatly.

This late 17th-century Moshe learned to be obsessed with justice from the first Moshe, Moses our Teacher, and from the words he speaks in this week’s Torah por­tion, Parshat Devarim (Deuteronomy 1:1-3:22). Moses begins his lengthy and eloquent val­edictory to the Jewish people with his pre­dominant concern. He is nearing the end of his life and his duty was to prepare the peo­ple to enter the Promised Land. But instead of instructing them about the methods to be used in entering the land, conquering it and settling it, we find him addressing the people with these words: “So I took…wise and experienced men, and appointed them heads over you… I charged your magistrates at that time as follows, ‘Hear out your fel­low man, and decide justly between any man and a fellow Israelite or a stranger… You shall not be partial in judgment: hear out low and high alike…’”

Moses too is obsessed with justice, to the extent that he interrupted his final in­structions to the Jewish people and pref­aced them with his plea that they establish a fair and equitable judiciary that would mete out justice to all, even the “stranger,” the non-Jew.

This week is a special Shabbat. It is the Shabbat before the major fast day of Tisha B’Av. We follow the reading from the Torah portion with a selection from the very first chapter of the Book of Isaiah. It is called Shabbat Chazon, or the Sabbath of the “prophetic vision” of Isai­ah.

Here, too, the prophet has numerous concerns, not the least of which is his cri­tique of the sinfulness of the Jewish peo­ple. But he does not fail to express his ob­session, which like the biblical Moses and the 17th-century Moshe Rivkish, was the cause of justice. So he concludes his vision of what the final redemption will look like: “I will restore your magistrates as of old… After that you shall be called City of Right­eousness…Zion shall be saved by justice.”

I write these words in the midst of a great and challenging crisis for the Jewish people. We are at war against a vicious and treacherous enemy. Yet, even in the midst of our valiant efforts to defend ourselves, we remain obsessed with the cause of jus­tice, and we strive in every way possible to wage a just war, even risking our own lives as we attempt to spare the lives of innocent civilians.

We are confident that Zion will in­deed be saved, imminently and glorious­ly, and that the justice we practice will be acknowledged by all mankind, thereby re­sulting in the universal blessing of the Al­mighty God of Justice and Mercy.

By Rabbi Zvi Hersh Weinreb

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