Parashat Korah
Consumption & Kedushah
We must differentiate between our wants and our needs.
By Rabbi Yehuda Levi
This
commentary is provided by special arrangement with Canfei Nesharim. To learn
more, visit www.canfeinesharim.org.
The
portion of Korah is named for the rebellious Levite Korah who started a dispute
over the issue of kedushah. The concept of kedushah is central in Judaism, and its meaning can have
profound impact on the environment today. Kedushah or the corresponding adjective, kadosh, are
usually translated obscurely as "sanctity" or "holy"; its
real meaning is: devotion to a sublime ideal.
We Are All Kadosh?
In our portion the Torah tells us that, following his
demagogic presentation, there was no longer room on earth for Korah; the earth
swallowed him up. At the core of his claims was the statement: "The whole
community is kadosh (Numbers
16:3)." That does not sound so terrible--does it? After all, we need go
back only four verses from here to read God's demand ". . . you shall be kadosh," But really it is
terrible. The obligation to be kadosh
is central to the teachings of the Torah and should guide us in all aspects of
our lives to strive toward kedushah. But if you are already kadosh, there is no more need to
strive. Thus Korah's complacency pulled the rug from under the Torah, and his
arguments were rejected.
What does it mean to strive constantly for kedushah? The first time the
commandment to "be kadosh"
appears in the Torah, Nahmanides quotes the Midrash which explains that most of
the body of Torah law 'hangs on' this commandment (Leviticus 19:1). He explains
further that the idea of being kadosh
follows the specifications of what foods and relationships are forbidden in the
Torah. He teaches that we may be fooled into thinking that as long as what we
are consuming is permissible, the amount that we consume doesn't matter.
Resources & Over-Consumption
According to Nahmanides, one who abuses the resources of the
world with the rationale that these resources are not forbidden, is called
"naval bereshut haTorah," a
'vile person within the delineations of the Torah.' Nahmanides writes that to
prevent such over-consumption, the Torah adds the general commandment of kedushah, "…that we should be
separated from excess…in these and similar issues." The importance of the
goal of kedushah in preventing
over-consumption is connected in the very persona of Korah, who claimed that
the Jews were already kadosh.
The Torah tells us that the earth swallowed up "all the
people of Korah and all their possessions." Our sages wonder, why were the
possessions mentioned here explicitly? They explain that Korah was a very
wealthy man and that this wealth caused the arrogance that brought him down.
Wealth is an important tool in human hands enabling us to fulfill our task more
effectively. But, if not used properly, it can cause our downfall--and even
destroy the world.
The kedushah
concept is central, not only to Judaism, but to environmental preservation as
well. Specifically, the kedushah
concept can be the key issue for problems caused by our habits of
over-consumption, which defeat our attempts to achieve sustainability.
Sustainability & Kedushah
Early considerations of sustainability pinpointed unchecked
population growth as the greatest threat to the world's sustained survival. The
rate of growth of world populations, they argued, could not be matched by
increases in food production.
More recent research has found that a factor of considerably
greater importance is the average individual consumption, which is increasing
at a much faster rate than that of population growth. In the course of thirty
years, the world's population doubled, while energy consumption per capita
increased eightfold in this period. We may add to this the fact that in North
America and Western Europe, ten percent of the world's population consumes
fifty percent of its energy.
The danger to the world posed by excessive consumption is
serious. Not only does it deplete the world's energy store, it also is the
chief cause of the warming of the atmosphere, through excessive burning of
fossil fuels. In other words, the excessively high standard of living in some
parts of the world is a major source of today's ecological crisis.
This over-consumption is also manifest in our use of raw
materials. It can even be found in our dietary habits. Note that the production
of one kilogram of beef consumes sixteen kilograms of grain. Present efforts to
stem the tide of over-consumption focus mainly on legislation to impose
restraints on the public. But this approach has very limited effectiveness.
Auxiliary propaganda drives to recruit public support, too, are largely
ineffectual, because they lack a rational basis. The spirit of "After us
the deluge!" is difficult to overcome.
Wants & Needs
All this shows that the root of the problem originates in a
selfish world view which inflates personal consumption beyond the essential.
Regarding this problem, the Torah instructs us to "be kadosh," in other words, to refrain from
self-indulgence and luxuries. To appreciate the significance of
this commandment, let us, for a moment, take a global view.
The world, with all its myriad components, was put at
humankind's disposal to use and enjoy as we see fit. Without any restrictions,
this would quickly lead to total disaster. Accordingly, the Torah provides some
detailed guidelines, such as the requirement to respect property rights,
marriage regulations, etc. But above all these, the key directive is the
commandment: "You shall be kadosh"
It instructs us to take from the world that which we need to do efficiently our
job of running the world in accordance with the will of its Creator--but no
more.
Critical Consumption
What does this mean in practice? When we prepare to eat a
tasty morsel, we are obliged to ask ourselves: will this make me a stronger
servant of God? Or, perhaps, am I eating it only because of the enjoyment?
This does not imply that we are forbidden to enjoy the world
in order to improve our mood when we feel down or to drink wine on Shabbat to
help us attain the joyfulness required for sublime inspiration, etc. Indeed,
the Sages already taught: "A person will be called to account for everything
which his eye saw and he did not eat."
This surely does not imply that we must eat from everything; but there
must be a reason--we have to weigh our decisions.
Every time we walk to the grocery down the street instead of
driving, every time we turn off the boiler when we had enough hot water for our
shower, we are being "kadosh"
and, simultaneously, making a contribution toward sustainability.
A child raised in this spirit will have "the quality of
the environment" at his heart and may have more impact on the ecology than
legislation imposed on a dissident public.
Rabbi Yehudah Levi is a former Rector, head of the
Physics/Electro-optics Department of the Jerusalem College of Technology, and
has been a President of the American Orthodox Jewish Scientists both in the USA
and Israel.