Parashat Ahare Mot
The Law of the Farm
This portion teaches us that there are no easy fixes to the complex
problems that face our social systems.
By Evan Wolkenstein
This commentary is provided by special arrangement with
American Jewish World Service. To learn more, visit www.ajws.org.
A student approaches me, red in the face. "Please explain
this," he says. I look at his report card. I've given him a low grade for
class participation. Over the course of the semester, he has repeatedly scoffed
at the comments of classmates. This has brought tension and distrust to the
class. When I remind him of this, his face falls. "You're right," he
says. "What if I apologize and never do it again?"
"Sorry," I say. "This
mistake has no undo."
On Forgiveness
We
often think that we can cut corners, avoid the costs of our actions, ignore
cause and effect, and come out
ahead. But we are mistaken, and Parashat
Ahare Mot comes to remind
us of the way things really work.
The
parashah begins by
describing the priestly Yom Kippur atonement service. We learn here that God
has incorporated atonement--the mercy that
leads to Divine forgiveness--into the fabric
of creation. But the parashah then takes a
dramatic turn as it delineates a series of laws and specifies the consequences
of failing to follow them: the aberrant individual is cut off from his people (Leviticus 18:29) and the guilty
nation is spewed out from the land
(Leviticus 18:27).
The
parashah makes a
distinction between the guilt for humanity's
mistakes, which may be absolved, and the consequences of those mistakes, for
which there is no undo. This distinction is crucial.
No Pleading to the Powers That Be
Steven
Covey, author of Seven Habits of Highly Effective People, writes that
natural laws determine processes and outcomes in the natural world. For
example, farm workers understand that "ripping
up the soil, throwing in the seeds, watering and cultivating overnight" will not provide them with "a bountiful harvest overnight."
With
acts of labor in the natural world, we know that the process must be done in
the correct order, at the right
time. Yet
in social systems, we somehow think that fast fixes and clever problem-solving
can undo the effects of neglect, disrespect,
and betrayal.
A
deep principle operates here, deeper than sin and punishment, one that we must
learn and re-learn, year after year. Namely, even as we embrace the tremendous
mercy of atonement, we must simultaneously bear in mind the opposite principle:
the Law of the Farm. No matter our
nation or identity, no matter our class or race, no last-minute desperate
action, no pleading to the powers above can contain the effects of our
actions.
Interdependence & Human Dignity
Violations
such as those enumerated to Moses in this parashah are irreparable assaults on human
dignity and cannot be reversed. The Israelites are prohibited from sexual
relations between close family members, from lying with each others' spouses, from offering their children to the Canaanite god Molech, and from lying with animals.
Each
is a violation of familial trust, neighborly trust, and fidelity to God. To break these laws is to
deny what we learned in Parshat
Bereshit--that each human being is created with the
divine spark, B'tzelem elohim, in God's image (Genesis 1:26).
No
community that tosses aside human dignity can thrive or even survive. God does
not need to expel people from the land--the
land itself will expel them. In a certain sense, they expel themselves.
Regardless of Divine compassion or even atonement, the consequences of their
actions will wreak destruction. In fact, the undeniable nature of these laws is
underscored by God, who tells Moses that it was not their religion nor their
national identity that brought the previous inhabitants of Israel to their
doom. It was their violation of these very laws.
For
us today, the Law of the Farm still applies to our relationships, to our
communities, and to the
ground we live on. We can no more saturate the soil with poison, fill the
atmosphere with carbon dioxide, and still
beg for miraculous redemption than the aberrant Israelites of Parashat Ahare Mot could lie with each others' spouses and not expect their world to crumble.
There
is no quick fix for global warming, no atonement for ignoring the spread of AIDS in Africa. There is no
magical restoration of the effects of poverty, of persecution. The Law of the
Farm, we learn from this parashah, is God's law. It supersedes the ways of Egypt and the
laws of Canaan. It was woven by God into the very foundation of existence.
The
Torah thus teaches that interdependence is essential to our survival. This is
what enables us to envision all of humanity as a single community and to build
our world in harmony with the earth. When we live the Law of the Farm, we unite
the earth with God's plan. We
become partners in a collective, redemptive process.
It
begins with committing ourselves to the preservation of human dignity. Only
then do we earn our sacred nationhood. Only then do we earn our place on earth.
Evan
Wolkenstein is the Director of Experiential Education and a Tanach teacher at
the Jewish Community High School of the Bay in San Francisco.