Parashat B’har
Masters Of
Servitude
The laws of the
Sabbatical year inspire us to sanctify space, time, and our behaviors towards
each other.
By Rabbi Michael Bernstein
The following article is reprinted with permission from SocialAction.com.
How can
a person whose life is dedicated to perfecting the world take a day off? At the
very heart of our ethical call as Jews comes the command for a Sabbatical--a
period of time during which we do not attempt to effect change.
This
obligation to take a sabbatical period is not limited to our actions every
Shabbat. As our Torah portion this week, B'har, addresses, every seventh year
the land itself is to observe a sabbatical year, which is tied to a cycle of 49
years. The 50th year, called the Jubilee, a shofar, or ram's horn, is
sounded, signaling that "amnesty is declared throughout the land" and
all property holdings must return to their original owners.
While
the Jewish tradition commands us to work to fix that which needs repair around
us, the worldview of tikkun olam (repairing the world) is driven by the
understanding that ultimately our possessions and even our very souls do not
belong to us. As we say in the prayer Aleinu, our mission is "L'tah-kein
olam b'malchut Shaddai: "to repair the world under the dominion of
God." The essential mechanism by which we come to see the world around us
as God's dominion is by taking a sabbatical from our own creative efforts,
whether it be 24 hours in a week, or one year in seven.
In the
laws of the sabbatical year, we see realized the concept of holiness in the
three dimensions of human life--space, time, and personal behavior. The
sabbatical is centered on the Land of Israel as a physical possession given
over to the Jewish people for stewardship. We are told that this land "may
not be sold beyond reclaim because the Land is God's" and we are but
strangers in residence here (Leviticus 25:23).
In
addition to recognition of the holiness of the land, we are commanded to
sanctify the years in which the Sabbaticals and Jubilees fall. The law of
agricultural and economic release is not to be arbitrarily applied from time to
time in order to give the fields a rest, or prevent those in dire straits from
slipping too far into debt. Rather, the structure of the Sabbaticals brings
holiness to the passing of the years.
As the
Sabbath day is the axis upon which the week revolves, and the festival calendar
brings meaning to the seasons of the year, the agricultural cycles frame a
pattern of sacred years, culminating every half century with a clarion call for
freedom for all the inhabitants of the land.
The
third and deepest dimension of the sanctity of the sabbatical cycle is the
responsibility of each person to do right by his or her neighbor. As the land
lies fallow and untended, so too are all debts left uncollected. In the same
echo of the shofar, blown to announce the return of property, is the release of
those fellow Jews who have fallen into servitude.
The
attention to the need of the downtrodden and vulnerable is not limited to
curtailing the time they must serve or the debt they must pay. At every place
where the Torah draws these limits, it includes a further exhortation that the
poor and rootless ones among us be treated with the utmost dignity and
humanity.
We are
told that even as we rise to provide the means for a person to survive, we
should not charge interest, but should instead allow the person to live by our
side as if one of the family (Leviticus 25:35-7). If hard times bring a person
to the point of becoming a servant, the master should not deal ruthlessly or
treat the person as a slave (Leviticus 25:39-43).
The
Torah even admonishes us against taking advantage of the very mechanisms that
should provide justice. For example, one should not take advantage of a
neighbor by selling land for a high price right before the Jubilee year in
which the property will be returned to its ancestral owner (Leviticus 14-17).
Even the seemingly prudent foresight that it is foolhardy to lend money to the
poor when a year of releasing debts is coming soon, is called by the Torah
"base and wicked," and counter to the command to constantly open our
hands to those in need (Deuteronomy 15:9).
In each
of these cases the rationale is simple and authoritative--"I am the Lord
your God." God did not bring us out of Egypt either to be slaves to others
or enslave others. God brought us out of Egypt to be servants to God.
In their
context, each of these dimensions of sanctity focuses on the particulars of
those living within the boundaries of the culture and land of Israel. The
injunction against outright slavery is limited to the Hebrew and the resident
alien. The return of property and release of debts is tied to the state of
being settled in the Land. However, the ethical lesson at the heart of these
Sabbatical laws, the recognition of the limit of our ownership of our property,
our time and even our souls, runs through the very fabric of all God's
creation.
This
framework that teaches us how to respect the holiness of the Sabbatical year
can inspire us to other holy acts of release and declaring amnesty. Whether it
be in supporting Jubilee 2000 (an effort to forgive the monumental debts that
saddle poor countries and prevent their attaining liberty), or dedicating
ourselves to the wise and respectful stewardship of our fragile environment,
the lessons of Parashat B'har can help us fulfill our mission of perfecting the
world in the name of God's dominion.
Rabbi Michael Bernstein is the spiritual leader of
Congregation Bnai Jacob in Longmeadow, Massachusetts. He was ordained at the Jewish Theological
Seminary of America in New York City, where he also worked toward a doctorate
in Jewish Philosophy. Rabbi Bernstein
joined the Bnai Jacob community in August, 1999 with his wife Tracie and
daughter Ayelet.