Parashat Hukkat
Water Consciousness
How to send environmental problems down the drain.
By Jonathan Neril
This
commentary is provided by special arrangement with Canfei Nesharim. To learn
more, visit www.canfeinesharim.org.
This week's Torah portion, Hukkat,
can be viewed as a narrative about the Jewish people and water. Water--in
Hebrew, mayim--is
mentioned twenty-two times. The portion begins with God's command to mix water with the
ashes of a red cow for purification. Next, Miriam dies, and the well which
provided the Israelites with water disappears. The Jewish people quarrel with
Moses, complaining (Numbers 20:3), "There is no water to drink!" Moses and Aaron strike the rock
and God brings forth water.
Next,
Moses asks the Edomites to pass through their land, with a promise not to drink
their water, or alternately, to buy it from them. Then the Jewish people travel
by way of the Sea of Reeds--where God had split the sea for them--and on their
desert journey complain again about lacking water. They arrive in modern-day
Jordan and sing an exultant song about their appreciation to God for water.
Finally, the Torah portion ends with them encamped on the eastern bank of the
Jordan River.
Learning to be Appreciative
What
is God teaching us through the Torah's water narrative? The Jews' experiences with water in the
desert can be understood as a spiritual training to cultivate appreciation for God's
goodness. God takes the essential, tangible resource of water and gives it to
us in environments where we do not have it.
We
learn to appreciate water and to know Who really provides it through the
process described here of taking water for granted, losing it, and then being
given it by God. In an ultimate sense, water does not nourish us. God does.
Water is one of the chief means by which God provides life to us every day. The
see-saw experience of having water and then losing it is the means to develop
the spiritual muscles of appreciating God.
Yet,
always being on the positive side of having water leads a person to take it for
granted. Today, piped water is incredibly convenient; it relieves us from carrying
our water from streams and cisterns to our homes. Today, people in the West
tend to lack an appreciation of where water comes from, and they end up wasting
and polluting it. Where appreciation ends, misuse begins.
Abuses Abound
This explains how much of the
western and southeastern United States could experience water scarcity and need
government agencies to call for conservation. Or how we could lose sight of how much energy goes into
bringing every gallon to our faucet. In many areas of the United States and the
world, electricity-producing generators power pumps that raise water hundreds
or even over a thousand feet from the underground aquifer to the water tanks at
the top of local mountain ranges, so that gravity can then take it to our
homes.
Given this, if we use 230
gallons of water a day, we are raising almost 2,000 pounds in weight every day
up the vertical height of a 60 story skyscraper. Over an entire lifetime, this
is a lot of energy used and a lot of carbon put into the atmosphere. Misusing
water wastes energy and unnecessarily causes global climate change. Scientists
predict that climate change is likely to cause sea levels to rise, impacting
sandbars like Long Beach Island and New Jersey, and islands like Manhattan, as
well as causing more intense storms and floods.
Environmental problems do not
just have to do with air pollution, global warming, species extinction, or
water scarcity. Those are merely symptoms. As long as we only treat the
symptoms, the problems will continue popping up and getting bigger.
Branches vs. Roots
Henry David Thoreau said, "There are a thousand hacking at the branches of evil to one
who is striking at the root." Today
we generally hack at the branches: in many counties we spend significant
amounts on wastewater treatment and desalinization plants to produce more
usable water, and in some states we enact Draconian measures like water
rationing when the aquifer just gets too low.
Environmental problems at
their root are spiritual problems--they stem from a lack of awareness of the
Source of all Existence. Once we come to that awareness, we can address
environmental problems in very different ways. Since beneath every
environmental problem is a spiritual problem, awaiting every environmental
problem is a spiritual solution. Drop a stone in the pond and the ripples will
reach far beyond you.
The Torah is a blueprint for
spiritual living on this planet. It enables us to transform our daily, mundane
ways into holy acts. If we can preserve our connection to God's sustaining power in our world of great abundance,
we can transform our lives and the world in holy ways.
The great Sage of Talmudic times,
Rabbi Tarfon, teaches that "The
day is short, the work is much, the workers are lazy, the reward is great, and
the Master is pressing."
I might add: the
climate is changing, the seas are rising, the glaciers are melting.
We can address environmental
issues at their roots if we live according to the Torah's call. And when we get at the roots, we're going to deal with many of the branches as well.
When we finally embrace this path as a people, our spiritual problems
masquerading as environmental problems will make their way down the drain.
Suggestion Action Items:
1) Easy: Connect to the physical source of
the water you drink. Go to that source and sit by it, like Jacob and Moses did.
Listen to the water. Think about how most of your body is comprised of water.
Try this every year or every month and see what happens.
2) Still not demanding a lot: Contemplate your
monthly water bill, remembering that each drop is given to you as a gift. If
you use close to 230 gallons a day, like the average person in the United
States does, think about key areas where you could reduce the amount you use.
3) More
involved: Connect this physical substance to its spiritual source, which is the
Creator of the Universe. Before and after you drink water or any liquid, say
the blessing on it. The blessing begins with the word 'baruch,' which is related to 'bereicha,' pool, since God is like an
infinite pool.
4) Still more involved: Another gateway to water
awareness is the Jewish ritual netilat yadayim, washing hands
with water for purity. By using a vessel to pour water over our hands when
arising in the morning and before eating bread, we can connect to the purifying
potential of water.
5) For the truly committed: Take a few concrete
steps toward water conservation. Install low-flow faucets and toilets. Hook up
a grey water system to water your lawn with sink water. For more information
and how-to, click here.
Jonathan
Neril is a rabbinical student at the Bat Ayin Yeshiva in Israel's Gush Etzion
region and is currently in his fifth year of Jewish learning in Israel. He
holds an MA and a BA from Stanford University with an emphasis on global
environmental issues. He serves as Canfei Nesharim's project manager for Eitz Chayim Hee: A Weekly Environmental
Torah Commentary for Learning and Action.