Biblical
Affirmative Action: Noah As A Product Of His Generation
The talmudic
discussion of Noah’s righteousness sheds light on our understanding of
affirmative action.
By Ilan Haber and Avi Weinstein
The following article is reprinted with permission from Hillel: The Foundation for Jewish Campus Life.
Instructions: Read the following case study and discuss the
various sides to the issue, then read the full Midrash below and answer the
questions following the Midrash.
Larry comes from a poor minority neighborhood, and spent
the better part of his adolescence trying to avoid becoming a victim of the
drugs and crime that infest his community. He came from a largely dysfunctional
family, and had very few worthwhile role models. Barely surviving the ridicule
of his friends and family, and balancing a part-time job along with his
schoolwork, he managed to pull off mostly A's and B's throughout high school.
He earned an 1100 on his SATs. If the Ivy League university to which he applies
has an average SAT score of over 1300, and is frequented by scholastic over-
achievers, should Larry be accepted at the expense of a student with better
grades and SAT scores but who comes from a more affluent, stable environment?
Genesis 9:1
These are the Generations of Noah: Noah was a righteous
man in his generation: Noah walked with God.
Midrash Rabbah, Genesis 30:9
In his generation: There was a
disagreement between Rabbi Yehudah and Rabbi Nechemiah.
Rabbi Yehudah said: In his generation he was considered a righteous man, but if
he would have lived in the generation of Moses or in the generation of Samuel
then he wouldn't have been considered a righteous man.
In the market where the blind cry out, the one-eyed man is called
clear-sighted.
There is a story of an individual who opened up one barrel of wine and found it
had turned into vinegar. The same thing with the second barrel. The third
barrel he found to be only sour (and so he took it). The others said to him,
"That barrel is sour!" He answered back, "Is there any
better?"...
Rabbi Nehemiah said: If he was considered a righteous man within his own
generation, then surely he would have been considered a righteous man had he
lived in the generation of Moses and Samuel.
This could be compared to a tightly closed flask of expensive perfume placed
within a graveyard that still produced a pleasant smell. If it was outside the
graveyard it would produce a smell that much better!
This could also be compared to a virgin that frequented a marketplace of
prostitutes, and she didn't receive a bad name. How much more so if she was
among better company!
Your Midrash Navigator
1. What ambiguity of the verse
in Genesis is the Midrash coming to explain?
2. How does each Rabbi interpret the verse differently?
3. According to each Rabbi's interpretation how do we look at the individual in
relation to the environment that he/she comes from? Do we judge people based
totally on their own merits in isolation or do we take into account the
environment that one comes from?
4. What do the metaphors used to describe the position of each Rabbi tell us
about their outlook? What do they tell us about how each one views Noah in
relation to his generation?
5. If you were Rabbi Yehudah, and the dean of admissions at the university that
Larry is applying to, then would you accept him? What if you were Rabbi
Nehemiah? Why? Would it make a difference if you were a Democrat or a
Republican?
A Word
Often affirmative action is
framed as redress for wrongs done to minorities in the past. The lack of
fairness and discrimination in the workplace demand that favor be shown to
minorities for university admissions.
The rabbis frame it differently, at least Rabbi Nehemiah does. He would say
that if a person could make it to school each day and slug out a "B"
average even though he came to school hungry, if he passed an abandoned home
being used as a "crack house" each day on his way to school, then he
deserves a place at the table of the finest institutions in America on merit!
How many of those sitting at our august institutions would have fared that well
under those circumstances? That is the question and that is how our talmudists
would have framed the discussion.
Prepared by Ilan Haber, Orthodox Rabbinic Advisor at Yale University with a word by Avi
Weinstein, Director Joseph Meyerhoff Center for Jewish Learning.
Provided by Hillel’s
Joseph Meyerhoff Center for Jewish Learning, which creates innovative
educational resources based on Jewish texts and trains Hillel students,
professionals, and lay leaders to infuse Jewish content throughout their
activities. © 2002 Hillel: The Foundation for Jewish Campus Life.