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The Color of Elul – Ki Tetze 5783

The gypsy-punk group Gogol Bordello’s first hit was a curious song called “Start Wearing Purple.” Maybe you know the song? 

Start wearing purple, wearing purple
Start wearing purple for me now
All your sanity and wits, they will all vanish
I promise, it’s just a matter of time

The lead singer of the group, Ukrainian-born Eugene Hütz, claims the song is about a crazy neighbor who would dress entirely in purple. I have been told that purple is our bat mitzvah‘s favorite color. (It’s something that she shares with my daughter, who, when I asked about it, said, matter-of-factly, “Purple is objectively the best color.”)

Well, I have some good news: purple is an appropriate color for the month of Elul, which we are in right now. Why? Because it is a balance of two other colors, red and blue. It’s a kind of coalition color. And it suggests exactly the way we should feel in Elul. I’ll come back to that.

The fighting in Ukraine passed a grim milestone this past week: one half-million people who have been killed or wounded in the fighting, Russians and Ukrainians. Some among us might take some small comfort, given the nature and origin of the conflict, in knowing that the count is higher on the Russian side, but I think it is always in bad taste to gloat in the loss and suffering of others, and in this case particularly because this seems to be such a senseless war. Furthermore, some of the soldiers who are dying for Mother Russia feel that they have been deceived by their government regarding why they are fighting in Ukraine.

But as much as we may be inclined to be supportive of Ukraine, whether because of the politics of Putin or the Jewish background of Volodymyr Zelensky or because Russia attacked a fledgling democracy for completely selfish reasons, I think that standing up for Ukraine is a fraught endeavor for the Jews. 

That is the land that my great-grandparents fled, and probably many of yours did as well. Ukraine, having been gradually captured by Poland in the 14th and 15th centuries, was a place where the local peasants loathed the Jews in particular, because Polish nobles sent Jewish tax collectors to the Ukrainian lands. When the Ukrainian Cossacks rose up against their Polish overlords during the Khmelnytsky Uprising of the mid-17th century, it is not too hard to understand why they massacred Jews as they rebelled against the Poles. 

Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir, the subject of a biopic which opened this weekend, wrote in her autobiography that growing up in Kyiv she recalled her father boarding up the door to keep out marauding Ukrainians, who regularly attacked Jews. In the film, Golda describes Christmas pogroms as an annual event, and they hid in terror waiting to see if they’d make it through the night unscathed. To this day, rates of native anti-Semitism in Ukraine still run relatively high, despite being the only nation in the world other than Israel with a Jewish head of state.*

Not that things are any better in Russia, by the way. But let’s face it: our shared history makes Ukraine a mixed bag. When my grandmother left her little shtetl in what is today northwest Ukraine in 1921, she and hundreds of thousands like her were happy to be out of that blood-soaked land. They never looked back.

So today, while there is no question that the Ukrainians deserve our support in casting out Putin and his troops, I nonetheless feel a certain ambivalence about standing for people who did not really want the Jews in their land to begin with, and certainly did not miss us after Hitler’s Einsatzgruppen came through. It’s undeniably fraught. 

We are of course celebrating today as a young woman is called to the Torah for the first time as a bat mitzvah, an inheritor of the obligation to the mitzvot of adult Jewish life. And a part of that inheritance is of course the imperative to take stock of our lives in the month of Elul. 

This is the month preceding Aseret Yemei Teshuvah, the ten days of repentance which go from Rosh Hashanah until Yom Kippur. It is time to take inventory, to reflect on our lives, on the past year, on where we are and where we would like to be. It is a time to consider the ways in which we have failed, the ways in which we might be better, the things about ourselves with which we are satisfied.

And the reality that each of us must face at this time of year is that life has its ups and its downs, that each of us is a complex being. We have our good points and our not-so-good points. And it is our duty in this season, and all the more so during the Aseret Yemei Teshuvah, to think of ourselves as exactly that: scales in balance. Maimonides, in his Hilkhot Teshuvah, his book of law about how to go about repentance, says that it is mandatory at this time to see ourselves as having performed an equal number of good deeds and transgressions; that each pan of the scale weighs exactly equal to its partner. We are all “beinoni,” in-between in these days. And our job is to tip the scale to the good side by striving harder to perform more mitzvot, so that we may be inscribed for a good year.

Your own estimation of your deeds over the past year does not actually matter, because we tend to judge ourselves with kaf zekhut, the benefit of the doubt. We are inclined to think, “Yeah, I was a good husband, a terrific father, a fantastic coworker, an extraordinarily respectful driver (most of the time), a responsible Jew. I shovel my sidewalk when it snows and I do the dishes and feed the cat when nobody else wants to. OK, I’m not perfect, but who is? I’m certainly better than most people, so the mass of my ‘good deeds’ in that scale pan surely outweighs the other one.”

None of that matters, because we like to see the overwhelming good in ourselves, even as we fail to see the same in others. There is a certain amount of self-protective inclination built into all of us; we love to believe that, as Garrison Keillor used to say about the children of Lake Wobegon, we are all above average.

Truth is, we are all in the middle somewhere, in the purple, if you will. We all fail sometimes. We all occasionally give half as much as we should. We all have our strong and weak points. We are all occasionally quick to anger, or blatantly self-interested, or too willing to criticize. It is easy to give ourselves credit for the good, and a little less so when it comes to our less-desirable behaviors.

And the Torah acknowledges the complexity of humanity in many ways. Consider just the opening verse of Parashat Ki Tetse, which we read this morning (Devarim / Deuteronomy 21:10):

כִּֽי־תֵצֵ֥א לַמִּלְחָמָ֖ה עַל־אֹיְבֶ֑יךָ

When you go out to war against your enemies…

The Torah does not even give us the opportunity to consider a world in which there is no war, in which you will not have enemies. War is simply an inevitability. We want to believe that people will prevent war, but lamentably we know that human nature does not always incline to peace. Similarly, in last week’s parashah, Re’eh, in which we read explicitly that even though it is our duty to work for a world in which there will be no needy, there will always be poor people.

So on the one hand, the Torah continues to inspire us to be better people, teaching us (for example) to create a society in which people provide for others in need, as our bat mitzvah discussed earlier. But on the other hand, the Torah reminds us that the ills of war and poverty will always be with us.

Perhaps that is what makes purple so wonderful: that it is a human color, reflecting the nature of our lives and our society. Blue and red are primary colors; they suggest one way or the other. But purple, being in-between, reminds us that to be human is to see our lives as a mixture. We take the bad with the good. We acknowledge that there are no ones and zeroes, no absolutes. No individual is perfectly righteous; and nobody is completely wicked. We are all beinoni, all somewhere in-between.

As we continue to move through Elul and into 5784, we should think purple; we should remember that each of us is in balance, and we want to tilt the scales in our favor, by going a little bit further for those around us, by seeking out the extra mitzvah, by working a little harder to stave off war and poverty if we can, and of course by remembering that we will never be free of either obligation.

Now is the time to start wearing purple.

~

Rabbi Seth Adelson

(Originally delivered at Congregation Beth Shalom, Pittsburgh, PA, Shabbat morning, 8/26/2023.)

*The current Prime Minister of France, Elizabeth Borne, has a Jewish father and a non-Jewish mother, although to my knowledge is not halakhically Jewish.

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לאן הולכים מכאן / Where Do We Go From Here? – Eqev 5783

The portion of the Torah that we read this morning, up front in Parashat Eqev, is one of the most Zionist moments in the Five Books of Moshe. It’s so Zionist that when the Conservative movement established the custom of reading Torah on Yom HaAtzma’ut (Israel’s Independence Day), which we do here at Beth Shalom, they chose this passage to read. In particular, Eqev says the following (Devarim / Deuteronomy 8:7-10):

כִּ֚י ה’ אֱ-לֹקֶ֔יךָ מְבִֽיאֲךָ֖ אֶל־אֶ֣רֶץ טוֹבָ֑ה אֶ֚רֶץ נַ֣חֲלֵי מָ֔יִם עֲיָנֹת֙ וּתְהֹמֹ֔ת יֹצְאִ֥ים בַּבִּקְעָ֖ה וּבָהָֽר׃ אֶ֤רֶץ חִטָּה֙ וּשְׂעֹרָ֔ה וְגֶ֥פֶן וּתְאֵנָ֖ה וְרִמּ֑וֹן אֶֽרֶץ־זֵ֥ית שֶׁ֖מֶן וּדְבָֽשׁ׃ (ט) אֶ֗רֶץ אֲשֶׁ֨ר לֹ֤א בְמִסְכֵּנֻת֙ תֹּֽאכַל־בָּ֣הּ לֶ֔חֶם לֹֽא־תֶחְסַ֥ר כֹּ֖ל בָּ֑הּ אֶ֚רֶץ אֲשֶׁ֣ר אֲבָנֶ֣יהָ בַרְזֶ֔ל וּמֵהֲרָרֶ֖יהָ תַּחְצֹ֥ב נְחֹֽשֶׁת׃ וְאָכַלְתָּ֖ וְשָׂבָ֑עְתָּ וּבֵֽרַכְתָּ֙ אֶת־ה’ אֱ-לֹקֶ֔יךָ עַל־הָאָ֥רֶץ הַטֹּבָ֖ה אֲשֶׁ֥ר נָֽתַן־לָֽךְ׃

(7) For YHWH your God is bringing you into a good land, a land with streams and springs and fountains issuing from plain and hill; (8) a land of wheat and barley, of vines, figs, and pomegranates, a land of olive trees and honey; (9) a land where you may eat food without stint, where you will lack nothing; a land whose rocks are iron and from whose hills you can mine copper. (10) When you have eaten your fill, give thanks to YHWH your God for the good land which God has given you.

What I hear in this passage is a love letter to the Land of Israel, describing its bounty, its landscape, its minerals, and its intimate connection to the body of stories and laws and customs known as Judaism. It includes, of course, the list of the Seven Species typical to the land, and of course the passage that we know from Birkat haMazon / grace after meals, in which we are required to express our gratitude liturgically after eating. 

Of course, it is somewhat anachronistic to impose a late-19th-century political movement for the return to Israel onto a text written about two-and-a-half millennia earlier. “Zionism” per se is not exactly what the Torah is invoking, as Moshe addresses the Israelites on the far side of the Jordan River. Rather, this passage is meant as an incentive to the Israelites, speaking to their perspective as the children of former slaves wandering through the wilderness. Fear not, it seems to say; you will soon be in a place where everything is wonderful. You have an ancient and eternal connection to this land, and when you inherit it properly now as the significant nation you have become, you will fully reap the benefits that God has promised you as part of the berit, the covenant with your ancestors.

We are living, of course, in a very different world today, 75 years into the existence of the modern, democratic State of Israel, which of course bears little resemblance to the Torah’s vision of Israelite governance. And yet, this text surely summons the Zionist passion which many of us feel.

Hatikvah 6

There is an Israeli pop song that’s been floating through my head all week. It’s by the reggae group Hatikvah 6 called “לאן הולכים מכאן” (Le-an holkhim mikan / Where do we go from here?). The song hints at the political protests of 2011, when hundreds of Israelis set up tents in central Tel Aviv to decry the astronomical cost of living. The movement launched careers for a few politicians, but ultimately had minimal lasting effect on apartment rental prices in Israeli cities. In fact, in 2022, Tel Aviv was the third most-expensive city in the world.

But the question of “Where do we go from here?” neatly captures the current moment in Israel. As you may know, the governing coalition in the Knesset, which holds a slight majority of 64 seats out of 120, passed a piece of legislation known as the “reasonableness clause” as a part of a larger package of judicial reform. This law would prevent the Israeli Supreme Court from using “reasonableness” as a standard for upholding the law, and in particular as a check on legislative orders from the Knesset. Given the uproar in Israel over these reforms, the opposition walked out en masse in protest, so the law passed 64-0. 

What this legislation effectively says is that if a simple majority of elected politicians, even 61 out of 120, believe that a government decision is reasonable, it does not matter if all the other 59 members of Knesset and the entire Supreme Court feel it is unreasonable. Commentators have observed that this might open the door to corruption. (BTW, the best analysis I have read about the situation in Israel is by David Horovitz, editor of the Times of Israel.)

The Supreme Court has already announced that it will debate the legality of the law. When they strike it down, as I anticipate that they will, the State of Israel will be in uncharted “constitutional” territory. I say “constitutional” in quotes, because, as you may know, Israel has no constitution, and no upper parliamentary body, so the Supreme Court is really the only check on the power of the majority coalition in the Knesset. This attempt by the Netanyahu coalition to reign in the judiciary amounts to what some in the opposition have labeled a “coup,” weakening the Supreme Court and thereby giving too much power to the Knesset majority.

Furthermore, the “reasonableness” legislation is only the beginning. There are more pieces of judicial reform to come from this coalition. And when the hobbling of the courts is complete, they will turn to those pieces of legislation that are features of the coalition agreements, the back-room horse-trading deals which hold the coalition together and which might otherwise be struck down by the court, as explained by Horovitz. Those include:

… the legalization of discrimination based on religious beliefs, the annexation of parts or all of the West Bank without equal rights for Palestinians, the restricting of media, the constriction of women’s rights, the blanket exemption of the fastest-growing sector of the populace, the ultra-Orthodox, from military and national service.

Make no mistake: everybody in this room is part of a minority whose rights will be curtailed by a government which tips its hat to theocracy. We all know that Israel right now is only barely tolerant of non-Orthodox Judaism. How about an Israel that makes it illegal? Imagine being on a synagogue trip with your rabbi, observing Shabbat according to our customs, and suddenly we are arrested for hosting a service in which men and women are sitting together?

Israelis of all sorts, but particularly the intellectual elite, are facing a state which they do not recognize. Hundreds of thousands have been out in the streets. Some are actively leaving. Israeli reservists are writing letters to the IDF leadership to tell them that they will no longer serve their reserve duty. The economic and security toll of the actions of this government is inestimable.

So לאן הולכים מכאן? Where do we go from here? The challenge here for us as Diaspora Jews, most of whom are not Israeli citizens, but all of whom have a significant stake in the State of Israel, is how to respond to this.

We have supported, and must continue to support Israel because the right to a tiny strip of our ancestral land, as described in Parashat Eqev, where we Jews are guaranteed self-determination, is essential to our survival as a people. We support Israel because of the values espoused in her Declaration of Independence. We support Israel because we see her democratic government committed to upholding those values, protecting minority voices and giving strength to the disenfranchised. 

There are really only two things that might affect the situation. First, ongoing protests in the streets of Israel, which did succeed in at least delaying the vote a few months back, and made the opinion of what is likely a majority of Israelis painfully clear.

Second, economic protest, and here is where things get thorny for the American Jewish community. We provide $3.8 billion of military aid to Israel every year. This is really a “back-door” subsidy to American defense contractors: the money goes to them, and the arms (like the Iron Dome system, which shoots down incoming missiles, launched largely from Gaza) go to Israel. This subsidy protects Israeli citizens and makes life safe and livable in a rough neighborhood, and of course supports American jobs. I would not want to see this money go away.

Also, we Americans have always demonstrated our support by sending personal charitable contributions to Israel. So the dilemma we are facing is how to continue to support the Israeli people and the democratic norms within Israeli society without enabling the more problematic aspects of the current government.

One such organization that we might want to support is called התנועה לאיכות השלטון, the Movement for Quality Government in Israel, a well-established, non-partisan non-profit that works for improved government, to expose corruption and flaws in the democratic system. There are probably others, and as I become aware of them, I will share that info with you as well. 

A final thought: there is a reason we call immigrating to Israel “making aliyah,” where “aliyah” literally means, “ascent.” In the Talmud, Israel is described as the highest spiritual point in the world; one “ascends” to Israel from anywhere else in the world, and within Israel one ascends to Jerusalem.

During the protests of the last couple of weeks, thousands of Israelis made the 40-odd mile trek on foot from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. They ascended physically and spiritually, and their aliyah was a sign not only of their commitment to the State of Israel but also to its democratic principles.

I hope that as they were climbing through the Shefelah, the fertile Judean foothills in the center of the country, at least a few of them thought about Parashat Eqev: the Seven Species, and the sense of expressing gratitude for this land. I hope that some of them were thinking, and perhaps causing some other Israelis to pause and think that the only way that we might continue to eat, to be satisfied, and to express thanks for what they have is to ensure that we do not deepen this growing rift in Israel and indeed the Jewish world. That we must continue to make a metaphorical aliyah together.

לאן הולכים מכאן? Where do we go from here? We keep going up. We do not have a choice.

~

Rabbi Seth Adelson

(Originally delivered at Congregation Beth Shalom, Shabbat morning, 8/5/2023.)