Showing posts with label shoftim. Show all posts
Showing posts with label shoftim. Show all posts

Thursday, August 28, 2014

Shoftim 5774



Solomon the Wise or Solomon the Expedient?


Most of you are probably familiar with the story about the two prostitutes who come before King Solomon, each claiming that the baby is theirs.  He immediately calls for a sword to be brought to him and offers to cut the baby in half.  The first woman gives up the right to the baby rather than see it cut in half and the other woman says, “Cut the child in half.”  Solomon awards the baby to the first mother, deciding that only the real mother would not want to see her child killed.


Tsedek, tsedek tirdof….Justice, justice shall you pursue we are told in this week’s Torah portion, Shoftim.  But, did Solomon really dispense justice?


In a fascinating study of this story, called The Judgment of Women, University of Connecticut Law Professor, Anne Dailey, gives us another perspective.  In her essay, included in the book Out of the Garden: Women Writers on the Bible, she proposes that perhaps the second woman “displays a courageous act of self-determination” by confronting Solomon who, without hearing the women out, without delving in the why and without patiently listening to their story, calls for his sword to be brought and, at the point of the sword, threatens to dispense justice.  Imagine the scene---the women were probably frantic to say something in the very few moments they had to plead their case before Solomon followed through on his threat to cut the child in two.  Solomon chose to render a decision swiftly and expediently, preferring to judge the women on those few frantic words.  Was justice really served?


When a person appears before a ruler, a judge, a teacher, a parent, a clergy person---a person of authority---they usually come with some expectation that the person they have approached has some measure of wisdom simply by having attained their position. (Imagine how the two women must have felt coming before King Solomon!) They have a reason to expect that they will be given a just hearing.  But if the authority figure wants to get home, is late for another appointment, isn’t feeling well, or believes they possess an exceptionally discerning mind, they might well want to dispose of the matter as swiftly as possible.  But is the decision necessarily a just one?


And what about the people who come before the authority figure seeking justice?  If one of them is outspoken, has a reputation as a trouble maker, is cocky, a marginalized member of society (the women were prostitutes) or verbally combative (“Cut the child in two!”) might the ruling person not be inclined to dismiss their side of the story?

God gave us ears so we could listen.  Everyone deserves to be heard.  None of us, including King Solomon, has the right to dispense justice at the point of a sword. 


Shabbat Shalom,
Debby Lewis

Wednesday, August 27, 2014

Shoftim 5774

I am always moved, every time that I am in Jerusalem, by the sign that stands next to the Supreme Court of the State of Israel. The sign conveys the opening verse from this week’s parasha:
“You shall appoint shoftim,  judges, and shotrim, officials, for your tribes… and they shall govern the people with due justice” (Deut 16:18). 
This verse identifies the biblical imperative of having wise leaders and thoughtful and able enforcers to ensure that the law is established morally and ethically in the land.

This stands in stark contrast to what appears in the middle of the parasha:
“If, after you have entered the land that the Lord your God has assigned to you, and taken possession of it and settled in it, you decide, ‘I will set a king over me, as do all the nations about me,’ you shall set a king over yourself, one chosen by the Lord your God… he shall not keep many horses… and he shall not have many wives… when he is seated on his royal throne, he shall have a copy of this Teaching written for him on a scroll by the levitical priests. Let it remain with him and let him read in it all his life…” (Deut 17:14-19)
Rabbinic commentators disagree as to whether there is a positive commandment to have a king, or rather a concession to human frailty (Etz Hayim, pg. 1092). But as you read the passage, it becomes abundantly clear that the Torah is anxious about the power, and possibility of future abuse of power, that this king may have. And so, to ensure that the king does not go astray, the Torah instructs the king to keep the Torah close by, emphasizing adherence to Torah, without ever avoiding the Torah’s commands.

We at Anshe Emet are very lucky to have two incoming leaders to our youth world who epitomize the wisdom and thoughtfulness that the Torah enjoins about the judges, rather than the kings. Rabbi D’ror Chankin-Gould will begin on Sunday, September 7th as your synagogue’s youth director. He is a brilliant and caring person, and we are so excited to have him on the team. We also have Shaqued Gavriel, who just arrived from Israel as our shinshinit, which stands for shnat sherut, meaning year of service. Shaqued will be bringing her passion for Israel and Jewish life to all of our youth programming over the coming year.

I hope that as we read about great leadership in this week’s parasha, that you will join me in welcoming these two stellar leaders to our community.

Shabbat Shalom!
Rabbi David Russo

Thursday, August 8, 2013

Shoftim 5773


Summertime Thoughts on the Pursuit of Justice


Although we are now in August and have just ushered in the month of Elul it is still summer.  Like so many others I become nostalgic for summer camp – and in my case for Camp Ramah in the Berkshires where I spent nearly 20 summers as both camper and staff member.  Camp remains a special place because I learned so many important life lessons in camp.  During my first summer as a “madrikh” (counselor) I remember disciplining a camper by threatening to dock him from canteen.  My advisor overheard my “conversation” and asked if I was familiar with the verse from this week’s parasha, Shoftim:  “Tzedek tzedek tirdof!” (usually translated as: “Justice, justice you shall surely pursue!”).

He asked me the same question which commentators have been asking for centuries, namely, why does the verse repeat the word “tzedek/justice”?  Why not simply command that we pursue justice?  The answer we agreed upon was that this is the basis for our understanding that God not only expects us to pursue justice, but to think ethically and behave justly at all times.  The lesson:  even in camp the punishment has to fit the crime and if there is no connection between the misbehavior of the camper and docking him from canteen then that is not a “just” response.  Even rewards and punishments in summer camp have to be consistent with that part of our mission as Jews that demands justice in every situation.

Our sages have pointed out that we read this parasha and its teachings (e.g. -that we seriously pursue justice and that we creating a working and functioning system of government that guarantees fairness and justice for all) just as we begin the countdown to Rosh Hashana and the new year.

This means that our pursuit of justice and our efforts at “heshbon nefesh” (our taking stock of our deeds during the past year) will not only intersect but are interwoven.  This is underscored by the opening words of the parasha:  “Shoftim v’shotrim titen lekha.. / You shall establish judges and officers in all your gates” (Devarim 16:18)  The commentators teach that the words “titen lekha/you shall establish” signify that before we call upon judges and officers to deal with the actions of others we must judge and make an accounting for our own actions.

This echoes the teaching found in Pirkei Avot (The Teachings of the Fathers): "Do not judge your fellow until you have stood in his place." (2:5)  These are excellent guidelines for us to consider as we begin the process of “heshbon nefesh” in preparation for the new year and we seriously consider what each of us needs to do to bring justice into the world rather than criticize others.

Shabat Shalom,

Rabbi Matt Futterman
Senior Educator