ACHAREI MOT-KEDOSHIM 5762-2002
"Shaatnez:
Understanding Irrational Decrees"
Rabbi Ephraim Buchwald
Once
again, this week, we have combined parashiot--Acharei
Mot-Kedoshim. The theme of the second parasha, Kedoshim,
is holiness. In Leviticus 19:2 we read that G-d speaks
to Moshe and instructs him to tell all the people of Israel,
"Kedoshim tih'hee'yu, kee kadosh Ani Hashem Elokeichem."
You shall be holy, for I, the Lord your G-d am Holy. The
parasha proceeds to list many, many laws that reflect
the notion of holiness, and the means by which the People
of Israel can become a Holy nation.
The
laws of parashat Kedoshim reflect an extraordinary sense
of nobility and exaltedness: the laws of pe'ah and
leket--leaving a corner of the field and/or the
gleanings of the harvest or the vineyard for the poor,
honesty in business, paying the salary of a hired worker
promptly, not putting a stumbling block before the blind,
not favoring the wealthy or even the downtrodden in justice,
not speaking evil against a neighbor, not hating your
brother or sister in your heart, properly reproving a
wayward person, not being vengeful or holding a grudge,
and loving your neighbor as yourself.
In
the midst of this ennobling list of mitzvot, the following
verse suddenly appears: Leviticus 19:19 "V'hem't'cha
lo tar'bee'ah kil'ayim, sad'chah lo tiz'rah kil'ayim,
u'veged kil'ayim sha'at'nez lo ya'aleh ah'leh'chah."
You shall not mate your animal with another species, you
shall not plant your field with mixed seed, and a garment
that is a mixture of combined fibers shall not come upon
you.
According
to Rashi (Rabbi Shlomo Yitzchaki, 1040-1105), the foremost
commentator on the Bible, the laws of shaatnez fall
under the category of "chukim"-- decrees,
commands of the King for which the human being knows no
reason. Some commentators, like the Ramban (Nachmanides,
1194-1270) offer insights in to the nature of these decrees.
When
we look closely at the story of creation in the first
chapter of Genesis, the words "l'mee'no"
or "l'mee'nah", according to its kind,
appear again and again. When the dry land appears and
sprouts forth vegetation, herb yielding seeds and fruit
trees, the Bible in Genesis 1:11 states: "L'mee'nay'hu"
according to its kind. In Genesis 1:24-25: when G-d creates
the living creatures, He creates them each according to
its kind: each animal, each creeping thing and each beast
of the land is fashioned according to its kind.
By
emphasizing and reemphasizing "according to its kind"
the Torah wishes to define the integrity of each created
species. Every tree, each fruit, every animal, even each
blade of grass is conferred its own integrity. The human
being has to preserve and guard that integrity. The Jew
especially is bidden to preserve the boundaries of creation.
And so while the human being is duty bound to improve
the world and complete the work of creation, human beings,
especially Jews, are not permitted to violate the integrity
of creation. Hence, in parashat Kedoshim we are taught
that it is forbidden to mate different species of animals,
whether domestic or wild. Similarly proscribed is the
planting of mixtures of seeds in the same furrow, unless
the different varieties are separated by a fence or are
far enough apart so that each can draw its own nourishment
from the ground without violating the other's nourishment.
Likewise, grafting one species of fruit on to a tree of
another species, is forbidden.
Perhaps,
the most challenging aspect of kil'ayim, the laws
of forbidden mixtures, is what we call shaatnez--the
prohibition of mixing two types of threads together in
a single garment. We learn from a reference in Deuteronomy
22:11, that this does not apply to all fibers, but is
limited to the mixture of wool and linen together in a
garment. Wool of course, comes from the animal world,
whereas linen comes from the vegetable world, once again
underscoring the individuality of the species.
As
a young boy growing up in an increasingly observant home,
the prohibition of shaatnez was not a common concern
in our family. It seems that my grandfather, who was a
religiously observant tailor, claimed that he never found
shaatnez in a garment. Of course my grandfather,
who came to the United States from Poland in the early
1900's to support his wife and six children who were back
in Poland, was certainly not a Brooks Brothers tailor.
In fact, he probably only sewed garments of very, very
poor immigrants. The likelihood of there being expensive
linen in those garments was rather remote.
So
when I got to Yeshiva University High School, and Reb
Joseph Rosenberger, of blessed memory, of the Shaatnez
Laboratory of Williamsburg mounted his famed shaatnez
campaigns, I began to have my garments checked for wool
and linen, and behold none was found. But, in college,
I had already started teaching and earning money, allowing
me to buy better quality suits. Lo and behold, my clothes
occasionally contained shaatnez, usually a linen
lining in the collar which needed to be removed. To my
great dismay, once the tailor removed the shaatnez
from the lining of the collar, the suit was never the
same. I must admit that I harbored some resentment at
this "irrational" mitzvah.
Over
the years I wrestled with this mitzvah and searched for
some meaning for myself, despite it being a chok--an irrational
decree. I remembered learning an interesting custom of
kashrut that's recorded in the Mesillat Yesharim,
Rabbi Moshe Chaim Lutzatto's (1707-1746) famed ethical
masterpiece, "The Path of the Just."
Contrary to popular opinion, and the stereotypical caricature
of Jewish mothers who say: "Ess, ess mein kind--finish
everything off the plate, because there are people starving
in Africa. Don't leave a drop!" Jewish tradition
recommends that every time we eat, we leave a sample of
our food on the plate, a speck of meat, a drop of potatoes,
a little part of the string bean. The reason for this
practice is that we should never be perceived as being
gluttonous. Every time we eat we must remember that there
are people in this world who have no food. And so we symbolically
set aside a little bit of food from our plates in order
to recall those who are less fortunate than ourselves.
Now, while it is true that this food eventually winds
up in to the garbage and is "wasted," it does
raise our consciousness to help those who are hungry,
and thus is not really wasted.
Applying
this lesson to clothes: We who lived in the second half
of the 20th century and now the early 21st century, have
no true appreciation of what a gift proper clothing is
to the human being. I recall that when I was sitting shiva
for my parents of blessed memory, I was not permitted
to put on a freshly laundered shirt, because it was considered
a source of joy. Mourners are expected to wear the same
clothes for the entire week of shiva, with the exception
of Shabbat. How uncomfortable it made us feel. Even the
thought of it today arouses discomfort. After all, how
is a freshly laundered shirt a source of joy? Consider
that only 60 or 70 years ago, laundering clothes was a
very difficult task. Especially in the midst of winter,
it meant going out in the freezing cold to wash the garments.
Bringing back a freshly laundered garment was indeed a
source of great joy. We take it for granted, but we shouldn't.
There
are people, hundreds of thousands of people, perhaps even
millions of people in the world today, who do not own
a fresh change of clothes. In our extraordinarily affluent
world, there are impoverished people who barely own a
loin cloth, let alone a fresh change of underwear. Perhaps,
through the law of shaatnez the Torah is telling
us: If you wear a garment that is made of wool, leave
the linen for the poor. Similarly, if you are fortunate
to wear a garment made of linen, leave the wool for the
poor. Be sensitive, be aware, that there are people throughout
the world who do not have the endowments and "luxuries"
with which you are blessed.
And
so, in this way, our Torah teaches: "Kedoshim
tih'hee'yu," be a Holy People. Be a sensitive
people. Be aware of G-d's gifts to humankind. Act in His
image, perform an act of loving-kindness by sharing your
blessings with those who are less fortunate.
May
you be blessed.