BEHAR 5765-2005
"The Torah's Revolutionary Economic System"
Rabbi Ephraim Buchwald
This
coming week's parasha, parashat Behar is an extraordinarily
challenging and revolutionary parasha.
The
Torah, in Leviticus 25:2 proclaims: "V'shahv'tah
ha'aretz Shabbat la'Hashem," and the land shall
keep a Sabbath unto G-d.Just as the human being must
have Shabbat, a day of rest, so the land must have its
rest--the Sabbatical year known as shemita. Farmers
may work the land for six years, but on the seventh
year the land is to lie fallow and be "released"
from cultivation.
The
Torah makes it clear that contrary to popular perception,
the land is not the absolute possession of the human
being, but rather belongs to G-d, and is to be held
in trust for G-d's purposes. This idea was so revolutionary,
that the ancient peoples who lived alongside the Jews
and saw them practice the laws of shemita, had trouble
comprehending their behavior. In fact, the Roman historian,
Tacitus, attributed the practice of shemita to laziness
on the part of the Jews.
During
the Sabbatical year the land was devoted to G-d, by
being placed at the service of the poor and the animals.
During the Sabbatical cycle as the land lay fallow,
all fields were open to the public who were entitled
to come and take food from whatever grew wildly for
their daily needs. Furthermore, in Deuteronomy 36:10,
we learn that the seventh year was to be set aside as
a time for national education, and that all Jews, men,
women and children were to be exposed to the teachings
and duties of the Torah. In his commentary on the Pentateuch,
Rabbi Joseph Hertz notes that while the leaders of most
ancient peoples worked diligently to keep knowledge
away from the masses, it was "the glory of Moses"
that he made Torah knowledge universally available to
all the Jews, young and old alike (page 531).
Parashat
Behar also introduces the concept of the Jubilee, known
in Hebrew as Yovel. In the fiftieth year, the year after
the seventh year of the seventh Sabbatical cycle, all
land reverted back to its original tribal owners. Hebrew
servants and their families were emancipated, and almost
all property, returned to the original owners. This
system assured that no family or tribe was to be locked
into perpetual poverty, and that at least every fifty
years the downtrodden were able to regain their family
real estate holdings and start to rebuild their lives,
without the terrible burdens of old debts. The American
social philosopher, Henry George, is quoted as saying,
"It is not the protection of property, but the
protection of humanity, that is the aim of the Mosaic
code."
A
law that is often overlooked, is the regulation regarding
the sale of individual homes. All individual homes that
had been sold during the previous years were also returned
to their original owners in the Jubilee year, with the
exception of those homes built within a walled city.
This, of course, significantly limited the amount of
urban development that could take place on the land.
For
those of us who live in capitalistic economic systems,
the Torah's laws regarding land and dwellings must seem
strange at best, or foolhardy, at worst. Clearly the
Torah does not support the practices of pure capitalism.
Neither does the Torah advocate pure socialism, where
wealth is divided by all equally. Wealth is certainly
not a sin in the Torah's eyes. The Torah system is in
essence, a modified system that makes certain that the
poor can be resuscitated and restored to a point where
they can have a chance to regain their dignity.
Although
it might be speculative, it seems to me that while the
Torah expresses the centrality of caring for the needy,
it is also articulates a rather strong anti-urban attitude.
Those of us who live in brutally overpopulated cities,
and dwell in buildings that are essentially stacked
boxes of apartments, know well the price that is paid
for this mass warehousing of humanity resulting in a
lack of fellowship, neighborliness and friendliness.
It may very well be that human beings do not have the
capacity for the vast numbers of social and business
relationships that are foisted upon them today, so that
all relationships quickly become shallow, and hardly
any of them are meaningful. Because of over urbanization
and overstimulation, everything becomes superficial.
The
Torah in effect says, don't build high-rise dwellings
with 30 apartments on a floor. Human beings need to
live in manageable "herds," even the animals
know that. It is not unusual for a city dweller to learn
that a next door neighbor had passed away several months
earlier. This kind of stockpiling of bodies may be considered
"dwelling" together, but it certainly is not
"living" together.
Because
of the Torah's rules mandating restricted urbanization,
there will inevitably be more open space. Perhaps the
Torah is also informing us that it is important for
every person to have a garden--a real agricultural experience.
People simply need to feel a connection to the earth,
to appreciate the role of the farmer, to behold the
beauty of flowers blossoming, to feel connected to nature,
and in that way connect more profoundly with G-d.
As
our already frenetically-paced lifestyle becomes increasingly
frenetic, increasingly compartmentalized, increasingly
lonely, we see more people losing their humanity, becoming
increasingly unsociable, increasingly violent.
Although
the economic and social systems of parashat Behar are
not readily replicable today, this parasha surely serves
as most effective reminder about how careful we must
be not to allow our present systems to reduce us as
human beings. We need to stop to smell the roses. We
need to stop to look our spouses and our children in
the face, and have meaningful conversations with them.
We need to kneel down more often, to help the child
who cannot stand tall on his/her own. We need to regenerate
our minds and our hearts by setting aside sacred time
for study. That is the revolutionary message of parashat
Behar. Let's go for it!
May you be blessed.