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KEE TISAH 5763-2003
"Reverence
for Learning in Jewish Tradition"
Rabbi
Ephraim Buchwald
In this coming week's parasha, parashat Kee Tisah, we read
of the fateful sin of the Jewish people with the Golden
Calf. The sin of the Golden Calf is considered so grievous,
that it eventually contributes to the Al-mighty's decision
to ban from entering into the land of Israel all male
citizens of Israel who were alive at that time and were
20 years of age or above.
When
Moses came down from the mountain, after receiving the
two tablets from G-d, and heard and saw the enthusiastic
celebration of the people for the Golden Calf, he smashed
the tablets. Dramatically stopping the idolatrous festivities,
Moses calls on his brethren, the tribe of Levi, to exact
vengeance upon the leaders of the rebellion, and 3,000
Israelites perish in the confrontation.
Moses
begs G-d to forgive the Jewish people. G-d accedes to
his request, but reminds Moses that He will take the sin
of the Golden Calf into account together with future sins,
which He does after the sin of the scouts who come back
with an evil report concerning Israel.
To
distance himself from the sinful people, Moses moves his
tent outside the camp and proceeds to hold court from
that location. Scripture tells us in Exodus 33:8 that,
despite the rebelliousness of the people, whenever Moses
would go out to his tent, "Yah'koo'moo kol ha'am,
v'nitz'voo ish peh'tach ah'hah'lo," the entire
nation would stand at the entrance of their tents, and
gaze upon Moses until he reached his tent. Standing for
Moses was an obvious gesture of respect for the leader
and the redeemer of Israel.
It
is interesting to note that some of the traditional educational
customs practiced by the "yeshiva world" today
originate from this Torah portion. One of the virtually
universal practices is that when a rabbi, leader or teacher
enters a room, students are expected to stand and to remain
standing until the exalted person has reached his designated
place. Similarly in some yeshiva elementary schools when
a principal or a guest enters a classroom, students stand--as
a gesture of respect. In many yeshivot, students speak
to their teachers only in the third person, never referring
to a teacher as "You." So for instance, it is
not unlikely to hear a student say, "Yesterday the
Rebbe taught us such and such in the Talmud," rather
than say, "You taught us," which is considered
disrespectful. Certainly no one would dream of walking
through a door before the rabbi, or of not holding the
door for their teacher or, in communal prayer, of not
waiting for their teacher to finish his prayers before
beginning the repetition of the Amidah (central
prayer).
The
Talmud, in tractate Baba Metziah 33a, teaches that
if a person simultaneously happens upon the lost object
of their parent and the lost object of their teacher,
he is required to retrieve the lost object of his teacher
even at the expense of the lost object of his parent.
The sages explain that while a parent gives his child
life in this world, the teacher gives his student
life in this world, and (through the study of Torah) insures
his student's eternal life in the world to come. Therefore,
the teacher's lost object takes precedence over the parent's
lost object. However, if the parent is the child's primary
teacher of Torah, the child must show ultimate respect
to the parent over a non-primary rabbi or teacher.
The
determining factor that governs this relationship of ultimate
reverence for a teacher is the primacy of Torah--which
is regarded as the elixir of life! As our Maariv (evening)liturgy
states (based on Deuteronomy 32:47)--Torah is our life
and the length of our days, and on it we must meditate
all day.
It
is of course this reverence for education which has permeated
Jewish life throughout the ages. Historically, there was
hardly a generation throughout the millennia, no matter
how poor, how insecure or endangered, that was illiterate!
In fact, the Talmud (Nedarim, 81a) states boldly, "Take
heed of the children of the poor, for from them Torah
will emerge."
Historically,
the Jewish people, in the time of the first century sage
Simon ben Shatach, were the first to introduce formal
compulsory education, and strict rules were set governing
class size and the qualifications of teachers.
In
the Code of Jewish Law there are abundant and exacting
regulations concerning unfair business competition. Yet,
when it comes to education, there are no competitive restrictions.
The Code of Jewish Law posits that one may establish a
competing school in the same neighborhood, in the same
courtyard, even in the same building as an existing school,
because according to Jewish tradition, (Baba Batra 21a)
"Kin'aht sofrim tar'beh choch'mah," jealousy
and competition between scholars are viewed as a means
to increase wisdom and scholarship.
One
of the quaint Jewish customs that underscores the unremitting
reverence for learning is the practice of kissing a holy
volume that falls accidentally to the floor, as if to
atone for the negligence of allowing a holy tome to fall.
Could anyone imagine, even in their wildest dreams, that
a lifelong scholar and obsessive devotee of John Milton
would kiss the cover of Paradise Lost that has
fallen!? And yet, the zeal and reverence that Jewish people
have for education does not allow for the slightest disrespect,
implied or real, even to an inanimate object or volume.
It
is this reverence for education that is at the core of
Jewish educational success, and accounts for much of Jewish
economic success. The scholar was always the most respected
person in the Jewish community, far more than the wealthy
business person. And that is why the wealthy business
person would always vie to marry his children to the rabbi's
or the scholar's children.
In
this time of despair, that is marked by the vast illiteracy
of our people, we Jews need to redouble our efforts to
make Jewish education the sine qua non of Jewish life,
and to make certain to devote our foremost efforts to
assure the highest degree of excellence in Jewish education
for all Jews.
May
you be blessed.
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