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VAYEIRA 5763-2002
"Sodom:
The Home of Institutionalized Evil"
Rabbi Ephraim Buchwald
Have
you ever wondered what it would be like to live in Sodom?
There are, after all, many places in the world, even today,
that are perfidiously evil. But what specifically was
it about Sodom that repulsed G-d so deeply that He was
compelled to destroy it?
Scripture
tells us in Genesis 13:13: "V'anshei S'dom rah'im
vah'chah'tah'im la'Hashem m'od," and the people
of Sodom were wicked and sinful toward G-d exceedingly.
What is the meaning of the word "exceedingly"?
According to the Midrash, there was a particular and unique
perversion to the evil of Sodom. The Midrash suggests
that the people of Sodom indeed practiced mitzvot, like
the mitzvah of Hachnasat Orchim--of hospitality
and welcoming guests, but in a perverted sense. If a traveler
would arrive in Sodom, he would be "warmly"
welcomed by the Sodomite people. If the guest was tall,
they would place him in a hotel with short beds, and if
he was short they would place him in a hotel with long
beds. To make certain that the guest was "comfortable,"
they would either pull the guest's limbs out of their
sockets, or amputate their limbs to make sure that they
fit the beds properly. The Midrash is obviously underscoring
the fact that the Sodomites did believe in the value of
hospitality--but in a most perverted way.
Similarly,
the Midrash expands on the verses, Genesis 18:21-22. In
those verses G-d says that because the outcry of Sodom
and Gemorrah has become so great and because their sin
is so very grave, "Er'dah nah v'er'eh ha'k'tzah'ah'kah'tah
ha'bah'ah ay'lay ah'soo kah'lah, v'im lo, ay'dah'ah."
I will descend and see if they act in accordance with
its outcry which has come to Me--then destruction. And
if not, I will know.
Now
the word "ha'k'tzah'ah'kah'tah" could
refer to the cry of the city Sodom. However, the Midrash
suggests that since the word is a feminine possessive,
and literally means "her cry," that it refers
to a woman. The Midrash says that there was a young woman
in Sodom, (they say it was actually Chutz'pit,
the daughter of Lot), who had compassion on a poor person.
Now the laws of Sodom declared it illegal for anyone to
help a poor person. In fact, a popular sport in Sodom
was to watch poor people languish from hunger and die
of starvation. So when the Sodomites noticed that this
particular poor person was not dying of hunger, they sent
their Sodomite "FBI" agents to investigate.
It was soon discovered that Chutzpit, the daughter of
Lot, was secreting some food to the unfortunate soul.
Chutzpit was then taken out to the stake to be burned
alive. The cries that G-d hears, and to which He responds,
were the cries of Chutzpit.
Further
in the story, when Lot takes the guests, (who are really
angels), into his home, and the people of Sodom come to
presumably sexually attack them, Lot pleads with his Sodomite
neighbors (Genesis 19:7), "Al nah ah'chai tah'ray'oo,"
I beg of you my brothers, do not act wickedly. I have
two daughters, Lot says, who have never known a man. I
shall bring them out to you, and do to them as you please.
But to these men do nothing, inasmuch as they have come
under the shelter of my roof. Once again, we see the perversion
of a good value. Lot is surely trying to protect his guests,
but at the same time, he is prepared to throw his daughters
to the "wolves" who will undoubtedly ravish
them. A normal parent would do everything to save and
secure his children.
We
see that Sodom has so perverted the values of humanity,
that virtue in Sodom has become vice, and vice has become
virtue.
Elie
Wiesel tells a fascinating story of a prophet who comes
to Sodom, and begins to prophecy that Sodom will be destroyed
if the people do not repent. At first, the people of Sodom
are amused that a prophet would have the temerity of coming
to the most wicked place on the face of the earth, to
try to persuade them to repent. After a while, they tire
of his presence and of his prophecies and they begin to
taunt him and beat him. They heave garbage at him, and
make his life miserable. But the prophet was determined
to continue his urgent prophecy.
After
two or three years, a young lad approaches the prophet.
"Mr. Prophet," he says. "Of all the places
on earth, why did you choose to prophecy in Sodom? You
know its well-deserved reputation for being the most evil
place on the face of the earth?" The prophet replied,
"When I first arrived and began to prophecy, I really
believed that my words would be effective, and that the
people of Sodom would repent." "But you see,"
said the youngster, "Your words have fallen on deaf
ears, and you are now the object of scorn and ridicule.
Why do you continue to prophecy?" Responded the prophet,
"When I first began to prophecy, I thought I would
change the people of Sodom. Now I continue to prophecy,
in the hope that the people of Sodom will not change me!"
While
most of our world is thankfully not Sodom, there are elements
of Sodom to be found in many parts of our globe. If we
think that we are protected from the influences of Sodom,
we are gravely mistaken. Of course, it is important for
us to choose a healthy environment in which to live and
to raise our children. And yet, at the same time, no matter
how positive the environment, there are always going to
be negative elements. And so, it is incumbent upon us
to continue prophesying--so that Sodom doesn't change
us, so that the negative influences don't impact on us,
and that we will be able to live good and noble lives.
May
you be blessed.
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