Eco-Kashrut: Environmental Standards for What and
How We Eat
We need to renew the unity of earth and humanity.
By Rabbi Arthur Waskow
In recent decades,
Rabbi Zalman Schachter-Shalomi and others have advocated a broadening of the
concept of kashrut to include
restrictions on consumption based on ecological considerations. Here, one of
the Jewish Renewal movement's most articulate spokespersons argues the case for
eco-kashrut in the form of a commentary to the Torah portion Shemini (Leviticus
9:1-11:47).This article is
reprinted with the permission of the Jerusalem Report.
It
reads, to modern eyes, like a cookbook. The Torah portion of Shemini begins by
telling us to bring beef, mutton, and pancakes to the sacred altar at the
transcendent moment of its dedication. It ends by making sure that on any
ordinary day we do not eat whales, hawks, camels, or shrimp. For even in our
ordinary lives, some foods are sacred.
And
between these two celebrations of the sacredness of food, we witness the deaths
of those who brought "strange fire" to the Holy One.
How did
biblical Jews get in touch with God? By eating and choosing what to eat. Not by
murmuring prayer; when Hannah did that (I Samuel 1:13), the priest Eli though
she was drunk.
Why by
eating? Because in the deepest origins of Jewish life, the most sacred
relationship was the relationship with the earth. For shepherds, farmers,
orchard-keepers, food was the nexus between adamah,
the earth, and its closest relative, adam,
the human. So ancient Jews got in touch with God by bringing food to the
Temple. With our bodies we affirmed, "This food comes from a Unity of
which we also are a part: from earth, rain, sun, seed, and our own work. It
came from the Unity of Life; so we give back some of it to that great
Unity."
In our
most mundane moments, we affirmed through the rules of kashrut that what and how we ate was holy. And in our wildest
poetic fantasies of the history of humankind, we thought that what went wrong
was somehow wrongly eating--a mistake that brought upon us an earth that would bring
forth only thorns and thistles for us to eat, as we toiled with the sweat
pouring down our noses.
When
the moment came for us to turn history around, we learned to rest. We learned
Shabbat. Not from the thunderclap of Sinai, but from eating--from the
manna--that sweet and flowing breast-milk of El Shaddai, the God of Breasts,
All-Nourishing. From the manna, we learned that together with the earth, we
rest. And rest was then extended from the seventh day to the seventh year, when
the earth was entitled to rest and the human community that worked the earth
was obligated to rest as well.
Today,
most of us have shrugged away the bringing-near of sacred food, the sacred
choice of foods we do not eat, the sacred pausing so that one-seventh of the
time we do not grow our foods. We think that resting is a waste of time that
could be used to make, invent, produce, do.
Indeed,
in the last few hundred years, the human race has invented the most brilliant
act of work in all of its history. We have affected the planet--its very
biology and chemistry--in ways no species ever has before. And we have invented
the Holocaust, the H-bomb, global warming. Strange fires, all of them. Fires
through which a few people can now kill billions, a few corporations can now
kill thousands of species.
What
can we learn by renewing the ancient text? For shepherds and farmers, food was
what they ate from the earth. For us, it is also coal, oil, electric power,
paper, plastics, that we take from the earth. For shepherds and farmers, kashrut was the way of guiding their
eating toward holiness. For us, eco-kashrut should do the same.
We
should ask: Is it eco-kosher to eat vegetables and fruit that have been grown
by drenching the soil with insecticides? Is it eco-kosher to drink Shabbat
Kiddush wine from non-biodegradable plastic cups? Is it eco-kosher to use 100
percent unrecycled office paper and newsprint in our homes, our synagogues, our
community newspapers? Might it be eco-kosher to insist on 10 percent recycled
paper this year, 30 percent in two years, and 80 percent in five years?
Is it
eco-kosher to destroy great forests, to ignore insulating our homes,
synagogues, and nursing homes, to become addicted to automobiles so that we
drunkenly pour carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, there to accelerate the
heating of our globe? Strange fire indeed!
We can
light a blaze to consume the earth. Or we can make a holy altar of our lives,
to light up the spark of God in every human and in every species.
Rabbi Arthur Waskow is a Pathfinder of
ALEPH: Alliance for Jewish Renewal, director of the Shalom Center, author of God-Wrestling--Round
2, and Down-to-Earth Judaism,
and co-editor of Trees, Earth, and Torah: A Tu B'Shvat Anthology.