Investigating the Individuals to Whom We Contribute
A contemporary Conservative rabbi reviews the Jewish legal literature for
guidance on how much to ask about a person who solicits us for tzedakah--or whether to give to all who
request our help.
By Rabbi David Golinkin
Reprinted with
permission of the author. The full responsum (a rabbinic reply to a question of
law), including footnotes not reprinted here, appears in Responsa in a
Moment, published by the Schechter
Institute of Jewish Studies and is available at its "Responsa
for Today" website. An additional question to ponder, which was
not raised by the author: Since in our times, the government usually provides
for the basic needs of the poor--how does this affect the issue? Our related article on "Investigating
the Organizations to Which We Contribute" addresses many of the questions
raised at the beginning of this article.
Question:
A "bag lady" accosts me on the Upper West Side of
Manhattan and asks me for a quarter. Should I ask her why she doesn't go out
and get a job? A schnorrer [charity
collector] knocks on my door, holds out a letter signed by an eminent rabbi and
asks me to contribute to his yeshivah in Jerusalem. Should I check out the
letter and the yeshivah? I enter my local Jewish bookstore and see five pushkes [charity boxes] on the counter.
Should I automatically put a quarter in each, or should I read the fine print
and investigate each charity's legitimacy? Lastly, I receive many direct mail
solicitations every month. Should I send a small donation to each, or
investigate every charity that asks for money and send a larger contribution to
the one that deserves it most?
Responsum:
Jews have been grappling with these dilemmas for at least
2,000 years. On the one hand, most individuals and organizations that ask for
our help are legitimate and really do merit our tzedakah. On the other hand, a
certain percentage of those who ask for money are charlatans and crooks.
Some tzedakah experts say that giving is a habit that must
be cultivated. Therefore, it is better to give often and spontaneously, even if
one is not sure about the credentials of the recipients because, if we stop to
think about every contribution, we will get out of the tzedakah habit. Others
say we should investigate before we give, because by giving to the wrong people
and organizations, we may have technically fulfilled the mitzvah of tzedakah,
but we are in fact depriving those who really need our help. Let us see what
Jewish tradition has to say on the subject.
Surprisingly enough, the rabbinic sources have a basically
positive attitude toward beggars. Maimonides clearly states:
Whoever sees a poor person asking [for assistance]
and ignores him and does not give him tzedakah has transgressed a negative
commandment as it is written, "do not harden your heart nor shut your hand
against your needy brother" (Deuteronomy 15:7).
We do not know the talmudic source of this statement, but it
is clearly in keeping with the following rabbinic passage:
Rabbi Abin said: This poor person stands at your
door and the Holy One blessed be He stands at his right hand as it is written:
"He stands at the right hand of the needy" (Psalms 109:31). (Vayikra
Rabbah 34:9)
On the other hand, other passages recommend kindness to
beggars for selfish reasons: "Rabbi Nahman said: This world is like a
water wheel—the bucket that is full empties while the empty becomes
filled'" (ibid. and parallels). In other words, you should give to beggars
now, because one day down the road the tables may be turned—the beggar may
become wealthy while you may become a beggar.
Nonetheless, our sages were not blind. They knew that some
beggars were frauds and, even if investigated, some would escape detection.
Indeed, a number of rabbis were duped by dishonest beggars. Rabbi Hanina, for
example, was accustomed to send four zuz
to a certain poor person every Erev Shabbat [Friday]. One time he sent the
money with his wife. She returned and said to him, "There is no need... I
heard them say to him: On what will you dine—on the white linen tablecloths or
on the dyed silk tablecloths?"
This type of fraud prompted Rabbi Elazar to say: "Come
let us be grateful to the cheaters, for were it not for them we [who do not
always respond to every appeal for tzedakah] would sin every day."
Other sages were not so forgiving. They resorted to cursing
the cheaters in order to discourage fraud. The Mishnah (Pe'ah 8:9), for
example, states:
Whoever does not need to take yet takes, will not
depart from the world until he will be dependent on others... and whoever is
not lame or blind and pretends to be, will not die of old age before he becomes
like one of them, as it is written: "He who seeks evil, upon him it shall
come" (Proverbs 11:27).
This warning was reiterated in four other places in rabbinic
literature and was codified in the standard codes of Jewish law.
Yet, despite the fear of possible fraud, none of the sages
refrained from giving tzedakah. After all, it is a positive commandment that,
according to Rav Assi, is as important as all of the other commandments put
together (Bava Batra 9a). Some later rabbis shared the liberal approach of
Rabbi Chaim of Tzanz, a nineteenth-century hasidic rabbi:
I give tzedakah to one hundred poor people on the
assumption that I may find one out of a hundred who is worthy and I will have
the merit of helping him. But you refrain from giving to one hundred poor
people... lest one of them be unworthy. Therefore know that the average beggar
who holds out his hand is presumed to need the money and you should not concern
yourself with hidden matters.
The talmudic sages, however, were more careful with their
tzedakah. They realized that if you give to everyone who asks for money, you
ultimately deprive those who really need the money. They therefore took
precautions against fraudulent beggars:
1. Rabbi Sheilah of Naveh made a play on the word "ha'evyon" [a needy person]:
"This needy person hav hunakh
[beware] of him." In other words, beware of cheaters. (Vayikra Rabbah
34:9)
2. Rabbi Abbah did not want to embarrass the poor by having
to look at them, following the principle of mattan
baseter [giving in secret] (Bava Batra 9b and 10b), but he was wary of
cheaters. He therefore would wrap the coins in his kerchief and drag it behind
him and walk by the houses of the poor, but out of the corner of his eye he
looked for cheaters (Ketubot 67b).
3. There is one talmudic passage that gives explicit advice
about avoiding charity fraud: "Rav Huna said: One investigates when asked
for food, but not when asked for clothing." The Talmud explains that in
his opinion, clothing is more urgent than food because it causes the beggar
shame and should therefore be supplied, no questions asked. "Rav Yehudah,
however, said: One investigates when asked for clothing, but not when asked for
food." The Talmud explains that in his opinion, lack of food is more
urgent than lack of clothing because it causes physical pain and suffering and
should therefore be supplied without investigation. The Talmud concludes with a
beraita [teaching of the early sages]
which supports Rav Yehudah, and this latter ruling was codified by the standard
codes of Jewish law.
It seems, then, that the guiding principle was that one
waives investigation when faced with an urgent situation of human suffering: A
person who asks for food may be in pain and may die. Therefore, you give him
the benefit of the doubt and feed him on the spot. But a person who asks for a
change of clothes can wait while you check him out.
Times have changed and beggars no longer ask for food or
clothing, but the same principle can be applied: If an emaciated person dressed
in rags asks you for a quarter, you should give him the benefit of the doubt.
But if a nicely dressed schnorrer comes to your door collecting for his
yeshivah [a Jewish day school or institution of higher learning], you can take
down his particulars and send him a check after checking out his legitimacy. No
one will starve in the interim.
(Read
Rabbi Golinkin's response about investigating organizations.)
Rabbi David Golinkin,
Ph.D., is president and rector of the Schechter Institute of Jewish Studies in
Jerusalem, where he teaches Talmud and Jewish law, and he heads the Va'ad
Halakhah (committee on Jewish law) of the Masorti, or Conservative, movement's
Rabbinical Assembly in Israel.