Parashat D'varim
Belonging To the Land
An obligation of responsibility for this generation and the next.
By Matthew Mausner
This
commentary is provided by special arrangement with Canfei Nesharim. To learn
more, visit www.canfeinesharim.org.
"…You have dwelt long enough at this mountain.
Turn and
journey, and come to the mountain of the Amorites and to all its neighboring
places, in the plain, on the mountain, and in the lowland, and in the south and
by the seashore, the land of the Canaanites, and the Lebanon, until the great
river, the Euphrates River. See, I have set the land before you; come and
possess the land which the Lord swore to your forefathers, to Abraham, to
Isaac, and to Jacob, to give them and their descendants after them (Deut. 1:7-9)."
A Clear Message
The
idea of belonging runs deeply throughout the Torah, and particularly in this
week's
Torah portion, D'varim. For the Jewish people, belonging is not only
manifested in the sense of belonging to a people, but also a very deep sense of
this people belonging to a land. We belong to the land of Israel, and only here can a
deep aspiration for wholeness in our home be fulfilled, and can we truly
manifest as a nation. While being a light unto the nations may sometimes
require us to bring messages of healing from slavery and spiritual brokenness
and exile to the farthest corners of the earth, the essence of our tikun
(repair of ourselves and of the world) is strong Jewish life in the Jewish
homeland.
Reading
Torah as an organic whole, a message stands out: This is how the world needs to be
fixed--you,
the Children of Israel, need to live according to the mitzvot (Divine
commandments), not just anywhere, but "in the land which I will show
you (Exodus
12:25)." That is to say, the world will be fixed by the Jewish people
doing God's
will in the land which God gave us.
The Next Generation
One
such expression of God's will is caring for the Land of Israel. To live
in exile is to live a contradiction. If a person does not live in his or her
homeland, having no concrete expectation that his or her descendants will be
living on the same land, then what reason is there to treat the land right, to
live sustainably, and to ensure that the resources and health of the land will
be there for future generations?
Human
beings are hard-wired with instincts to protect and feed our children; these
instincts can and should reinforce our attitudes towards our land. We should feel
just as strongly that our land and its health must be protected. We should know
in our bones that they are one and the same. But when we do not live in our
land, when we are separated from that deeper commitment, then we are
disconnected from the wholeness of our instincts.
To
do the 'right' thing according to Torah, and to do the right thing according to
secular morals or science, are often seen in opposition. But even to make a
separation between the environment and society--or to separate nature from the world of
human interaction, speech, morals, and behavior--is a classic example of the mentality of
dualism so prevalent in Western culture. Yet as Jews we know that the spiritual
environment is not separate from the natural environment. People who
treat other people horribly while seeking to protect land or sustainability are
not doing anything laudable; the Nazis, for example, were big proponents of
organic gardening.
American
Indians have a saying: decisions should be made for the 'seventh
generation.' Conduct
in a land, the way one treats the environment, is best determined by having in
mind what will be best for one's descendants.
One's great-grandchildren, it is presumed, will be living in and dependent
on that very same land. Deep ecology moves from the family outward: the only truly
responsible way to make decisions is to have the seventh generation in mind--and the many,
many generations of microorganisms, plants, insects, and animals that
constitute the web of life on which all depend. In D'varim, the Torah is
trying to clue us in to this logic, but is rightly placing a deeper rationale
above any simple self-interested rationalism (or nationalism).
Linking Our Actions & the Land
We
learn that not only our own health and prosperity, but the health of the
land, depends on our conduct:
"And it will be, if you hearken to My commandments that I command you this
day to love the Lord, your God, and to serve Him with all your heart and with
all your soul, I will give the rain of your land at its time, the early rain
and the latter rain, and you will gather in your grain, your wine, and your oil.
And I will give grass in your field for your livestock, and you will eat and be
sated. Beware, lest your heart be misled, and you turn away and worship strange
gods and prostrate yourselves before them. And the wrath of the Lord will be
kindled against you, and He will close off the heavens, and there will be no
rain, and the ground will not give its produce, and you will perish quickly
from upon the good land that the Lord gives you (Deut. 11:13-21)."
This
is really an environmental concept: our national moral conduct helps make it
rain, helps the soil be healthy, helps bring the blessings of the Divine
on all life in the land. This is a holistic prescription: if we fulfill our role, peace will envelop
Israel--its land, its people--and the entire world. The fabric of life on
earth is interwoven and interdependent. Our conduct--our
self-control over the numerous collective human efforts that create and
pollute--is
essential to maintaining the health of this fundamental web of life on
which we all depend.
Jews
are meant to be a light unto nations: by living in an exemplary way, by fully
and proudly manifesting our mission in our national homeland, by conducting
ourselves in ways that respect both the eternal laws revealed in Torah, and the
natural laws on which life on earth depends. To be ecologically responsible, to be
spiritually responsible, and to be politically responsible: these are all really
the same thing at root. The Torah teaches us again and again how we must treat
trees, plants, animals, and individual people. In D'varim, we learn how
we must relate as a nation to our land.
Matthew Mausner
is a historian, teacher, and writer in Jerusalem. He is currently completing a
thesis on tribal identity and belonging at Israel's Bar Ilan University.