Parashat B’hukotai
No Food, No
Torah; No Torah, No Food
The curses in
B’hukotai were actualized during the Holocaust; when we are ready, we can seek
comfort in God’s blessing of consolation that follows the curses.
By Rabbi Marcia Plumb
The following article is reprinted with permission from The Union of American Hebrew Congregations. For a free e-mail subscription to the UAHC’s
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The first half of this week's Torah portion, B'hukotai,
begins with 13 blessings (Leviticus 26:3-13), continues with 30 curses that
will occur if we don't follow God's commandments (Leviticus 26:14-41), and ends
with a final blessing of consolation from God (Leviticus 26:42-45). God
basically says that even though there will be destruction, I will still be with
you in the darkness. This is a strange kind of consolation in light of the
violence of the curses that precede it.
The curses are about emptiness and hunger--hunger for peace,
rest, land, and food. One of them focuses on physical hunger: "When I
break your staff of bread, ten women shall bake your bread in a single oven;
they shall dole out your bread by weight, and though you eat, you shall not be
satisfied" (Leviticus 26:26). This verse implies that even when we eat, we
will still feel the gnawing hunger pangs we get on Yom Kippur.
Perhaps this verse foreshadows the Jewish experience during
the Shoah (Holocaust). In the camps there was constant hunger. Instead
of baking bread in the ovens, as our verse suggests, women were themselves sent
into ovens.
Yaffa Eliach tells the following story about survivor Tula
Friedman:
A waiter came to the table with a basket of bread. Tula
closed her eyes and inhaled the aroma of the freshly baked bread. She passed
the basket to me without taking any…. She said, "You know, in camp I used
to dream that one day I would marry a baker, and in our house there would
always be an abundance of bread."
"For this basket of bread," another woman across
the table said, "you could buy in camp all the jewelry you see at this bar
mitzvah. Once in Bergen-Belsen, I exchanged a diamond ring for a thin slice of
white bread."
The bread on the table was still untouched. The waiter came
again to the table. "Ladies, I see that you are not hungry today."
"Not today," replied Tula, "and not ever
again."
The waiter was about to remove the bread. "Leave it on
the table," said another woman. "There is nothing more reassuring in
this world than having a basket of freshly baked bread on the table in front of
you." (The Five Books of Miriam,
Ellen Frankel, Grosset/Putnam Books, New York, 1996, p.192.)
In the camps the days were filled with curses, similar to
those in this week's parashah. The talmudic phrase Ein kemach, ein
Torah; ein Torah, ein kemach--"If there is no food, there is no Torah;
if there is no Torah, there is no food"--has poignancy in the light of the
Shoah.
In other words, if there is no food in our stomachs or if we
don't have the physical or emotional essentials for life, then it is impossible
for us to absorb the words of Torah or experience spirituality. And if we do
not have spirituality in our lives, then we are missing the essential nutrition
for our souls. After Auschwitz, many people turned away from God because they
had not been able to feel God's Presence in the darkness.
Perhaps that is why the consolation blessing is so
important: "Yet even then, when they are in the land of their enemies, I
will not reject them or spurn them so as to destroy them, annulling My covenant
with them, for I the Eternal am their God. I will remember in their favor the
covenant with the ancients, whom I freed from the land of Egypt in the sight of
the nations to be their God: I the Eternal" (Leviticus 26: 44-45).
When we are in emotional or physical darkness, when it seems
as if our world is falling apart and we cannot sense God's Presence, the
consolation verse sustains us. God is there in the darkness, perhaps silent but
waiting. Even when we feel cursed, the blessing of the Eternal is assured. When
we are ready, we will sense God's Presence again.
Rabbi Marcia
Plumb writes about and teaches a national adult education curriculum in London,
England, for the progressive movements in the U.K. She also teaches spirituality at Leo Baeck College, the European
progressive rabbinical school.
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