Parashat D'varim
Perceptions of Justice
People's
perceptions of a society are often based on that society's judicial system.
By Joseph Telushkin
The following article
is reprinted with permission from CLAL: The
National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership.
If you were told you could give one last message to your
descendants, what would you tell them?
That is the challenge that confronts Moses. The Jewish
nation that he has forged and guided for forty years in the desert stands
poised to enter the land of Canaan. But Moses knows that he will not be allowed
to accompany them; he is destined to die in the desert. The entire book of
Deuteronomy, starting with this portion, consists of his farewell message.
It is surprising that at so dramatic a juncture, Moses'
opening remarks focus much attention on an issue that applies to a small
percentage of the population, the creation of a judicial system: "Hear out
your fellows, and decide justly between anyone and a fellow Israelite or a
stranger. You shall not be partial in judgment: hear out low and high alike.
Fear no one, for judgment is God's" (1:16-17).
Since the average citizen is neither a judge nor an
advocate, and does not usually spend much time in a courtroom, why does Moses
make this issue so central to his message?
Perhaps it is because peoples' perception of a society's
justice or lack thereof is so heavily influenced by its legal rulings. The
number of Soviet citizens sentenced to jail for dissident activities in the
Soviet Union in the 1970's represented an infinitesimally small percentage of
the population. But it was the unjustly sentenced "prisoners of
conscience" that caused people throughout the world to see the Soviet
Union as an unjust society.
Indeed, in our country, the common perception that numerous
criminals are acquitted on the basis of technicalities causes many Americans to
feel that criminal justice is unjust, even though the percentage of such cases
is small.
And so, as the Jews prepare to establish their state, Moses
reminds them that a just society starts with equal justice before the law.