Parashat D’varim
“Eichah:” Where
Are We Now?
We should respond
to major historical events and to personal decisions with the question, “Where
are we morally?”
By Rabbi James R. Michaels
The following article is reprinted with permission from SocialAction.com.
The yearly Torah reading cycle is almost as unpredictable as
the Jewish calendar. It's nearly impossible to predict the exact date a Torah
portion will be read; sometimes two portions are read together, other times
separately, just to make the puzzle even harder. But certain features of the
yearly cycle are a constant. For example, on Shabbat before Tisha B'Av [the
fast of the ninth of the month of Av] we always read the first Torah portion in
D'varim, or Deuteronomy.
I have no way of proving it, but I
believe this is no coincidence. On the contrary, I think it's all based on one
word found in Deuteronomy 1:12. The verse begins with the word "eichah"--the
Hebrew name for the book of Lamentations, which is read on the eve of the fast.
In fact, the tradition on this Shabbat is for the Torah reader to depart from
the musical cantillation we normally chant, and to sing that one verse in the
special melody for Lamentations. When Tisha B'Av begins on a Saturday night, at
the conclusion of Shabbat D'varim as it does this year, evoking the mood of the
coming fast when we read this verse is especially heartrending.
Verse 1:12 reads: "How can I
bear unaided the trouble you cause, the burden and the bickering?" Its
plaintive nature evokes the rhetorical nature of the question; there truly is
no answer, only a moan, and a cry of despair.
The word "eichah" occurs
only 18 times in the entire Bible. In each instance, it conveys this rhetorical
complaint. But the same Hebrew letters, vocalized differently appear one other
place, in the book of Genesis. After Adam and Eve eat the fruit of the tree of
knowledge, God asks them, "Ayekah," which means, "Where
are you?" The traditional explanation for this question is not that God is
asking the location of the first humans. Rather God is asking them, "Where
are you morally? Have you grown, have you learned anything?"
Our sages have traditionally
looked at the rhetorical question "eichah" and read it with the very
real question "ayekah" in mind. Yes, we mourn for the tragedies of
our people. Yes, we allow ourselves the luxury of anguish at the calamities
that dot our peoples' history. But where are we? What have we learned from that
history? To ask the first question and not attempt to answer the second would
be an exercise in shallowness. Not only that, it wouldn't be the Jewish thing
to do.
Each summer, Shabbat D'varim and
Tisha B'Av occur close to the anniversary of the first atomic bomb at
Hiroshima. Each year, there is a discussion about whether it was right to drop
the bomb when and where we did. I always view this discussion as an exercise in
futility. Dropping the bomb was an act of war; in war, armies are concerned
with winning, not what is morally right.
Recent publications, however, have
shown a deeper and more significant issue: the process that led to the decision
to drop the bomb. In the high echelons of the U.S. military, there was very
little discussion at all. The generals knew we had the weapon, and wanted to
use it. Once the process was set in motion, no one stopped to ask whether the
target was the correct one, whether it had military value, or if the A-bomb
would usher in a new era in world history. In short, no one bothered to ask
what the implications of using this horrifying new weapon would be.
The arguments about the
justification for dropping the bomb won't change past history. But we still
have the obligation to ask "ayekah"--where are we? We can't undo what
was done over 50 years ago, but we can hope that our leaders will be prudent in
the present about decisions with catastrophic consequences.
We should also ask the same
question on a personal level. So often, the major decisions we make are not
made in dramatic circumstances, but rather on the spur of the moment: Whom can
we help today? Are we influenced by that person's race or ethnicity? Do we
allow superficial distinctions to deter us from seeing the common humanity in
all people? Perhaps most important, once we've started moving in one direction,
do we ever stop to evaluate where we're going, and whether we need a mid-course
correction? Those are the questions that we should ask on Shabbat D'varim, as
we read the first chapters of Deuteronomy.
Rabbinic midrash, or
interpretation, tells us that in the wilderness, our people would recount their
sins each year on Tisha B'Av, realizing that they bore the punishment for their
gravity. Each year, they would be given the message that they hadn't been
totally forgiven. Then, just before they entered the land, they knew that the
time had come for a new beginning, as God had would finally answer, "I
have forgiven."
On Shabbat morning, when we hear
the Torah reader intone the word "eichah" let us ask ourselves
"ayekah"--Where are we? And if we can answer that we have indeed
learned to question the little decisions that can lead to big calamities, then
perhaps we will begin to sense a new dimension of God's favor.
Rabbi James Michaels is the spiritual leader of
Congregation Beth Israel in Flint, Mich.