Parashat Ki Tissa
Tzedakah And
Jewish Education
Our communal
responsibility to ensure the immortality of the Jewish people depends on our
commitment to supporting Jewish education.
By Rabbi Bradley Shavit Artson
The following article is reprinted with permission from University of Judaism.
Jewish education forms
the backbone of our communities. We assure the community of vitality and
endurance through the Hebrew studies of our children, the outreach programs for
those considering conversion, and the continuing education programs for other
seeking adults. And those programs need our support.
Consider today's Torah
portion. God instructs Moses to take a census of the Jewish People in order for
each Jew to pay a half-shekel tax to maintain the central communal institution
of Jewish learning--the Mishkan (Tabernacle). The Mishkan, a Jewish school!?! Absolutely, since it was there
that the entire Jewish community gathered to learn the word of God. And that
first school was supported by all. The Torah records:
"Everyone who is
entered in the records, from the age of twenty years up, shall give the Lord's
offering: the rich shall not pay more and the poor shall not pay less than half
a shekel when giving the Lord's offering..." (Exodus 30:14).
So vital was the
necessity of everybody contributing to tzedakah (funds for public
assistance, literally "justice") that, in the words of Rabbi Abraham
ben Ezra (12th-century Spain), the contribution "atones for a soul."
According to the Talmud, "Tzedakah is as important as all the other commandments
put together."
And precisely because of
the centrality of giving--because it is only through supporting the community
that we achieve a collective immortality--that this Torah verse imposes an
unexpected obligation on the poor. For this verse insists that the poor cannot
give less than a half-shekel. According to Maimonides, "even a poor person
who lives entirely on tzedakah must also give tzedakah."
Giving to tzedakah
involves the very heart of Jewish responsibility and humanity. To be a
responsible Jew implies, among other attributes, to support the Jewish
community. All of us, no matter how rich or how poor, are members of a
community that provides services to its members.
And at the center of
those services is the need to train Jews to maintain a community. Without
knowledgeable and passionate Jews--young and old--there will be no Jewish
services to provide since there will be no Jews to provide them. Supporting
Jewish education is an act of Jewish responsibility, a shrewd investment in the
future.
All of us, even the poor,
have a right to be responsible, to feel that we contribute to the maintenance
of the Jewish community. Our claim to humanity and belonging is predicated on
our giving tzedakah. Our ability to provide Jewish institutions to care for
immigrants, the elderly, Israel, oppressed Jewry, civil rights, and a range of
other issues depends on the cultivation and continued training of Jews who
recognize their obligations and responsibilities as Jews. And that means
supporting Jewish education.
A tale from the Talmud:
The wealthy Rabbi Tarfon once asked Rabbi Akiva to help him invest his money.
Rabbi Akiva took the funds and used it instead to allow poor students to
continue their Jewish education. Several days later, when Rabbi Tarfon asked to
see his investments, Rabbi Akiva took him to the school and showed him the
students as they recited their lessons from the Bible. When they arrived at the
verse, "He gives freely to the poor; his righteousness endures
forever," Rabbi Akiva pointed to the students and said, "This is the
investment I made for you!"
There is no greater
investment than in supporting places of Jewish learning--our day schools,
synagogues, and seminaries. If there is to be a Jewish community tomorrow, it
will be as a result of the hardworking Jewish educators--rabbis, cantors,
teachers, principals, and others--who provide a sense of Jewish identity,
piety, and involvement both for children and for adults.
Without Jewish education,
we cannot survive. And, as today's Torah verse indicates, the responsibility to
support Jewish education rests on each one of us. Rich and poor, together we
must assure Jewish survival with our shekels, our involvement, and our hearts.
Rabbi Bradley Shavit Artson is the Dean of the Ziegler
School of Rabbinic Studies at the University of Judaism in Los Angeles. He is
the author of The Bedside Torah: Wisdom, Dreams, & Visions (McGraw Hill).
For a free subscription to his weekly email Torah commentary, please send an
email request to bartson@uj.edu.