Parasaht Ki Tissa
Our Golden Calf: When Tzedakah Is Not Righteous
The incident of
the Golden Calf challenges us to consider how we respond to tzedakah that comes
from resources that were acquired unethically.
By Rabbi Dan Bronstein
The following article
is reprinted with permission from SocialAction.com.
Few principles are as valued or as
central to Judaism as that of tzedakah,
which translated literally means "righteousness" but is usually
understood as the Jewish word for "charity." And in the Torah portion
Ki Tissa, the conceptual framework of giving and receiving takes center stage.
Ki Tissa is best recognized for
containing one of the most infamous events of the Jewish people's wanderings in
Sinai: the construction of the Golden Calf. We might recall that even as Moses
ascends Mount Sinai in anticipation of receiving the Ten Commandments from God,
the people Israel, in a swirl of panic and fear over Moses' absence, devote
their energies to constructing an idol made out of gold.
The construction of an idol is, of
course, diametrically opposed to faith and service to the God of Israel, who is
One, who is non-corporeal, and who, while being very much a part of human
existence, also transcends the material realm. Indeed, an ongoing theme of
Israel's Exodus from Egypt is that Israel's departure from the land of bondage
is an ethical as well as physical journey.
Egypt under the pharaohs was the
very model of the profound immorality of placing the accumulation of wealth
over and above the value of human life. In embracing the covenant of the God of
Israel, the Jewish people was leaving behind a world based upon the primacy of
accumulating wealth, and setting forth on a journey towards a society based on
justice, truth and peace, a society in which the value of all human life was an
essential moral aim.
In the case of the Golden Calf,
Israel's sin of idolatry seems so glaring and obvious. But like ancient Egypt,
we too live in a world in which the accumulation of wealth is often given
primacy over the value of human life. At the same time, social action and
charitable giving are ways in which the Jewish and other communities attempt to
deal with the ills and injustices of society.
Maimonides, arguably the greatest
Jewish thinker in the last one thousand years, devoted quite a bit of energy
delineating the different levels of tzedakah. He rated anonymous giving, given
out of free will, to be the highest level of charity. Just as the ancient Sages
argued that it was more ethical to serve God out of love than fear, so too tzedakah
given out of love and genuine concern for and service to others is a higher
form of giving than charity given out of amoral interests.
What are we to do, then, when
tzedakah is given for immoral reasons, and how are we to respond when
charitable resources are derived from unethical and criminal pursuits?
I am reminded of two such
instances, taking place in the throes of the creation of the State of Israel.
As is now more widely-known, several Jewish gangsters contributed money,
weapons and smuggling expertise on behalf of Israel's struggle for
independence.
One such gentleman, Jake
"Greasy Thumb" Guzik, was Al Capone's accountant; another was Bugsy
Siegel, a mob enforcer, and founder of the Las Vegas gambling industry. Some
argue that when facing a basic existential crisis like the Jewish people did
after the Holocaust, our community had no choice but to accept aid from any
source. But what about today?
We in the social action community
and indeed in the Jewish community as a whole must ask and challenge ourselves
to think critically about when the ends justifies the means--and they don't. In
recent years, our community has increasingly had to ask whether financial
resources gained from unethical activities should be accepted, or even applied
specifically to social action concerns.
Ivan Boesky, Michael Milken and
now Marc Rich, are well-known for their less than pure ways of accumulating
wealth, but each also achieved notoriety for their seeming devotion to
tzedekah. (Marc Rich, for example, did business and grew wealthy in part from
his dealings with regimes such as Iran, Iraq and apartheid-era South
Africa--and yet he also gave millions of dollars to Israel and other causes.)
Although this dilemma is not new,
I fear that our community has yet to truly deal with this challenge. There are
no hard and fast rules to these moral questions. But if we are not thoughtful
about what we construct, and if we ignore the sources of our largesse, we too,
like our ancestors in the wilderness of Sinai, may find ourselves building an
idol made of gold rather than truly serving God and caring for humanity at
large.
Rabbi Daniel Bronstein was ordained at the Hebrew Union
College-Jewish Institute of Religion and is presently a Ph.D. candidate in
Jewish History at the Jewish Theological Seminary of America. He also presently
serves as a Program Officer and Educator at the Jewish Life Network, and counts
Rabbi Yisroel Salanter and Groucho Marx among his two greatest influences.