Parashat Metzora
Water for Life
This portion calls on us to make clean water a focal point of our action
and advocacy.
By Carol Towarnicky
This commentary is provided by special arrangement with
American Jewish World Service. To learn more, visit www.ajws.org.
As the title suggests, this week's parashah deals with the care and treatment of metzorot--lepers--as well as people with other physical
afflictions and diseases. The text gives instructions for purification so that
individuals who leave the community because of illness and impurity may
re-enter safely. Not surprisingly, fresh water is essential to the
process: "He
shall…bathe his body in mayyim hayim and he shall be clean (Leviticus 15:13)."
The
Hebrew phrase mayim hayim translates
as "living waters." These waters are, indeed, the waters of life. The sense of
the idiom, according to modern translator Robert Alter, is that the water is
not stagnant, but flowing, either from a spring or river. "The…ritual,"
he writes, "is designed to
carry off the impurities from the place inhabited by the community (Alter, The Five Books of Moses)."
Illness & Water
While
water's function of
carrying disease away from the camp is central to the parashah, the phrase "living waters" also provides a description of what the
water brings to the community. The words "living
waters" convey how
essential clean fresh water is to all people. It provides for sanitation and
health, both in treating illness and in preventing it.
The
parashah makes the assumption that illness is
inevitable. The word "when" is used repeatedly to introduce the
instructions for healing
(Leviticus 15:12, 13, 16, 19, 25, 28). This phrasing calls on us to ensure
that we can treat illness, as well as prevent it as much as possible. In this
context, we are directed to ensure access to clean water in order to restore
health and life.
Note
that the Torah assumes that, even in the desert, living waters will be
available for cleansing and purification. In a sense, ensuring that the
Israelites had access to flowing water for drinking and sanitation was
essential to their national survival. Yet in the modern global community,
billions of people lack access to the water they need to live and thrive.
The
lack of clean water endangers the health and economic well-being of more than a
third of the developing world. According to the United Nations, 2.6 billion people--42 percent of
the world's population--lack access to basic sanitation. This
results in preventable child and adult deaths and disease, and expands the
divide between rich and poor.
Improving
sanitation can dramatically improve the lives of individuals and communities.
Every dollar spent on improving sanitation and hygiene results in up to 34
dollars saved in health, education, and social and
economic development.
The International Year of Sanitation
2008
is the International Year of Sanitation, part of the International Decade for
Action on Water declared by the United Nations in 2005. While significant
progress is being made on providing safe drinking water, the drive to increase
sanitation is well below its targets.
The
major barrier, says U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, is a lack of political
will. Our elected leaders have not made water a priority and neither have we.
Here again, the Torah teaches us.
The
Israelites who fell ill, who became impure with skin afflictions and discharge,
were not neglected by the community. Rather, they were cared for by the most
revered members of the community, the priests. The religious and political
leaders themselves stepped out of the mishkan and walked among the
people to engage personally with lepers.
Imagine
the implications for our global community if political and religious leaders
paid regular visits to those suffering from preventable diseases, to those
denied access to sanitation, to those without living water. Providing a
spotlight for the current reality would build political will. It is when
leaders step out of their houses of leadership and walk among the community
that real needs begin to be addressed.
The
name of the U.N. movement for water and sanitation is called "Water for Life." This week's
parashah calls on us to raise our voices to make
clean water a focal point of our action and advocacy.
Carol
Towarnicky is a freelance writer in Philadelphia.