Parashat Metzora
Reaching Out To
The Isolated
Just as the priest
went out from the community to welcome back those who had been afflicted with
leprosy, we too should reach out to those who feel excluded from our
communities.
By Dvora Weisberg
The following article is reprinted with permission from CLAL: The
National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership.
The parasha opens with a description of the ritual for
purifying a metzora, an Israelite stricken with a skin disease. The
metzora is required to dwell outside the Israelite camp until the affliction
has passed. On the day on which the metzora is eligible for purification, the
Torah records that "he shall be brought to the priest" (Leviticus
14:2).
The next verse, however, reports that "the priest shall
go outside the camp" to the place where the metzora has dwelt alone during
his sickness. The classical commentaries explain the apparent contradiction by
noting that the priest must go out to the metzora since the latter cannot
return to the camp until the purification ritual has been performed.
To the commentators' explanations for the priest's behavior,
we can add another insight. The metzora, as a result of contracting a
disfiguring disease, has been exiled from the community. While this precaution
may have risen from the desire to prevent the spread of a contagious disease,
it undoubtedly left the metzora feeling emotionally, as well as physically,
alone.
Cured of his illness, the metzora is now permitted to rejoin
the community, but the period of isolation may have left him angry and
withdrawn. The priest goes out to meet the metzora in part to draw him back
into the community. Reentering the community is a gradual process, reflecting
the difficulty the metzora experiences reconnecting with other human beings.
Our communities include individuals who for one reason or
another feel isolated. We cannot ignore these people or contribute to their
feelings of estrangement. Fear of their afflictions is no excuse for causing
them further pain. Just as the priest goes out to meet the metzora, so too we
must reach out to those in our midst who have been excluded, drawing them back
into a caring community.