Parashat Metzora
Natural Healing
Plants and medicines are part of God's gift to us.
By Ramona Rubin
This
commentary is provided by special arrangement with Canfei Nesharim. To learn
more, visit www.canfeinesharim.org.
This
week's Torah portion, Metzora, can teach us about restoring balance both
to creation and human society. According to the Jewish tradition, tzaraat,
a skin disease described in this week's portion, results from lashon hara
(gossip, or other derogatory or harmful speech).
The portion describes the ritual healing of a person who has
contracted tzaraat. To understand this healing in context we will
examine a key cause--the sin of lashon hara--and the particulars of its
cure. We will look at the plants used in the purification and how this can
teach us about appreciating and protecting the earth's botanical diversity and
healing potential.
Leprosy & Speech
Speech represents the articulation of identity or belief,
the generative force of creation. Within Jewish taxonomy, human beings are
referred to as "medabrim" or "speaking ones." Our
power of logic-based communication distinguishes us from the rest of creation.
Our words are powerful. Through prayer and blessing we have the potential to
transform our reality and the world around us.
This effect of speech is evident in the laws pertaining to tzaraat.
Rabbi Yehoshua ben Levi explains that lepers are required to dwell outside the
camp in solitude because their speech caused a separation between people
(Erkhin 16b). Therefore, the leper'sspiritual healing must occur in a state of separateness.
Cedar & Hyssop
When our speech becomes blemished, a strong remedy is
required to heal it. The remedy described in Parashat Metzorah comes about
through a cleansing immersion process involving two wild birds, a red wool
string, and samples from two plant species: the cedar tree and the low-lying
hyssop (Leviticus 14:4).
The healing process is clearly spiritual--the plants are not
ingested, merely held. And yet, the Torah requires their inclusion in the
process. God is reminding us of the curative powers of plants, and invoking the
symbolism found in the natural world to aid the spiritual healing of a person.
Rabbi Samson Raphael Hirsch teaches that the ritual healing
of the leper is aimed at reintegrating the individual into the social
community. The leper's harmful words disturbed the social fabric that binds the
community together, and therefore he must go through a reintegration process
involving banishment to the field outside human encampment, and a cleansing ritual
that brings in elements of the natural world.
For centuries, Jewish sages understood the birds and plants
involved in the healing ritual to carry symbolic lessons through the nature of
their being. Rashi explained that two wild birds are used in this purification
ritual because birds are constantly chirping and twittering, alluding to the
mindless chattering of one who slanders others. The Sfas Emes hints that the
birds represent both the harm caused through negative speech, and the powerful
expression of beneficial, life-giving speech.
The Sfas Emes also explains that the two plants used in the
healing ritual--cedar and hyssop--represent two poles of being brought into
harmony through the actions of the cleansing ritual. Because cedar grows so
tall and hyssop is a lowly shrub, together they represent the highest and
lowest types of plant life.
Symbolism in Healing
Symbolism and representation are often the most important
part of any healing ritual involving plants. Herbal and homeopathic healing
traditions follow a practice of recognizing the healing power of herbs based on
the physical qualities of the plant, such as their shape, texture, color, or
resemblance to an organ.
In homeopathy this is referred to as the "law of
similars," and the principle that "like cures like" is a
profound one in many natural systems of healing. We are reflected in nature,
and nature is reflected in us.
In the same vein, the Sfas Emes comments that the cedar is
associated with pride and haughtiness, which lead a person to speak lashon
hara. Just as the cedar is distanced above the earth, harmful speech comes
from feeling "above" or distanced from others.
In contrast, hyssop grows low to the ground. The priest
sprinkles water on the leper using a bundle of both these plants during the
healing ritual to be reminded that though loftiness is part of creation, it
should be countered with humility.
Because it is one of the few times that healing is discussed
in the Torah, and certainly the most detailed instance, the case of the leper
has become a paradigm for Jewish sickness and healing.
The central use of two specific plant species in the ritual
is very important. Their mere presence at the ceremony is enough to reap their
curative powers, probably due to the powerful symbolism described above. From
this we can learn the profound importance of ensuring the survival of the vast
diversity of plants on this earth.
The use of plants for healing is an ancient and time-tested
practice. Exploration into the rainforest and other areas of great biodiversity
has yielded riches for the medical world. Indigenous peoples around the world
maintain traditions rich in knowledge about the healing and curative powers of
their local plants. Medicinal knowledge as well as agricultural practices can
be learned from similar studies.
We must remember that these plant foods and medicines are
part of God's gift to us to use for healing and result in a responsibility to
pass on as resources for future generations. Like the leper, we may need
their presence to stay healthy.
God has provided us with abundance and healing through the
natural world. These gifts are to be found in the specific plants and the
diversity of uses in healing and nutrition. Plant medicines come to use in many
different styles of healing. They are prepared in teas, tinctures, poultices,
and capsules, are used in cooking as seasonings and vegetables, as sources of
inspiration for lab-synthesized medical products, as fragrance or oils in
aromatherapy, and in micro-doses in homeopathic remedies or flower essences.
In the case of the leper, the Torah requires their presence
for the powerful symbolism they offer. The plants become our teachers,
balancing specific energies and sharing metaphors for growth that impact both
body and psyche.
Our role in creation is symbiotic. We are both caretakers of
nature and we can also be cared for and healed through nature. Like the
opposing natures of the cedar and the hyssop, we contain both extremes. Through
positive speech we can build relationships within both human communities and
our natural environment that will support and encourage connection and life.
Suggested
Action Items:
1. Get
in touch with the healing properties of plants by exploring herbal medicinal
practices.
2.
Try planting your own herb garden, preferably with species native to
your location.
3. Learn
about seed saving practices as a way of cultivating pure non-genetically
modified strains of medicinal herbs.
Ramona Rubin
received a masters degree in public health epidemiology at the University of
Michigan where she worked with Michigan Integrative Medicine. Her focus is on
connections between human health and the environment, particularly the
spiritual connections between a healthy environment and mind-body healing.