Parashat Shemini
Kashrut After
Refrigerators
Jewish dietary
practices allow us to welcome the sacred into our daily lives and into mundane
acts.
By Rabbi Bradley Shavit Artson
The following article is reprinted with permission from University of Judaism.
Without attempting to justify the elaborate Jewish dietary
laws, the Torah provides a lengthy list of which foods are kosher and which are
not. Animals with cloven hooves and which chew their cuds are kosher. Fish with
fins and scales are kosher. Birds which eat grain and vegetables, and which can
fly, are kosher. Insects, shellfish and reptiles are not.
Since the earliest stages of our history, Jews have
understood the patterns of kashrut (the dietary laws) to be at the very
center of our heritage. Jews have sacrificed their lives rather than desecrate
themselves with 'treif' (non-kosher) food. From the biblical and into
the rabbinical period, new guidelines and restrictions developed as Jews
encountered different cuisines and aesthetic standards, yet the core of kashrut
has remained unchanged over the millennia. Some of our most stirring stories of
Jewish martyrdom--of Jews who preferred to lay down their lives rather than
abandon their Judaism--center around the laws of kashrut.
Thus, as early as the time of the Maccabees (167 B.C.E.), we
have stories of Jews forced to eat pork by the Syrian oppressors. In those
stirring tales, the Jews chose to die with their integrity intact, to expire
still obedient to the dictates of God and Torah. They could not conceive of a
Judaism without kashrut, so central were the dietary laws to the entire rhythm
of Jewish living.
Yet, the Torah gives no justification for kashrut.
Consequently, Jews throughout history have struggled to understand the reasons
underlying kosher eating. One explanation, popularized by the Rambam
(12th-century Spain and Egypt), is found in Sefer Ha-Hinnukh (The Book
of Education). For this school of thought, God is a cosmic doctor, providing a
prescription to ensure the health of the Jewish People. "God knows that in
all foods prohibited to the chosen people, elements injurious to the body are
found. For this reason, God removed us from them so that the souls can do their
function."
This view understands kashrut as a medical plan to ensure
the health of individual Jews. God prohibited foods that were harmful, thus
ensuring that Jews would be vigorous and fit. God, they tell us, was the first
health-food freak, and kashrut was the macrobiotics of its time.
The problem with such a viewpoint (that pigs cause
trichinosis and were prohibited for that reason, for example) is that it
implies that God doesn't care about the health of the rest of humanity. After
all, kashrut applies only to the Jews. If God is the creator of all humankind,
then isn't it logical to expect God to care about everyone's health?
Another understanding of kashrut, advanced by persons
interested in abandoning the dietary laws, is that kashrut was an early
compensation for unsanitary conditions. If the Jews of the Torah had invented
refrigerators, they wouldn't have required kashrut. Now, with modern
technology, we don't need these outmoded precautions.
My grandmother was one of the most devoted exponents of that
opinion. Now that we have homogenized
milk and air-tight containers, we don't need kashrut. Such a viewpoint has no
basis in either science or religion. No sacred text links the practice of the
dietary laws to a fear of epidemic, or to a need to avoid rotting meat. That
viewpoint also ignores the fact that most of the world's religions observe some
form of dietary laws (Islam, Buddhism, and Hinduism, among them).
Why, then, is kashrut significant? If not health or physical
well-being, what is the goal of the dietary laws? The answer is found in the
Torah itself. "You shall sanctify yourselves and be holy, for I [the Lord]
am holy."
Kashrut is a way of welcoming the holiness of Judaism into
our daily lives. At each meal, we rededicate ourselves to the high standards of
Jewish living and behavior. The network of Jewish values--loving our neighbor,
caring for the widow and orphan, affirming a connection to the Jewish people,
and establishing God's rule on earth--gain strength and depth through the
regular practice of kashrut.
Every form of effective pedagogy involves regular repetition
and frequent exposure. Since we eat three times each day (at a minimum!),
kashrut is the basic school to recall and reinforce a sense of living in brit
(covenant) with God, to making the values of Judaism visible through our deeds
and priorities. Affirming our Jewish commitments by adhering to kashrut
cultivates a greater awareness and an unwavering commitment to the eternal
values of Torah--justice and holiness.
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.