Parashat Shlah
How Do
Activists Remain Active?
The tzitzit
(fringes) on our clothes remind us not to be discouraged or lose hope for
social change, based on the realities we see around us.
By Nina Wouk
The following article is reprinted with permission from SocialAction.com.
"Failure is impossible," wrote Susan B. Anthony,
certain that righteousness must eventually triumph. The road to that triumph,
however, may be pitted with failures, the goal postponed longer than a
lifetime. How, then, do activists stay active?
Parashat Shlah suggests an answer.
The Israelites send spies over the border of the Promised Land; they return to
give their wandering people an incoherent report of a good but deadly land full
of giants. Only two spies maintain hope of crossing into the land and fighting
to stay. The people, understandably confused and terrified, retreat from the
challenge, and live out 38 hazardous years in the wilderness before trying
again.
Moshe's instructive response
contains an antidote to such debilitating panic. The Israelites and their
descendants are to wear fringes on the corners of their garments, where
unhemmed cloth begins to unravel, as a reminder to stay on course and not
"run after your own eyes and your own hearts."
Torah scholar Nitzhia Shaked
explains the nature of these two distractions. "Our own eyes" refers
to what we can learn by observation, often immensely demoralizing. "Our
own hearts" refers to thought, and its supporting current of emotion. Thus
in suspecting our hearts we are called on to examine how our fears and desires
warp our perceptions.
Led only by our own eyes, we
experience the limits of realistic hope for social change. History often
provides evidence against our deepest wishes, with every instance of compassion
balanced by an intolerable cruelty. Success becomes impossible when measured
against a messianic ideal. Success is possible when measured more modestly, in
lives saved, in suffering relieved, in justice established, instance by
instance.
Led only by our own hearts, we get
caught up in the heady ferment of partial success, and mistake the part for the
whole, inviting painful disillusionment. The success of the civil rights
movement was its failure, when millions of African-Americans discovered that
legal equality ended neither racism nor poverty. The passage of laws protecting
gay people can, as Urvashi Vaid points out, invite dangerous complacency among
a still endangered minority. The signing of the Americans with Disabilities
Act, a triumph for the disability rights movement, led to a decade of
frustration as neither bureaucrats nor judges nor, most importantly, ordinary
Americans, understood or enforced it as a civil rights law.
For a disliked and discounted
minority, crossing into the promised land means more than the difficult work of
legislative change and convincing judges. It requires creating public support
for the movement's goals. It requires a massive effort at communication.
The disability rights movement
remains encouragingly clear about this. Disability publications, such as Ragged
Edge and Mouth, regularly publish articles on ways to communicate,
along with analyses of failures and successes in communicating. This
self-critical attitude, which makes it possible to define and refine realistic
goals and programs, is exactly what the Torah requires.
How can activists remain active?
The Torah doesn't tell us to ignore the evidence of our eyes or the urges of
our hearts, but to expect messy limits, to look towards the place where our
hopes unravel, and to turn our eyes and hearts back towards the reminders of
our goals and ideals.
As the act of donning and looking
at the fringes is repeated daily, so must be the tasks of resistance. Ours is
not to complete the work, as our sages assure us, only to stay the course.
Nina Wouk is an accountant who spends most of her free
time serving on three ritual committees.