Parashat Tazria
Leprosy and Other Plagues
We can sanctify our houses, clothes, and bodies by creating a more just
society.
By Rabbi James Jacobson-Maisels
This commentary is provided by special arrangement with
American Jewish World Service. To learn more, visit www.ajws.org.
In this week's parashah,
Tazria,
we read about the disease tza'ra'at, commonly translated as leprosy. What is peculiar about this skin disease is
that it not only afflicts humans but also clothing (Leviticus 13:47) and houses (Leviticus 14:33-57). It is not
only people's bodies that
are struck with tza'ra'at, but also their possessions. What is the significance of this peculiar
feature of tza'ra'at and what does it tell us about our
society?
The rabbis
understood tza'ra'at to be a punishment from God for various
transgressions, including, most famously, wicked speech (lashon ha-ra),
but also pride, deceit, false witness, bloodshed, wicked thoughts, pretending
to have knowledge of Torah, causing discord, miserliness, announcing but not
giving charitable donations, defamation of character, idol worship, blasphemy, and robbing the public (Leviticus Rabbah 16:1,5; 17:2,3).
Corrupt Societies
Together these many
sins point to a society that is falling apart: one filled with selfishness,
deceit, disharmony, and violence. Indeed, the theme of deceit, predominant in
the above list of evils, strikes at the very core of what is essential for a
society to function--namely our trust in our fellow citizens, leaders, and
social institutions.
The Sefat Emet, a
Polish Hassidic Rebbe, takes the theme of wicked speech even further,
indicating that the plague of tza'ra'at results not only from evil
things one has said, but also from things one should have said but didn't. That
is, it is not only that acts of evil are being committed, but as importantly,
acts of good are being omitted. In particular, it is the failure to protest and
oppose evil rampant in society that leads to the plague.
Tza'ra'at strikes beyond the body, then, because its
causes and their effects are more than personal. Rather, these sins and crimes
are profoundly destructive for the entire society in which they take place.
Societies filled
with deceit, discord, and violence end up suffering from "plagues"
that strike houses, clothes, and bodies--symbolic representations of shelter,
sustenance, and healthcare. An effective and moral society, one that speaks out
against injustice, will be a society in which each of these necessities is
attainable by all people.
Indeed, the midrash
makes clear the consequences of social and national destruction in its reading
of this parashah, where it interprets the story of a house plagued with tza'ra'at
as referring to the destruction of the Temple and the exile of the people
(Leviticus Rabbah 17:7). The sins of tza'ra'at, then, lead not only to
personal and societal suffering, but also to national calamity.
Salvation is Possible
Tza'ra'at, or forms of this "plague," exist
today. In both the developing world and our own communities, people lack the
most basic necessities, not as a result of natural forces but as a result of
our failure as local and global citizens to create the social conditions
necessary for providing these resources.
In our own society,
a society of great wealth and abundance, we fail to provide adequate housing
and clothing to all, though the resources to do so are plentiful. More
strikingly, of course, is that many Americans lack access to adequate
healthcare.
In the developing
world, the provision of these resources is even more difficult. Yet on a global
level, with our help, providing these basic elements of life is not
impossible.
Despite the
destruction we see in the world, salvation is possible. The midrash
cited above does not end with exile and destruction. Rather, it concludes by
interpreting the explanation of the rebuilding of the infected house ("and
they shall take other stones, and put them in the place of those stones"
in Leviticus 14:42) as referring to the rebuilding of Jerusalem and the Temple
and the return of the exiles.
So too, the Sefat
Emet tells us that the reason tza'ra'at spreads to our houses and
clothes is to indicate to us that not only can they be afflicted, but they can
also be sanctified.
We can sanctify our
houses, clothes, and bodies by making sure that shelter, clothing, and
healthcare are available to all. We can help create societies that not only
lack the destructive values of selfishness, deceit, discord, and violence, but
that also know when and how to speak the words that need to be spoken, to stand
up and take action. Together, then, we can help create a global society of
compassion, harmony, and truth.
Rabbi James
Jacobson-Maisels is pursuing a Ph.D. in Jewish Studies specializing in Kabbalah and Hasidism at the University of
Chicago. He teaches on Judaism and Jewish Mysticism in a variety of settings in
America and Israel.