Parashat Vayigash
Joseph's Foresight and Restraint
A Torah teaching for the Western environmentalist.
By Dr. David Goldblatt
This
commentary is provided by special arrangement with Canfei Nesharim. To learn
more, visit www.canfeinesharim.org.
Joseph
is a paragon of foresight, self-discipline, and concern for the larger
community. As we saw previously in Parashat Miketz, Joseph used
prophetic insight to instruct Egypt to make provisions during the seven years
of plenty for the seven-year famine that would follow. He had sure knowledge of
an impending human-ecological problem and gathered grain in the time of plenty
as insurance against hard times to come.
In this week's Torah portion of Vayigash, we see how
Egypt benefits from the provisions that Joseph stored. In the years before the
famine, the Egyptians were obliged to show restraint--to consume less in return
for non-material gain, in this case the surety of survival in leaner times.
As Rabbi Avraham Greenbaum of Jerusalem comments,
"Joseph used the seven years of plenty to teach the Egyptians to put
limits on immediate consumption and gratification in order to save for the
future." As we will explore below, this is a lesson that modern societies
sorely need to learn.
As it turned out, during the second year of the famine, all
the Egyptians' stored grain rotted. The Midrash says that when the Egyptians
came to Joseph for food, he insisted they circumcise themselves and thereby
symbolically commit themselves to a path of self-restraint. After selling their
livestock for food, they sold themselves and their land (Genesis 47:13-19).
Rabbi Daniel Kohn explains that Joseph ultimately brought
the Egyptians to a point where they had concern for and a relationship with the
earth ("and the land will not become desolate," Genesis 47:19), even
though by that time the land no longer belonged to them.
Certainty & Power
Joseph had two distinct advantages in implementing his plan
for safeguarding Egypt--advantages we lack today:
1. His knowledge of the future was perfect (Joseph having
been prophetically told by God through Pharaoh's dreams what would transpire).
2. As second-in-command to Pharaoh, his control of the
Egyptian agrarian system was absolute and his ability to carry out his plan
complete.
Some level of uncertainty is inherent in many current
environmental problems, particularly climate change, and the predictive ability
of even the most advanced computers for these most complex phenomena,
especially those further in time or in narrow geographical areas, is limited. Thus,
it is a much greater challenge to plan and execute wise environmental policies
based on predictive knowledge.
Nevertheless, commitment to some basic environmental
management principles and values, such as the precautionary principle, should
be a guide for environmental planning in the face of uncertainty. The precautionary
principle implies "...a willingness to take action in advance of
scientific proof [or] evidence of the need for the proposed action on the
grounds that further delay may prove ultimately most costly to society and
nature, and, in the longer term, selfish and unfair to future
generations."
In the context of climate change and increasing energy
insecurity, this translates into governments, corporations, and civil society
spurring innovations in technologies, institutions, business practices, and
social norms that will reduce fossil fuel consumption and carbon dioxide
emissions.
In addition, developing renewable, carbon-neutral sources of
energy for modern society is a necessity. To have practiced foresight like
Joseph, this would have implied making these investments in earnest decades
ago, when the ecological indications of potential anthropogenic climate change
were speculative or tentative. Had we developed such foresight and the ability
to act on it, we would not have waited until just recently to take the issue
seriously, now when the first deleterious effects of climate change are already
noticeable, with much worse to come.
Even today, when concerned economists emphasize how
relatively little sacrifice of the one-time world gross domestic product would
be necessary to invest in effective greenhouse gas mitigation, vested interests
in well-to-do countries are reluctant to forego even this. Their leaders march
to the beat of global financial markets and short election cycles; they cannot
judiciously plan for the future because in an economy where shareholders demand
high returns in the current fiscal period and consumers demand instant
gratification, future concerns barely matter.
Socially-Aware Pragmatism
Returning to Joseph's self-discipline, we learn from the
text that Joseph did not have children during the famine and even that he may
have deliberately limited his offspring before the famine because of his
knowledge that it was about to occur: "Now to Joseph were born two
sons--when the year of the famine had not set in… (Genesis 41:50)" Rashi
comments: "From here [we see] that it is forbidden for a person to have
marital relations during years of famine."
The talmudic source of this proscription is a statement by
the sage Resh Lakish (Babylonian Talmud, Taanit 11a). Tosafot clarifies that
this stricture applies to one who wishes to act especially piously, as Joseph
did, but does not necessarily apply to the rest of the people, as is shown by
the fact that Levi fathered Yocheved (Moses' mother!) during the famine.
However, the Torah Temimah has a different view on Joseph,
explaining that his self-imposed abstention from having children during the
famine, while Levi bore Yocheved, teaches that the obligation to refrain from
increasing the population during times of communal distress falls specifically
on the wealthy, those who already have abundance.
Rabbi Natan Greenberg explains that Joseph's decision was in
part a pragmatic one based on a broad, socially-aware perspective that in times
of famine the collective is not served by having more mouths to feed. In
addition, even as a high Egyptian potentate, Joseph made a principled decision
to involve himself personally in the suffering of his community.
Ba'al HaTurim and Maharim note that Joseph's actions here
merited the blessing that Moses gives him in Deuteronomy that he would increase
from the blessing of the land.
Reducing Consumption
Population and consumption are two fundamental drivers
of environmental stress. In Joseph's time, when the vast majority of the population
lived much closer to subsistence levels, foregoing another child would have
been the appropriate gesture of solidarity and en masse would have made a
difference.
In developed countries in today's world, where
fertility is relatively low (and Jewish fertility in a country such as the U.S.
particularly low), reducing environmentally significant consumption is much
more important.
In today's globalized, highly interconnected world of
instantaneous communication, the notion of the community is necessarily much
larger than it was even 50 years ago. Is it acceptable for wealthy Jews in
developed nations to follow the current consumerist ethos, with its high
attendant levels of energy and material consumption, when people in their
cities, country, or world are suffering miserable poverty, are malnourished,
and live in environmentally degraded conditions? Particularly when this
consumption is indirectly accelerating the world's environmental decline?
As a fundamental matter of energy policy, to ensure long-term energy access and security for everyone,
developed countries must moderate their high energy consumption so that energy
resources are available and affordable to lift the world's poorest out of
poverty--without exceeding the earth's
ecological carrying capacity. This is as much a moral issue as a
matter of technology or economics, and as such it requires strong
national-political commitment, and personal ethical commitment.
The implication today is that in a world in which a large
percentage of the population is suffering privation in basic needs, including
food and water, and in which rampant consumerism is driving a significant part
of the global environmental decline--which impacts the poor disproportionately
more than others--the wealthy can reign in their environmentally significant
consumption and do not always have to live to the fullest extent of their
economic abilities.
We should refrain from overconsumption when others in the
world are suffering extreme (financial and ecological) poverty now and when indications are mounting
that today's ecological recklessness is impoverishing the world for the future.
Channeling more funds into helping the less fortunate
rather than indulging in more highly material and energy-consuming goods and leisure
activities is tzedakah (charity) for people and tzedek (justice)
for the earth. We should replace today's model of immediate material
gratification as well as conspicuous consumption with Joseph's model of
foresight, self-discipline, and concern for the common good.
David L. Goldblatt received degrees from Brown University
and Yale University and a doctorate in environmental science from the Swiss
Federal Institute of Technology (ETH). He is currently a research consultant in
energy and the environment for industry, ETH, and other universities, and he
co-directs the translation and editing firm editranslate.com. Dr. Goldblatt
lives in Zurich, Switzerland with his wife and four children.