Excerpt Browser

This page displays the full text of excerpts.  When viewing a single excerpt, its “Share,” “Switch Article,” and “Comment” functions are accessible.

GENESIS — 2:15 tend

GEN270 Let Your Table Be to You a Temple. …. Bananas—those ordinary staples of the American breakfast table---don’t come cheap.  [They are] a natural wonder, scarcely found in the wild.  To get those sugary, golden-hued fruit to our supermarkets, the U.S.-based companies that control banana cultivation the world over employ a cocktail of toxic fertilizers and pesticides known to harm human beings and animals.  They clear acres of virgin forest and replace vibrant tropical ecosystems with banana monocultures.  They burn remarkable amounts of fossil fuel to transport their product over vast distances—far more than producers of other crops.  They drive down wages by snuffing out competition; they deny their workers health care and education, and they prohibit unionization.  [Organic bananas are certainly an all-around better choice than conventional bananas.  Grown without pesticides, they are safer for the agricultural laborers and for surrounding ecosystems.  However growing them in quantity is difficult and requires the deforestation of virgin forests at high altitudes (where banana-living diseases are scarce).  Moreover, they do little to increase the quality of life of the laborers who grow and harvest them or to decrease quantities of fossil fuel burned in transportation to our markets.] The bottom line: transforming this wondrous and rare plant into an everyday breakfast item takes a tremendous ethical and ecological toll. I love bananas as much as anyone, but the ubiquity of this fruit is an example of a larger trend in American life-the desecration of the nourishing plants and animals God commanded us to “protect and nurture” in the Book of Genesis [this verse]. Banana producers have transformed a rare and fragile fruit into an utterly ordinary breakfast staple.  They have accomplished this feat through various nefarious technological, political, and economic practices—along the way damaging the earth and the lives of its inhabitants.  By contrast, we Jews have an ancient system of mitzvot regulating agriculture, diet, and food preparation.  A striking passage in the Babylonian Talmud encapsulates this system in a single sentence; “Rabbi Yochanan and Rabbi Eliezer taught: As long as the Temple stood, its altar atoned for Israel’s sins, but now a person’s table atones for him” B’rachot 55a.  For the Rabbis of the Talmud, food—the proper foods cultivated and prepared in the proper manner—could be as holy as the sacrifices offered on the altar of the Temple long ago. After my experience in Costa Rica, it was difficult to imagine how bananas could continue to appear on my home’s modern stand-in for the ancient Temple’s altar, the kitchen table.  The ecological and social harm wrought by banana production has besmirched this fruit’s golden reputation; as a consequence, I decided to replace bananas in my diet with other, locally grown, organic fruits.  In other words, there may be no better place to start redressing the errors of agribusiness than with those bananas on the breakfast table. (By Joseph Aaron Skloot, "Real Life / RealFood: Let Your Table Be to You a Temple")  SACTAB 207-9

SHOW FULL EXCERPT

GENESIS — 2:15 tend

GEN272 Partnership with God.  Few things have the ability to bring us closer to God than planting and growing food in a garden.  It is the ultimate example of our partnership with God and a manifestation of living Judaism.  But in actuality, it is a three-way relationship between humans, the earth, and God.  “The Lord God took the man and placed him in the Garden of Eden to till it and tend it” [this verse]. Let us not underestimate the importance of [this] deceptively simple [this verse] … God needed human help so that the entire life/growth process might move forward.  The early rabbinic commentators jumped on this thought: “The edible fruits of the earth required not only God’s gift of rain but also man’s cultivation.  Man must be a co-worker with God in making this earth a garden” (J.H. Hertz, ed., Pentateuch Haforahs). In other words, paradise was perfect—almost.  It was complete—almost. For all its beauty, for all its wonderful design, something was missing.  Us! God needed a partner: us.  [citing Balfour Brickner, Finding God in the Garden (Boston: Little, Brown, 2002), 15. (By Barbara Lerman-Golomb, "Getting Back to the Garden")  SACTAB 199-200

SHOW FULL EXCERPT

GENESIS — 2:15 tend

GEN275 The realities of aquaculture [the industrial farm equivalent for raising sea animals in confinement] must make us cringe as Jews, we who are commanded not to cause undue suffering to animals.  Farm-raised fish live in water that is so fouled and crowded that it makes it hard for them to breathe, and they cannibalize one another at a high rate.  They have nutritional deficiencies that weaken their immune systems, and they are slaughtered in horrible, inhumane ways.  Fish raised through aquaculture live in terrible suffering and die the same way. To combat the illnesses—parasitic bacteria, rickettsia, lesion—that farm-raised fish contract, producers introduce chemicals and medications  Millions of other fish destined for sale in the United States are raised with chemicals and drugs not approved for use in this country. Yet, as we have seen with Chilean fish producers, devastating viruses still spread, killing millions of fish each year.  When we purchase most farm-raised fish, we are violating the values of both bal tashchit and tzaar baalei chaim by supporting an industry in which large-scale death rates and animal suffering are inherent in nearly all methods of aquaculture.  The first value is drawn from a commandment given to us in Deuteronomy 20 not to wantonly destroy God’s creation, and the second value is rooted in the environment from Exodus 23 to prevent suffering to animals. Sadly, wild-caught fish are hardly a more humane alternative. While they live freely before they are caught, unfettered by cramped and filthy conditions, the methods of catching the sea animals we crave-trawling, longline fishing, purse seines—also kill millions of sharks, marlines, sea turtles, albatross, dolphins, and whales each year.  This kind of ‘scorched-earth style of ‘harvesting’ sea animals,” where 80 to 90 percent of what fisheries catch –so-called by-catch—are thrown back, dead, into the ocean, goes against the value of bal tachchit in a way that we can no longer ignore as people of faith.  This knowing wastefulness is akin to Maimonides’s teaching with regard to cutting down fruit trees: “We do not cut down fruit trees outside the [besieged] city, nor do we take away from them the water channel so that they may dry up, as it says, “Do not destroy its trees” [Deuteronomy 20:19], and anyone who cuts down [such a tree] gets lashes.  And [this rule is] not only during a siege, but at all places; anyone who cuts down a fruit tree in a manner of destruction is lashed.” Mishneh Torah, Hilchot M’lachim 6:8  We cannot ignore the parallel between the cutting down of fruit trees in pursuit of a city and the cutting down of innumerable species in pursuit of the one or two most desirable ones. Maimonides makes this extrapolation explicit when he teaches further, “And it is not only trees, but anyone who breaks vessels, tears clothing, tears down a building, plugs a spring, or wastes food in a manner of destruction, transgresses ‘Do not destroy.’” (ibid.)  When we consume wild-caught salmon or tuna, we are, at the same time, participants in a system that is wantonly destroying the diversity and vibrancy of God’s creation. Furthermore, nearly one-third of wild-caught fish in the world are reduced to fish meal and fed to farmed fish, cattle, and pigs.  Using fish meal to feed farm-raised fish is, as Mark Bittman writes, “astonishingly inefficient. Approximately three kilograms of forage fish go to produce one kilogram of farmed salmon; the ratio for cod is five to one; and tuna … [the] ratio is 20 to 1.” Surely we as Jews, who are commanded not to seethe a calf its [sic] mother’s milk Exodus 23:19, we are commanded to shoo away the mother bird when we take her eggs Deuteronomy 22:6-7, must learn from these values that to feed a fish with fish meal should violate any holistic sense of kashrut.  These fishing systems are not only ecologically troublesome; they are also cruel in the various methods by which hundreds of different species are crushed together to die slowly over hours.  If kosher slaughter of farm animals is meant to help them die quickly and painlessly, the methods of fish slaughter in wild-caught fisheries result in the opposite effect—slow, painful, brutal deaths.  Even if Jewish tradition says little or nothing about how fish should be slaughtered, surely we should extrapolate from what it does say about slaughtering land animals to know that fish should not be made to suffer in any of these ways.  So what is a Jew to do? Foer and others advocate that we eat no fish at all, which is certainly a legitimate option, and perhaps the best one. God made Adam and Eve vegetarians, and perhaps this is the Jewish ideal. (By Joel Mosbacher, "FISH: A Complex Issue") SACTAB 190-2

SHOW FULL EXCERPT

GENESIS — 2:15 tend

GEN276 While no clear indication is given in the [Genesis] text to the precise meaning of “image of God,” tradition has variously identified it with such uniquely human capacities asfreedom of the will, reason, self-consciousness, moral deliberation, invention and the use of language (conceptual symbols), and cultural creativity.  Initially the only task given to man beyond the “natural” ones of to be “fruitful and multiply … and subdue the earth” is to obey the command of God. [See Seforno on this verse, who suggests that the words ולשמרה לעבדה may refer to man’s soul. Thus, man was placed in Eden to “cultivate and guard” his own spiritual capacity].  SPERO 60

SHOW FULL EXCERPT

GENESIS — 2:15 till

GEN277 A Jew is supposed to stay usefully busy.  Our legendary first ancestors weren’t plopped down in paradise to develop the perfect suntan or watch the fruit ripen: “Adonai Elohim took Adam and placed him in the Garden of Eden to work it and tend it [this verse].  He and Eve were expected to plant and to reap, to sow and to harvest—how else could they feed themselves? And then their apple-eating caused God to make the ground difficult to till, prone to thorns and thistles, so that “the sweat of your brow” became the only way to get bread from the earth. Genesis 3:17-19. As the Yiddish proverb puts it: “Roasted chicken doesn’t simply fly into your mouth.” Our sages, who deemed very little to be more valuable than study, knew that only a concentrated amount of labor makes learning possible. “Rava said to the rabbis: don’t come to me to study during the month of Nisan [harvest time] or the month of Tishei [when the grapes and olives are ready for pressing]. Do your work then so you won’t be threatened by poverty” Berachot 35b. The rabbis believe diligence arises not simply from nature or from our personal needs, but from God’s very purpose in creating the world. Isaiah 45:18 provides the critical phrase: “Adonai, the Creator of heaven, the only real God, the one who formed the earth, said this, Adonai set up the land and made it as it is. But Adonai but did not create it to be a waste, but lashevet, for habitation.”  When the rabbis want to say that we have a religious obligation to be constructively busy, they simply say, lashevet.  We are God’s partners by working on concrete projects that create decent places to live and raise families. This carries through from an individual to a communal activity. Midrash describes this spirited model for Jewish zeal: “Israel entered into the work of building the Tabernacle with zest, doing it joyfully and enthusiastically” Exodus Rabbah 48:16: BOROJMV 82

SHOW FULL EXCERPT

GENESIS — 2:15 till

GEN279 The exploitation of man by man in the form of slavery deprived the ancient nations of the true nobility and joy of work. Even so highly gifted a people as the Greeks failed to discover the true meaning of labor as the means of human self-realization. Its philosophers and poets no less than its masses rated work beneath the dignity of free men. Not only rough common and hard toil, but all handicrafts and even the works of art, which lend so much luster to the name of Greece, were relegated to slaves. Freemen, supposedly made of finer clay, were destined for leisure, pleasure and revelry. The only occupations worthy of them were hunting and fighting. The Germanic nations, too, were more attracted to the sword and the spear than the plow and the sickle. Leaving their work to the women and slaves, the heroic Teutons engaged in the chase and in battle. Of all the nations of antiquity, Israel alone recognized that labor holds the secret springs of joy, and emphasized the greater dignity of labor than of warfare. Work alone is truly honorable. The monition “choose life” (Deuteronomy 30:19) means: choose a handicraft.  “Love labor and hate lordship” is the text of rabbinic teaching. The most offensive labor is not as degrading as idleness. It is better for a man to flay a carcass in the public square than to become a public charge.  Jer. Peah 1:1; Avot 1:10; Avot de Rabbi Natan, ed. Schechter, A; B, 21; Bava Batra 110a  Work, no matter of what nature, provided it be honest and legitimate, exalts and dignifies a man, and renders him a true child of God, who Himself is pictured as a Master-Worker. The father of the human race, according to the legend of Genesis, was placed in the Garden of Eden not for idle play but for the purpose of tilling and caring for the Garden [this verse]. As a child of God, he was to assist in God’s work. It is only when Adam was lured into sin that labor lost its charm and became a curse. But even this curse the rabbis viewed as a blessing. They said that when Adam heard the words of God announcing the ground would yield thorns and thistles and that he would have to “eat the herb of the field,” he cried: “What! Shall I and my cattle eat from the same manger?” Adam was relieved and blessed the hallowing power of labor, whereby he would be able to rise above the brute world.  Pesachim 113a; Kiddushin 82a.  COHON 177-9

SHOW FULL EXCERPT

GENESIS — 2:15 till

GEN281 Work alone makes life meaningful and blessed. The joy that comes from it is contagious. It increases the happiness of the world. To translate the ideal of cooperation with God into a life of industry in cooperation with one’s fellow men has been one of the chief ethical goals of Judaism.  The conception of man as co-worker of God furnishes the key to the Jewish attitude toward labor.  Work is the vocation of man, the chief instrumentality of his joy and salvation. It is not only the joy of labor but its pain that is sounded in Jewish literature. The second chapter of Genesis reechoes the cry of the weary that labor is a curse.  The tillers of the soil in southern Palestine, who struggled against a desert influence and against thorns and thistles that overcrowded their arid land, naturally felt the bitterness of their toil. The Biblical author, voicing their sentiments, explained labor as the consequence of Divine displeasure. Due to a grave sin on the part of the father of the human race, the soil was cursed and man was made to wrest bread from it through the sweat of his brow. COHON 174-5

SHOW FULL EXCERPT

RSS
First181920212223242526283031323334353637Last
Back To Top