LEV1038 There are eight gradations in the giving of charity, each higher than the other. The highest of these, which has no superior, is to take the hand of a fellow Jew and offer him a gift, or a loan, or enter into a business partnership with him, or find him a job, so that he may become economically strong and no longer need to ask others for help. Scripture says about this, "… And you shall strengthen him, that is, the stranger or sojourner, so that he may live with you…" [this verse]. In other words, you shall strengthen him so that he does not fall into poverty and need charity. (Section 7) (Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Matanot Aniyyim, Chapter 10). We tend to think of charity as something we give to unfortunates to offset their calamities. There is much merit in that, as Maimonides will indicate [i.e., in his tzedakah hierarchy -- AJL]. But here this great Jewish conceptualist introduces a new and illuminating hierarchy to Jewish tradition. Tzedakah, he wants us to understand, involves more than merely alleviating symptoms. At its best, it is about eliminating causes. Don't scrimp on vision--think big, even if you must give little. Raise your tzedakah sights beyond tiding people over; instead, try to get them firmly back on their own two feet.
SHOW FULL EXCERPT