Parasha Re-eh: Do Not Inquire
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Portrain of Shimon Abeles from a book at the Jewish Museum, Prague, c. 1728 |
All we can be certain of is that he
was ten years old when he died. He was a Jewish boy and the grandson of a
prominent leader of the Jewish community in Prague in the late 17th
century. His death in 1694 will forever remain a mystery. His father claimed he
died of natural causes. The medical faculty of Charles University, then a
Jesuit stronghold, claimed he died a violent death. His father, Lazar, was
arrested and charged with murdering his son to prevent his conversion to Christianity,
about which the boy had shown some interest. Lazar died from torture before the authorities
could extract a confession. Although Shimon Abeles, the ten year old boy, was
never baptized, he was declared a Christian saint and a martyr, and buried in
Prague’s Tyn Church, in the Old Town Square.
I stood in front of that very
church in January, 2009 as part of a Rabbinic mission to Prague and Israel with
the Chicago Rabbinic Action Committee. It was in front of that church that I
first heard the story of Shimon Abeles. Afterward, the group of rabbis went
into the Church to see Shimon’s burial place. Not all of the rabbis went into
the church, however. Our Orthodox colleagues remained outside.
The reason they stayed outside, on
that bitterly cold January day is based on a verse from our Torah reading for this
week. In our Torah portion, the Jewish people are about to enter the Land of
Canaan. G-d is worried about their sliding back into idolatry when they come in
contact with the Canaanite people who worship their gods in abominable ways.
After the sin of the Golden Calf, G-d knows how susceptible the people might be
to succumbing to idolatrous forms of worship. So, he tells the people, “Beware
of being lured into their ways after they have been destroyed. Do not inquire
about their gods, saying, “How did those nations worship their gods? I too will
follow their practices.” Thus my Orthodox colleagues refused to enter the
Church, lest they violate that commandment to inquire about other religions.
Most of us here this evening take a
different view entirely toward inquiry into other cultures and religious
practices. We encourage intellectual inquiry into other faiths, cultures and
modes of worship. We hope that others take an interest in us as well. In some cases this may indeed lead to the
observance of another religion. In the
United States, 34% of American adults currently have a religious identity
different from the one in which they were raised! What was a relatively rare
occurrence at the time of Shimon Abeles is a common practice in present day
America. In fact, some firmly believe that our inquiry
into the faith and customs of others leads to understanding of one another that
is crucial to the very survival of our world. We Americans place freedom of
knowledge and inquiry among our highest values.
One of the major differences
between what we call “Modern Orthodox” Judaism and what we call
“Ultra-Orthodox” also known as “Haredi” Judaism is the degree to which inquiry and
exploration outside of the religious community is tolerated. “Modern Orthodoxy”
encourages its members to engage fully with Western culture. It believes that
secular ideas and insights can inform Torah knowledge, just as Torah knowledge
can inform secular ideas. Ultra-Orthodoxy, or the “Haredi”, on the other hand,
sees little value in teachings outside of their own circles. Their rabbis seek
to isolate their members from contact with outside world, be they secular ideas,
ideas from other religions, or ideas from non-Orthodox forms of Judaism. They
see non-Haredi ideas as potentially corrupting and leading their adherents astray.
Ultra-Orthodox leaders will go to
extra-ordinary lengths to keep the outside, outside. Just
imagine the challenge posed by the ever
present smart phone. As we all know, we
have at our finger tips a previously unimaginable wealth of knowledge through Smart Phone
technology. When they first came on the
market, Haredi rabbis condemned Smart Phones as a new evil. One prominent
leader said they were as destructive as weapons, and another publicly
destroyed a Smart Phone to get that message across. In 2013, however, Rami Levy
Communications, an Israeli company, came out with a kosher smart phone. How can
a smart phone be kosher, you ask? It actually has a heksher, that is,
rabbinical certification that it is permitted to use. What convinced the rabbis
that a smart phone CAN be kosher? This is a phone that one can make a call on,
one can text on, one can email on, but one whose search engine has been disabled.
In its place, there are apps. Approved
apps. Apps that Haredi Rabbis have
deemed appropriate. There were 600 approved apps when the phone came out in
2013. The company hopes that this number will eventually reach 20,000.
Some Haredi authorities are doubling
down on the ban on “non-kosher” cell phones. It was reported in June of this
year that anyone possessing a “non-kosher” cell phone at the Musayof Synagogue
in Jerusalem is disqualified from leading prayers during worship services.
Intellectual freedom, the ability
to explore ideas outside of one’s own narrow experience, may constitute a risk.
One might become attracted to the religious
beliefs and practices of the other, as the Torah seems to fear. The ideas of others may challenge and call
into question one’s own beliefs. One might even be tempted to go down unhealthy
or even self-destructive paths. But such strict limitations on inquiry demonstrate
a lack of confidence in the ability of one’s tradition to hold onto its own in
the face of competing forces. The answer
to this dilemma, in my opinion, is not to control access to the ideas of those
who are different from us. The answer is to study Torah, and to teach our
traditions to our children so that we can pass them on. I believe when we truly
educate ourselves in our Judaism we come to see and understand the beauty, the
power and the logic of our faith. Once do we will want to maintain it and embrace
it in the face of all challenges to it that we might confront.
Shabbat Shalom
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