Category Archives: Parshiot

Discussion Plan: The limits of our care for the environment

Discussion Plan: The limits of our care for the environment

  1. If you are on a nature walk and there is rubbish lying around from people who did the walk before you, do you find this disrespectful? If so, in what way?
  2. If you are on a nature walk and throw an apple core off the path deep into the forest, does this matter? Is it being disrespectful? If so, what is it disrespectful of? If not, why not?
  3. If you are on a nature walk and throw an empty can off the path deep into the forest, does this matter? Is it disrespectful? If so, what is it disrespectful of? If not, why not?
  4. Are there ways you are already actively involved in caring for the environment? If so, in what ways? Why are you involved in doing this?
  5. Is there a difference between using nature for our own purposes and exploiting nature?
  6. When someone says that we are responsible for maintaining a ‘clean’ environment, what reasons might they give for thinking this? What do you think about these reasons?
  7. When a cat covers up their waste, do you think they acting toward maintaining the health of their own environment? If so, in what way? If not, why not?
  8. Elephants, like humans, bury their dead. Could they be doing this for the same reasons we do?

Is it possible that other animals take care of the cleanliness of their immediate environment  instinctively,  while people have to do it consciously/intentionally? If so, why do you think there is this difference?

Leading Idea: Responsibility toward nature

Responsiblity toward nature:

Devarim 22:6-7: Birds and Bird Eggs.

Is the preservation of nature an end in itself (as well as a means to our ends)? This passage speaks about our responsibility toward the environment. We might feel this responsibility for three different reasons.

(i) Out of a responsibility toward our own children: This is to care for the environment so that in the future there will be more eggs to feed us. This is to see our responsibility toward mainaining a balance in nature in human terms. Our life will be extended in the sense that if we don’t take the mother bird then we will have the resources to continue to feed ourselves as the bird lays more eggs (See Abravanel).

(ii) Out of a responsibility toward the environment for its own sake. This is to say that we should not take the mother bird because we have a moral obligation toward nature itself (See Tigay Jeffrey and Sefer Hachinuch). This might be understood on theological or naturalistic grounds. We might feel a moral responsibility for looking after God’s creation, or we might feel a moral responsibility for the diversity and richness of nature in itself. Both might count as reasons for ‘not taking the mother bird with the eggs’, in that to do so would be to jeopardize the continuation of the species.

(iii) Out of compassion for the life of other species.  Here we have a moral responsibility to make sure other animals are not stressed or experience pain because of our own needs (See Maimonides),

(iv) Out of recognition of who we are and might become –  to realize our own humanity by becoming more fully human ourselves. In this case we might say that showing compassion to animals is important because, in doing so, we develop traits that are important to who we are as human beings (that is, we will become the kind of person who is compassionate by doing compassionate acts). These traits might be compassion (See Nahmanides), or humility and kinship with nature (see Ibn Kaspi)

Exercise: Desecrating ‘human ground’- hs

Exercise: Desecrating human ground

Which of these would desecrate human ground? give your reasons.

  • Building a museum on the site of an old cemetery
  • Constructing a road through a national park
  • Putting up an ice-cream stand for tourists at Auschwitz
  • Building a dam (changing nature) to give a city drinking water
  • Building a fighting ring as part of a sports hall.
  • Having a zoo where animals are kept in cages
  • Punishing people by putting them in prison
  • Cutting down native rainforest to plant sustainable growth trees
  • Making a campfire to sing songs around in the evening
  • Organizing an office space so that people don’t have common space to talk to one another

Exercise: For the sake of people or land?

Exercise: For the sake of people or land?

Which of these things do you think we do for the sake of our fellow human beings and which do we do for the sake of the environment? (or both/neither)

  • Keeping the school yard free of litter
  • Keeping our room at home tidy
  • Saying thank you when someone gives us a present.
  • Picking up bottles and place them in a recycling bin
  • Taking the rubbish out
  • Avoiding stepping on a grave if we are at a cemetery

Cleaning out the fish tank (if we have one)

Discussion Plan: What is disrespect?

Discussion Plan: What is disrespect?

  1. If you talk in a movie theatre when the film is showing, are you being disrespectful? – if so what is it you are disrespecting?
  2. If you put gum you have been chewing on the underneath of the desk, is this disrespectful? If so, what is it you are disrespecting?
  3. If someone gives you a present and you treat it badly, is this being disrespectful of the person who gave it to you? Why or why not?
  4. If someone gives you a present and you put it away at the back of cupboard and forget about it, is this being disrespectful of the person who gave it to you? Why or why not?
  5. Do you think writing in a book is disrespectful? Why/Why not? Does it matter what kind of book it is? If so, why should this matter?
  6. Is it disrespectful to spit on the ground – if so, what are you disrespecting?
  7. When might brushing someone off be a way of showing them disrespect?
  8. Could ignoring someone be a way of disrespecting them?
  9. Could ignoring someone be a way of showing them respect?
  10. Can you disrespect someone and still like them?
  11. Can you disrespect someone and still consider them a friend?
  12. Is there a difference between disrespecting things and disrespecting people? If so, what is the difference?
  13. Is there a difference between disrespecting people and disrespecting God? If so, what is the difference?
  14. Who decides what actions count as being disrespectful?

Leading Idea: Moral responsibility – people & land -PS

Moral Responsibility:  toward people, and toward the land.  

 Burying the Dead

In this parshah the explanation for why we should not leave a dead body hung on a pole or tree overnight might take us by surprise. Two reasons are given. The one we might expect is that the human body itself places a moral demand on us, requiring we bury it in a timely manner so that it is not defiled (leaving a human body hanging is an affront to God, as we are ‘formed in God’s image’).  Yet we are also given a second reason, one less expected. We are told “you shall not defile (make unclean, טמאה) your land, which the Lord, your God, is giving you as an inheritance.”  that is, it is for the sake of the land that we are required to remove the body and bury it.* This suggests that we have a moral responsibility toward maintaining the environment (keeping it clean), and not just a moral duty toward the human body.

Do we have a moral responsibility to look after the environment out of a responsibility toward the other people with whom we share the environment (so they can play safely and in an aesthetic space), or do we do it out of a moral responsibility toward the environment itself (not to defile the land?). In our own contexts, what does ‘defiling the land’ mean? Are there ways our own actions or inaction leads to the land being made ‘unclean’? (open cut mining?  Littering? Destroying rainforestד? polluting rivers?). Are there physical actions in the environment we feel morally responsible to take for the sake of other human beings? Are there physical actions in the environment we feel morally responsible to take for the sake of the environment itself?

* If the body is left hanging animals may come and pull it apart and spread parts of the body on the land – since in Tanach, those things that come in touch with a dead body become unclean, unfit for use, the physical earth would now become unclean, unable to fulfill its purpose. The point here is that is our responsibility to attend to the body so that this does not happen.

 

Leading Idea: Moral responsibility – people & land -HS

Leading Idea: Moral Responsibility:  toward people, and toward the land.  

Burying the Dead

In this parshah the explanation for why we should not leave a dead body hung on a pole or tree overnight might take us by surprise. Two reasons are given. The one we might expect is that the human body itself places a moral demand on us, requiring we bury it in a timely manner so that it is not defiled (leaving a human body hanging is an affront to God, as we are ‘formed in God’s image’).  Yet we are also given a second reason, one less expected. We are told “you shall not defile (make unclean, טמאה) your land, which the Lord, your God, is giving you as an inheritance.”  that is, it is for the sake of the land that we are required to remove the body and bury it.* This suggests that we have a moral responsibility toward maintaining the environment (keeping it clean), and not just a moral duty toward the human body.

Do we have a moral responsibility to look after the environment out of a responsibility toward the other people with whom we share the environment (so they can play safely and in an aesthetic space), or do we do it out of a moral responsibility toward the environment itself (not to defile the land?). In our own contexts, what does ‘defiling the land’ mean? Are there ways our own actions or inaction leads to the land being made ‘unclean’? (open cut mining?  Littering? Destroying rainforestד? polluting rivers?). Are there physical actions in the environment we feel morally responsible to take for the sake of other human beings? Are there physical actions in the environment we feel morally responsible to take for the sake of the environment itself?

Another line of interpretation is found in Rabbi Samson Raphael Hirsch’s commentary that interprets ‘land’ as the ‘human ground’. What does ‘human ground mean? One way to read this is to see the human ground as the physical and social space in which humans act out their lives.. It is the inhabited ground, in which our moral sensibility and free-will find expression. For example, the choices we make in the way we conduct ourselves in the shopping mall, the way we treat animals, the way we conduct ourselves socially) Here Hirsch is not just talking about any expression of our free-will, but free-will is given to us to given full expression to our moral purpose as human beings.It is within this constructed space of the ‘activities of persons’ that we (created in God’s image) have the responsibility to express our moral purpose. For Hirsch this enables us to give full expression to our worth as human beings. It is for the sake of this ‘human ground’ that we have a moral responsibility to bury the dead who have lost this capacity (as, in death, the body of human beings becomes merely a body – it is no longer expressive of our free-will. In death, the body is governed instead by the un-free-will necessity of decomposition). This recognition of our responsibility toward burying the dead together with our responsiblity toward preserving the quality of ‘the inhabited space of society’ brings both these dimensions of responsibility (toward people and toward the environment) together. The last paragraph raises interesting ideas about the human response to death – what makes a person’s death challenging and the ways in which it might disturb us.

 

* If the body is left hanging animals may come and pull it apart and spread parts of the body on the land – since in Tanach, those things that come in touch with a dead body become unclean, unfit for use, the physical earth would now become unclean, unable to fulfill its purpose. The point here is that is our responsibility to attend to the body so that this does not happen.

Ki Teitzei_Devarim 21:22-22:6-7 דְּבָרִים

 

21:22-23

22. If a man commits a sin for which he is sentenced to death, and he is put to death, you shall [then] hang him on a pole [ tree ].

21:22-23

ב  וְכִי-יִהְיֶה בְאִישׁ, חֵטְא מִשְׁפַּט-מָוֶת–וְהוּמָת:  וְתָלִיתָ אֹתוֹ, עַל-עֵץ.

23. But you shall not leave his body on the pole [tree ] overnight. Rather, you shall bury him that same day, for a hanging [human corpse] is to disrespect affront God, and you shall not defile your land, which the Lord, your God, is giving you as an inheritance.

כג  לֹא-תָלִין נִבְלָתוֹ עַל-הָעֵץ, כִּי-קָבוֹר תִּקְבְּרֶנּוּ בַּיּוֹם הַהוּא–כִּי-קִלְלַת אֱלֹהִים, תָּלוּי; וְלֹא תְטַמֵּא, אֶת-אַדְמָתְךָ, אֲשֶׁר יְהוָה אֱלֹהֶיךָ, נֹתֵן לְךָ נַחֲלָה.

 ….

22:6-76. 

If, along the road, you come upon a bird’s nest, on any tree, or on the ground, and [it contains] fledglings or eggs, if the mother is sitting upon the fledglings or upon the eggs, you shall not take the mother upon the young.

….

22:6-7

ו  כִּי יִקָּרֵא קַן-צִפּוֹר לְפָנֶיךָ בַּדֶּרֶךְ בְּכָל-עֵץ אוֹ עַל-הָאָרֶץ, אֶפְרֹחִים אוֹ בֵיצִים, וְהָאֵם רֹבֶצֶת עַל-הָאֶפְרֹחִים, אוֹ עַל-הַבֵּיצִים–לֹא-תִקַּח הָאֵם, עַל-הַבָּנִים.

7. You shall send away the mother, and [then] you may take the young for yourself, in order that it should be good for you, and you should lengthen your days.

ז  שַׁלֵּחַ תְּשַׁלַּח אֶת-הָאֵם, וְאֶת-הַבָּנִים תִּקַּח-לָךְ, לְמַעַן יִיטַב לָךְ, וְהַאֲרַכְתָּ יָמִים.

 

Form and meaning – unhewn stones

Unhewn stones: ‘whole’ or ‘peaceful’ stones, the adjective שלמות being of the same root as שלום, ‘peace’. The Altar, whose purpose is the forgiveness of sin, can only fulfill its mission when peace and brotherhood reign in Israel.

 Rabbi J.H. Hertz Commentary, p.862 (quoting Mekhilta of R. Yishmael, – a passage  in the name of R. Johanan ben Zakkai)