An inquiring mind will pick up items of information from wherever they may be found. But what are the lessons one can learn from them--and what is the yardstick by which their veracity and usefulness may be measured? Our member Rabbi Steven Ettinger shares this answer with us:
While describing his early yeshiva years in Teach Them Diligently (p. 21), Rabbi Wein ztz’l fondly recalled what he learned in ninth grade from Rabbi Mendel Kaplan. Along with Talmud, this famed disciple of the Mir Yeshiva and Rabbi Elchanan Wasserman taught his young student “how to actually read the newspaper, spotting its unintended lessons in life.” Undoubtedly, these were lessons in how to distinguish truth from falsehood, how to remain steadfast to Torah values in a world that celebrated vanity and immorality, and how to understand proper use of political power in contrast with its abuse.Today’s newspapers and news media are not
the information sources that existed in the late 1940s. Now, they report opinions,
not facts. Reporters are biased and not objective. There is no longer such
thing as verifying sources – there are no standards of truth.
The Torah, of course, is a primary unimpeachable
source. The Torah is truth. The Torah is unbiased. Finally, the Torah is
eternal. Thus the Torah should be the contemporary global news source – 24-hour
– six day - TNN (Torah News Network). The key, perhaps, is only learning to
read/interpret it.
Many (certainly those in the media and who appear
or attempt to shape public opinion) are heretics or sceptics. They do not
believe any of statements made in the previous paragraph regarding our Torah. They would claim that the Torah is a 3,000
years old manuscript, likely a work of fiction, written in ancient times and completely
irrelevant for a modern enlightened society.
They would certainly scoff at concepts like those found in parshat Shofetim:
worshiping trees, witchcraft and sorcery, talking to the dead, false prophets
allowing killers to flee from avenging family members, breaking a calf’s neck,
etc.
However, this parsha is perhaps the
penultimate example of the Torah as today’s media source. Nearly every
significant story that we can find in our daily news, regardless of topic or
discipline, has its roots and more – perhaps its entire arc –in its verses.
The parsha opens with the requirement to
establish a justice system and the overriding imperative to pursue
righteousness (“tzedek tzedek tirdof”). This prescription is so intense
that it is stated as a continuing condition for remaining in the Land of
Israel. Looking closely, these pesukim are today’s stories of judicial
reform, of the trial of political leaders and of activist courts both here and
abroad.
We know how miserly the Torah is with
words. Yet in our parsha there is significant redundancy. The word tzedek
appears three times in these three verses. Hashem repeats the phrase, “that
Hashem has given you” referencing the Land of Israel, twice in these verses.
Ramban translates tzedek here as truth and peace. If we commit to
unbiased truth and a desire for peace among our people, then these stories
become footnotes.
The next topic is the ashera tree that was worshipped as an idol. This seems incomprehensible to our modern sensibilities. Yet how many hundreds of millions “worship” their “Apples.” How many hours a day are their attentions absorbed and subsumed by the content on these devices. More drastic – and alarming – how many of our youth are influenced to the point of experiencing record levels of depression (and epidemic numbers of teen suicides), lower academic achievement levels, behavioral issues, not to mention issues with gender and sexuality. How many headlines and articles are devoted to these topics and can be attributed to this ashera?
Let’s jump forward to another headline,
leaders and elections. In Gaza there is a leadership vacuum. In New York they
may soon hail the “new generation” leader, the future of American politics --
an antisemitic communist. In Israel, of course, who the Prime Minister is or
should be may be the most polarizing issue of all.
This parsha has the only direct commandments
regarding leadership – the commandments regarding the Jewish king. It is
interesting to note that there is no commandment to anoint one – but there can
be a king IF the people request one. More interesting is that we find only two
positive commandments, only two tasks that a Jewish king is commanded to
perform (in contrast with things he is forbidden to do). He must (i) write a “sefer
Torah” and (ii) gather the nation once every seven years to read the Torah to
them. Bottom line, the purpose of a Jewish leader is to set an ethical example
– one of universal values, God’s values – and to serve the people, not himself
or his vanity or ego or pocketbook.
There are so many others, witchcraft and bone reading, cities of refuge, false prophets, the rules of war, ecology, etc. However, let us conclude with another mitzvah that seems so superstitious – that it could easily subject our religion to ridicule – eglah arufah. How strange is this: someone randomly finds an unidentified corpse and no-one knows who killed him. The elders then come out and determine (through precise measurement) which city was nearest. The representatives of that city must take a calf and perform a ceremony involving breaking its neck in order to absolve themselves from sin- on account of the blood that was shed.
How many of today’s stories involve
violence and bloodshed? In the newsroom, the bloodier the better. How many
murders and assaults? How many gunmen opening fire in shopping centers and
schools and stadiums? How many crime-related killings? How many innocent
victims of terror and war world-wide.
If mankind could only value life so much
that they could gather and regret and have a solemn ceremony for the death of a
man they cannot even identify. If
humanity could ask forgiveness for the loss of a single life and ask Hashem to
remove guilt for this death – because this is “doing what is right in the sight of Hashem,” then mankind might only be reading the Torah and there would
be no news. That day will come – that is the day Moshiach comes.