56 Friday, December 24, 1982 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS `Jews, Judaism and the American Constitution' Pamphleteering was a major instrument in the democratic political and so- cial processes. In liberta- rian struggles the pamphlet has been and remains a forceful method of creating a following and of defining just principles. The brochure, the pam- phlet, has a role in defining religious principles. American Jewish Arc- hives, superbly directed by Dr. Jacob R. Marcus, with the current co-directional assistance of Abraham J. Peck, collects the important Jewish tracts, relating to all factors in American Jewish experience. When the AJArchives also publish a brochure, it invites special interest. Such a publication is "Jews, Judaism and the American Constitution." It contain two important essays, "The Confluence of Torah and Constitu- tion" by Prof. Milton R. Konvitz, and "Jews and Jewry in American Con- stitutional History" by Leo Pfeffer, American Jewish Congress coun- sel. Pfeffer's covers a vast area of Jewish roles in battles involving separa ,- tion of church and state, capital punishment and many other aspects involv- ing constitutional problems in which the AJCongress and other civic protective movements are involved. On the church-state is-• sue, important cases are quoted and Pfeffer also deals with matters relating to the released time issue. Unified Jewish efforts in _ dealing with such litigation when challenges reached the courts are reviewed in the Pfeffer essay. Pfeffer mentions the successful ef- forts of the AJCongress in the suit on behalf of a Jewish parent for an injunc- tion against diStribution of the Gideon Bible in New Jersey public schools. * * * Jewish Law and the Death Penalty Because the death pen- alty is a matter of great interest and concern at this time, the attention given the issue by the Jewish community is vital. The re- sort to Jewish traditional principles on this subject and the Jewish attitude on capital punishment, as out- lined in the Pfeffer essay, is most significant. Quoting him: "It was, and still is not uncommon for the Jewish briefS to cite, quote and rely not only on American legal authorities, but also upon Talmudic scholarship. "In a capital punishment case, Maxwell v. Bishop (398 U.S. 262-1970) the amici curiae brief submitted to the Supreme Court jointly by the Synagogue Council and the American Jewish Con- gress is an example of this. Because of the significance of this development in American Jewish history a rather lengthy quotation from the brief is merited. Pages 3-4 of the brief read as follows (footnotes omitted): " 'The definition and the application of the laws of evidence and criminal pro- cedure in the Talmud made conviction in a capital case practically impossible. Thus, for example, it is noted that if an accused were to be convicted in a capital case the verdict could not be unanimous, the reasoning of the rabbis being that that if not a single one of the 23 judges _ constituting the court (Sanhedrin) could find some reason for acquittal there was something fundamen- tally wrong with the court. " 'Circumstantial evi- dence was not sufficient to sustain a verdict in a capital case; two eye- witnesses, subjected to rigorous cross- examination by the court, were required. Morever, the witnesses had to tes- tify that they warned the accused before the crime that the-act was prohited and what its penal con- sequences were. (Talmud, Sanhedrin, 40b et seq.) "In view of these pro- cedural requirements it is evident that conviction in a capital case was virtually impossible. But perhaps most indicative of the rab- binic view of capital punishment is the following from the Talmud (Makkot,, Chap. 1, Misna 7): " 'A sanhedrin which exe- cutes a criminal once in seven years is called a `court of destroyers.' Rabbi Eliezer ben Azariah states that this is so even if it exe- cutes one every 70 years. Rabbi Tarphon and Rabbi Akiba stated that if they had been members of the sanhedrin no one would ever have been executed.' "One Rabbi, Simeon ben Gamliel, expressed a con- trary view reflecting the most common justification for capital punishment, namely its deterrent effect. If the views of Rabbis Tar- phon and Akiba were to prevail, he said, 'they would increase murders in Israel.' However, later commen- taries note that Rabbi Si- meon's was a minority view and that the others ex- pressed the normative opin- ions of the rabbis. Hilkoth (Maimonides, Sanhedrin, xiv v.)" Torah and the U.S. Constitution It is the Konvitz essay on the "Confluence of Torah and the U.S. Constitution" that there is fascination in an exciting record of Jewish civil and religious liber- tarianism. Prof. Konvitz commences with an emphasis on the importance of the Oral Law as related to the written: "When we speak or think of Torah, usually the refer- ence is to Sefer Torah, the scroll comprising the first five books of the Bible; that is, we refer to a written document. But for millenia there has been in normative Judaism the firm belief that legendary, is a most in- spirational lesson in the Konvitz thesis. He illus- trates his point about the oral Torah relating to the written with the follow- ing: "The Talmud relates that when Moses ascended heaven, where he was to be taught the Torah, he saw God placing small crowns on top of the letters in the Torah. He asked why the crowns were necessary, and he was told that one day a great scholar named Akiba will live, and he will be a great, creative legal genius who will derive mounds and mounds of laws from each crown. LEO PFEFFER MILTON KONVITZ (Introduction to the Philos- ophy of Law, 1922, P.1). "Thus the Talmudic legend says: The Torah is stable; it was all revealed at Sinai; yet it must not stand still. Just as there was a place for Moses, so, too, was there a place for Akiba — and for Hillel and Sham- mai, for Maimonides, for Saadye Gaon, and for Rashi. "Emergence of law is possible because man has been given intelli- gence to meet the chal- lenges of life, not mechanically, instinc- tively, like the ant or the bee, but creatively, through the work of his rational powers. "Akiba was great because he had a great mind, given to him as a gift by his Creator. Judgments and de- cisions must be reached, then, by the use of logic, knowledge, inquiry, intelli- gence. "By the powers of his mind, Akiba, as it were, transcended the confines of his classroom and reached Moses at Sinai and heard what the judgment should be, and thus Akiba's deci- sion was 'a law transmitted to Moses at Sinai.' Thus was the law stable and yet had _ not stood still." * * * just as there is the written "Moses was astounded Torah Legends and Torah, so, too, there is the that this would be possible, Rabbinic Discourse oral Torah (Torah she bal- that any man could be so Another legend in the peh); that just as there was creative, so he asked God if at Sinai the revelation of he could not have a pre- Konvitz essay adds an in- vision of Akiba. 'Show me spirational thrill for the the oral Torah. reader in the traditional "Indeed, Samson Raphael Akiba,' he said. Hirsch contended that the "God complied, and Moses lessons related here. Prof. revelation of the oral Torah was placed in Akiba's Konvitz writes: "Another legend in the preceded in time the giving yeshiva, where he sat down of the written Torah to in the 18th row of students. Talmud gives expression to Moses, for, he argued, the Moses did not understand this paradoxical process. written Torah would be in- what was said, he could not The Talmud relates that comprehensible without a follow the line of argument, one day there was a dispute knowledge of the oral teach- and he grew weak in spirit between Rabbi Eliezer and ing. For example, the writ- from a sense of inferiority his colleagues. He tried by every argument to win ten Torah states: and frustration. them over to his side but Six days you shall labor, "But when the class success. Then he and do all your work; but the reached a conclusion and without said to them that if he is seventh day is a sabbath to acknowledged the legal the Lord your God; in it you decision, they turned to right, a certain miracle shall not do any work, . . Akiba and asked him would occur. The miracle occurred. But the sages (Deuteronomy 5:13-14). how did he know that this were not convinced. "But when does the Sab- was the law. "He resorted to two other bath 'day' begin and when " 'Master, how do you miracles, but still the sages does it end: is it from sunrise know this?" they asked. He to sunrise, or from sunrise said to them, "It is a law were not convinced. Then to sunset, or from sunset to transmitted to Moses at Eliezer said that if he was sunset? The text does not Sinai." When Moses heard right, heaven itself will ' prove it, and then a hea- say. this explanation, he felt at venly voice cried out that "And what is 'work'? The ease again. (Menahot 29b). the law always is as Rabbi text does not say. Just as "This charming legend Eliezer states it to be. At you' must know the English language before you can points up the proposition this point Rabbi Joshua rose to his feet and cried out that read a book in English, so that there is a creative prin- you must know the oral ciple at work in Halakha, in the decision of the law does Torah before you can under- the development of Jewish not rest in heaven. "The Talmud then law; that although the stand the written Torah. asks, what did Rabbi whole Torah, both oral and "This, as I have said, has Joshua mean by this? written, was revealed to been the belief in normative Moses, paradoxically Rabbi And the Talmud pro- Judaism." The explanatory that Akiba's judgments and de- ceeds to give the answer follows, the defining, of cisions had in them a new- in the words of Rabbi his thesis with the illus- ness that would have sur- Jeremiah: 'That the trative culled from the prised Moses himself had he Torah had already been been present in Rabbi Aid- given at Mount Sinai; we ba's classroom, yet they therefore pay no atten- were of such a quality that tion to a voice out of Moses would have accepted heaven, because Thou them as integral parts of the hast long since written in the Torah at Mount Sinai Torah that he knew. "The legend attempts to (Exodus 23:2) that one express the paradox of the must be bound by the legal process, which is, in vote of the majority.' "Had the Talmud ended the words of Roscoe Pound, that the law must be stable, the story at this pdint, the but it must not stand still. story would have been amazing enough, but there is an addendum which in- tensifies the astonishing wonderfulness of the legend. The Talmud pro- ceeded to add that Rabbi Nathan met Elijah the pro- phet, who, it was believed, had never died, and Rabbi Nathan asked him: 'What did the Holy One, blessed be He, do in that hour?' Elijah answered: 'He laughed, say- ing, 'My sons have defeated me, My sons have defeated me.' "The point of this ex- travagant legend is, of course, that the power of the law rests not on miracles, not on supernatural events, but on the intelligence, on the God-given powers of the mind." Prof. Konvitz emphasizes in his definitive essay that "there is a common pool of ideas that are shared, in varying degrees, by the Torah and American Con- stitutional Law." He de- clares that "of these ideas perhaps the basic and most significant is that of the Covenant. It is one of the most pervasive ideas of the Bible, and one that has cut deeply into American polit- ical thought and institu- tions." Defining Covenant, Prof. Konvitz points out that "in the Bible the word for Covenant is Be- rit, which is probably, de- rived from the word meaning binding ... " The following supplementary definition in Konvitz adds weight to an immense thesis so well out- lined: "A second, and even more important consequence of the idea of covenant was its obvious relevance to politi- cal life. Just as the church is created by covenanters, so, too, the political order comes into existence as the voluntary creation of cove- nanting members of society. "Thus in 1620, the Pil- grims aboard their sailing vessel on their way to Plymouth, entered into a covenant, known as the Mayflower Compact, in which they stated: We whose names are un- derwritten . . . Do by these Presents, solemnly and mutually in the Presence of God and one another, cove- nant and combine ourselves together into a civil Body Politick .. . "It is an extraordinary statement, without prece- dent in history; but it was the most natural thing for the Pilgrims to do, for it was a direct and unavoidable consequence of their invin- cible belief in their cove- nant theology. For how else can human beings limit their own freedom of action but by freely entering into a covenant among them- selves?" - * * * Bible Lessons and the Puritans Then there is the rela- tively impressive conclu- sion in the Konvitz thesis (Continued on Page 6)