2 Friday, February 28, 1986 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS PURELY COMMENTARY PHILIP SLOMOVITZ Nathan `Anatoly' Shcharansky: Modern Hero Of Pidyon Shvu'im' community. In Jewish law, it is placed above the important duty of feeding and clothing the poor. Special collections were made for extraordinary communal ex- penses, such as the support of or- phan children and fitting out a poverty-stricken girl with clothing and a dowry (hakhnasath kallah), but particularly for the ransom of captives. The Jewish people of an- cient and medieval times were frequently subjected to capture by enemies who extorted ransoms from the communities. In the Seventeenth Century, the Jewish community of Venice organized a society for redeeming the captives Ransom a captive before you feed the poor. No act of charity is greater: and money collected for any purpose what- soever may be used as ransom - even if collected to build a syrutgoguP. Joseph Caro, Shulchan Aruch' Every moment delayed in ransoming a captive is like shedding his blood. Joseph Caro, Shulchan Aruch He is now bearing the Hebrew name Nathan. That's one of the symbols of Anatoly Shcharansky's attainment of freedom. He is now the most modern achiever of the most principled Jewish obligation: that of "Ransoming the Captives." The meaning of the goal applied in his case, except that in his case it is the freeing of a captive, the restoring of justice in which all of Jewry had a share with mankind as the total collaborator. This is, indeed, what has been at- tained: that Israel and world Jewry, the United States and libertarians everywhere, shared in the demand for Nathan's liberation. The basic ideal, one of the most oblig- atory in the Jewish tradition, was bril- liantly defined by Dr. Philip Birnbaun in his Jewish Concepts. He is one of the most brilliant Jewish scholars of our time. His idealization of "Tzaavot — Wills" is shared with our readers, in the adjoining columns. On the present occasion of the freeing of Nathan Shcharansky, his "Pi- dyon Shvu'im — Ransoming the Captives" demands retention, added emphasis, a sharing with the generation that has con- tributed toward the battle for justice for him and must ever be remembered. Here is the text of it in Birnbaum's definitive essay: (hevrath pidyon shevuyim), for 6.1 :jowl.? i • the liberation of Jews incarcer- ated by pirates. Many other com- munities, following the example of Venice, appointed special par- nasim (communal wardens) to col- lect funds for the purpose of ran- soming the captives. The commu- nity was obliged to pay ransom for any of its members who sold him- self into slavery or was taken cap- tive for debts he owed. It was not obliged to pay all that was de- manded for the ransom of a scholar. According to a tannaitic statement, if a man and his father and his teacher were incarcer- ated, he takes precedence over his teacher in procuring ransom, while his teacher takes prece- dence over his father; that is, he must procure the' ransom of his teacher before that of his father; but his mother takes precedence over all of them. A scholar takes precedence over a king, for if a scholar dies there is none to re- place him, while all are eligible for Ransom Of Captives The ransoming of captives is considered to be one of the most sacred obligations of a Jewish Exemplary Tzavaot (Wills) kingship (Horayoth 13a). The Talmud relates that when Rabbi Joshua ben Hananya vis- ited Rome, he was told that a handsome-looking boy with curly locks was in prison. He stationed himself at the doorway of the prison ... and said: "I will not budge from here until I ransom him, whatever price may be de- manded." He ransomed him at a high figure, and it did not take long before the young man even- tually became a great teacher in Israel, namely: Rabbi Ishmael be Elisha (Gittin 58a). In the tannaitic period it had been found necessary to enact a law against paying too high a ran- som for Jewish captives, lest kid- napping might become a lucrative trade. The Mishnah therefore states: "Captives should not be ransomed for more than their value, as a precaution for the gen- eral good" (Gittin 4:6), The price might not exceed the value of the captive if sold as a slave. The tal- mudic sages forbade the assis- tance in their attempts to excape, for fear that the treatment of cap- tives in general would be made more • cruel. When emperor Rudolph demanded a large sum from the Jews for Rabbi Meir of Rothenburg, who had been seized and committed to prison in 1284, and the Jews were ready to pay any sum the emperor demanded, Rabbi Meir, known as the Maharam, refused to be ransomed. He spent the last seven years of his life in prison, revising his literary works. When he died, the emperor refused to surrender Rabbi Meir's body for fourteen years until a large sum was paid for its redemp- tion. Anatoly Shcharansky: Tasting Freedom. Shcharansky's image became associated with Ransoming the Captives. In the age-old Jewish commitment it meant payment for lives. That entailed the menace of the enemy's resort to blackmail. Not in the instance of the released pris- oner of the USSR. In the Shcharansky ex- perience there was rejection of payment of blackmail. It was a battle 'for justice — won by the libertarian spirit of his fellow Jews and the freedom lovers everywhere. That battle continues. Battle Continues As long as scientific geniuses like Alexander Lerner and his associates, dedicated Jews who wish to learn Hebrew and to teach it, remain the Prisoners of Conscience, the fight for freedom and jus- tice continues. There are many to be remembered as targets who must be released from the agonies of Soviet persecutions. Anthony Lewis, in a recent New York Times essay which was also nationally syndicated, re- called his personal impressions on a visit 'in Russia. He listed a few, including Dr. Alexander Lerner, who are among the notably oppressed. His listing, which fol- lows from his article, is an added appeal for action, as he stated: :1187$ From Tobit, the earliest of the Apoc- rypha Books: wills and perpetuating them have been ward. If our children are willing to published in the last few decades. The accept our material possessions Jewish Publication Society of America for from us, to use as they think best, My son, do not neglect your a time specialized in them Schocken pre- then perhaps we have the right to mother; provide for her as long as you sently enriches the collection with Ethical bequeath our values and our goals live; try to please her; do not be a cause Wills: A Modern Jewish Treasury. The to them too, in the hope that they of grief to her. Remember that she well judged and assembled volume was will choose to accept them and faced many dangers for your sake. edited and annotated by' Rabbi Jack make them their own. From Sam Levenson: Riemer of La Jolla, Calif., and Prof. Ken yehi. ratzon. Nathaniel Stampfer of Spertus College of So may it be. To my parents I owe America. They Judaica, Chicago. Let it be noted that the wills assem- gave it to me and I leave it to you. Take Rabbi Riemer makes this interesting bled in the Schocken volume are of the good care of it. "modern period," giving it special timeli- From Reb Shmuel Tefilinsky, 20th comment in an epilogue to this column: ness. Therefore the co-editors added value Century Jerusalemite Torah Sage (1888- The ethical wills in this collec- to the new work by taking into account 1945): tion were written by people who the contemporaries. wanted to make sure that their Endeavor to the utmost to cleave to An entire section in the Rimier- values as well as their, property God's teachings day and night, to de- Stampfer collection is devoted to ethical would be safeguarded after they vote yourselves all the days of your were gone. They were written by • messages from Holocaust sufferers. For lives to Torah and to the service of those who seek renewal of faith there is "A people who underkood that you God, and to labor in the Torah in Mother's Will," which was published in are not completely dead when you order to perceive and understand, to the ghetto newspaper Warsaw-Krakow, die if you leave behind people who hearken, to learn and teach and to dated 1940 and signed merely, "Your understand what you stood for "cast your burden on the Lord and he Mother.": and who will carry on what you will sustain you." believed in. Judaism, my child, is the Ethical wills are admittedly struggle to bring down God upon Ethical Wills As risky things to write. No one has a earth, a struggle for the sanctifica- Traditional Guidelines right to impose his values on his tion of the human heart. This heirs, even from the grave. The struggle your people wages not Ethical wills give human values. Re- end of life ought to be a time for with physical force but with spirit, sort to them is not limited to Jews. They making peace and for letting go, with sincere, heartfelt prayers, have universal commitments. In Jewish not a time for preaching, for judg- and by constant striving for truth traditions they may be the oldest of ing, or for burdening. But an ethi- and justice. legacies. In many respects they attain cal will can be a-love letter from So do you understand, my . sanctity....... , . . , , . - thetlgar a , a sum of a . child, how we, are distinct from olume Many v's Ma 'dolitiIittihrdthtdat tethit Ot tVe4404441ri iSagoio: " " " " " " " 1* ". 6 .1•• There is Prof. Aleksandr Lerner, the patriarch of the re- fuseniks, waiting 15 years now for a visa. Ther e is Yuri Orlov, who served seven years in a labor camp for organizing the Moscow Helsinki group and is now in internal exile in Siberia. There is Anatoly Koryagin, a doctor im- prisoned for exposing abuses of psychiatry. And of course there is Andrei Sakharov. Just last week unofficial peace activists in what is known as the Moscow Trust Group were set upon. They were on their way to meet and draft a peace pro> \ posal. Several were taken out of town, beaten and abandoned. One was detained in a psychiatric hos- pital, as two high-school girls in the group were last month. There should be no illusions about human rights in the Soviet Union. But the question is how to help. Mr. Shcharansky's release and President Reagan's reaction to it point to- the , heat way: by a combination of pressure and encouragement. The •battle for freedom and.justice is Unending. •••,•,,