THE JEWISH NEWS A Toast To Jewish Living Beauty Of Nature Is God's Advertisement Rabbi Paul M. Yedwab serves Temple Israel and is the author of this month's L'Chayim theme — the environment. For each edition of L'Chayim, a rabbi, a Jewish educator or other notable from the community will present an overview. At this time of year, when the leaves are beginning to turn and the pageantry of fall is before us, I am always reminded of the little boy who, having grown up in the big city, was more accustomed to concrete and asphalt than to the marvels of nature. One summer, his family took him for a vacation in the country. As he came to the edge of the lake, he suddenly lifted his eyes and saw a grove of trees on a ridge. Astounded, he gazed at the gorgeous landscape and, after a moment of thought, said: "Mother, it is very beautiful, but what is it supposed to advertise?" Actually, the answer to this child's question is simple. The natural world advertises the fact that there is a God — a God who gives us all of the loveliness and beauty of nature. Very often in our pursuit of away in our offices, and in our homes, in front of our television sets and behind the wheels of our cars. At this season of the harvest, however, we as Jews make the commitment to get closer to nature — to see the stars — to dwell in the succah. Succot is a time for renewing our appreciation for and our commitment to, the wonder of God's creation. And quite appropriately, Succot culminates in Simchat Torah, the time at which we begin once again canned beauty and contrived the reading of Breishit, the story of pleasures we overlook the enormous satisfaction that nature can give us. We lock ourselves the creation of the world. "In the beginning," the Torah recounts, God created the heavens and the earth; and God created human beings who were given "dominion" over God's creation. This privilege of dominion, however, carried with it great responsibility. When God created Adam, the Midrash tells us, God led him around to all of the trees in the Garden of Eden, and God said to him: "See My works, how beautiful and praiseworthy they are. Everything I have created has been created for your sake. Think of this, and do not corrupt or destroy My world; for if you corrupt it, there will be no one to set it right after you." Human "dominion" over nature does not include a license to abuse the environment. Trees especially, have always been highly valued by our tradition. In Genesis Rabbah we are reminded that trees were made for our companionship. The great Nachman of Bratslav boldly expands this conception, asserting that "if a "Everything I have created has been created for your sake..." person kills a tree before its time it is as if he has murdered a soul." In the Book of Deuteronomy God too shows a special concern for trees and for the natural environment. "When in your war against a city you have to besiege it a long time in order to capture it," God enjoins, "you must not destroy its trees, wielding the ax against them. You may eat of them, but you must not cut them down." We see then that even in the crisis of war, the ecological system is to be protected above all else. Building upon this biblical injunction protecting trees, the rabbis established the general concept of al tashchit, which translated means, "you shall not Continued on Page L-2