OCTOBER 12, 1990 THE JEWISH NEWS A Toast To Jewish Living Noah's Covenant And Animal Rights By DR. MARK SMILEY Dr. Mark Smiley is headmaster of Hillel Day School and the author of this month's To Our Readers. For each issue of L'Chayim, a rabbi, Jewish educator or other notable will present an overview of the month's theme. The Noah story ends with a special blessing, a lasting covenant with Noah and his family. "I will maintain my covenant with you. Never again shall all flesh be cut off from the waters of a flood and never again shall there be a flood to destroy the earth." (Genesis 9:11) After the destruction of the flood God promises mankind a feeling of security and a feeling of stability. Here, the Noah story develops an important relationship between man, animals and God. This covenant includes animals ("all living creatures"), for they, too, in the story of the flood, were put in a precarious position of potential extinction, of being required to go out after the flood to replenish the earth. The animals in the Noah story are not to be understood as insignificant stage props or a portable food chain, but rather as recipients of the everlasting covenant with God. This covenant with Noah develops a paradoxical relationship between man and animal. On one hand God permits man to eat animals. On the other hand while animals were not equal to mankind, they were not to be understood as valueless. While the story of the Garden of Eden suggests a vegetarian world, Noah's generation is permitted the eating of animals with a number of restrictions. These restrictions include not eating the blood of animals, not eating the limb of an animal while the animal is alive. Tzar Baalei Haim, the prohibition of cruelty to animals, is a fundamental Jewish value which permeates our talmudic and later rabbinic writing. Not only is eating of animals restricted to us by the laws of kashrut, we are prevented from inflicting any unnecessary pain on the animal world. Indeed, Jews are supposed to show compassion for animals. As Maimonides wrote in his Guide to the Perplexed, "We should not learn cruelty and should not cause unnecessary pain to animals"; the goal is to lean towards compassion and mercy. In addition, the great nineteenth century scholar, Samson Raphael Hirsch points out that Tzar Baalei Haim is an opportunity to teach our children a sense of compassion for the entire world. The biblical tradition is replete with verses limiting our burden to animals and requiriing us to help the animal of your enemy if you find him in distress. Jewish law and lore has a wonderful example that underscores the unique relationship of mankind and the animal world. When Jews wear a garment for the first time they recite a blessing, the Shecheyanu. However, if the new garment is a pair of leather shoes, the blessing is not recited. The tradition teaches us to be sensitive to the fact that animal life had to perish in order for us to enjoy this comfort. While there are conflicting opinions of the desirability of animals as household pets, there are two guidelines that appear in rabbinic literature that reinforce our responsibility to the animal world. The first states a man is forbidden to eat before his beast, since it says, "I will give grass in thy fields for thy cattle and then thou will eat and be satisfied." And in the second, Rabbi Lazer said, "A man is not permitted to take for himself a beast unless he is prepared to feed the animal himself." These talmudic statements reinforce that man has an obligation to treat the animal kingdom with responsibility and care. Animals are put in our world to serve us. Yet, we need to live lives of sanctity, of Kedusha, with respect to the animal world. Our laws of kashrut, ritual slaughter (Sheitah), (Bal Tascheet), not wasting matter, are all directed at insuring that mankind is sensitive to our taking of animal life. Rabbi Abraham Kook, chief rabbi of pre-Israel, and a vegetarian, considered the change after Noah and the flood to be evidence of humanity's moral deterioration and felt it constituted "an estrangement from the world of animals that would be repaired in the messianic era." If we search the Books of the Prophets we find that we all look forward to a time when man and wild beasts would be vegetarian.