S )fritualitv >> Torah portion How Can We Justify Biblical Violence? Parshat Mattot-Masei: Numbers 30:2- 36:13; Jeremiah 2:4-28; 3:4; 4:1-2. 0 ur biblical portion of Mattot opens with God's vengeance against Midian, an avowed enemy of the Israelites who had joined Balak the King of Moab in the hiring of Balaam to curse Israel. The Midianites also seduced Israel to have sex with their women and to engage in idolatrous orgiastic wor- ship of the Midianite gods. Israel was therefore enjoined to make a preemptive strike against a nation that had dem- onstrated its desire to see Israel vanquished. The Bible goes on to record Moses' insistence that the young Midianite women fit to engage in sexual relations be killed along with the young male Midianite children. How difficult is all of this car- nage to the modern ear? How can we possibly justify such action, even if it was against a nation that had already lifted its banner for Israel's disappearance from the face of the earth? What we must remember as we read the Bible is that we are study- ing a text from the earliest times of recorded history, a text that we believe to have been written more than 4,000 years ago. Yes, we also believe that the biblical text is God-given, but it was never intended that every verse of it be applied to every generation. Our tradition insists that alongside the written Torah, there is an Oral Torah, a vibrant and still developing legal system that determines which biblical laws only applied to the ancient world, which were open to limitation, re-interpretation and even expansion in different generations, and which were deemed unchanging and immutable for all times. The traditional Orthodoxy that survives today is the heir to those who fought valiantly against the Sadducees in the second commonwealth and the Karaites of the Middle Ages. Our ideo- logical ancestors regarded these sects as heresies because they believed in a literal interpretation of the written law for all generations. The arena of warfare is probably the one in which sweeping change from biblical law is most evident. The Bible commands, "But in wag- ing war against the people from the cities which the Lord God has given you for an inheritance, you shall not allow any person to live. Rather you shall utterly destroy them, the Hittite, the Amorite, the Canaanite, the Perizite, the Hivvite and the Jebusite as the Lord your God commanded you. This is so that they may not teach you to act according to all their abominations that they performed for their gods and sin before the Lord your God" (Deuteronomy 20:16-18) The Talmud insists that the command to "utterly destroy" every inhabitant of our enemies only applied to the specific nations singled out by the Bible during the early biblical period. During the first common- wealth, King Sennacherib of Assyria conquered the lands of the Middle East and confounded the indigenous people by forcing them to resettle in different areas and to intermarry with their new neighbors. Hence the eth- nic nations identified by the Bible no longer exist and so the law demand- ing their total destruction no longer applies. Moreover, Maimonides and Nachmanides agree that it is forbid- den for a Jew to wage war against any nation or individual — whether of the seven indigenous nations, Midian, or even Amalek — unless he be given the option of making peace and accepting the seven Noahide laws of morality. Once they agree to become moral indi- viduals, we dare not harm them. And according to this view, this was the case even in the biblical period! There is also a fascinating interpre- tation of Rav Naftali Zvi Yehuda Berlin (the famed Dean of the Volozhin Yeshiva, in HaAmek Davar, ad loc). He argues that the biblical command to kill women and children only applies to those who were acting in the ser- vice of the enemy. We could never have been commanded to harm perfectly innocent human beings, created in God's image! ❑ Shlomo Riskin is chancellor of Ohr Torah Stone and chief rabbi of Efrat Israel. , :cck occ JEWISH ,v lt v00N DAT/jis ck, - v REMEMBERING WHEN... From the archives of the Detroit Jewish News $2,000,000 JEWISH HOSPITAL CAMPAIGN OPENS IN FEBRUARY Association to Function Under Federation; Plan 200-Bed Project in City November 24, 1944 Incorporation of the Jewish Hospital Association of Detroit and the completion of plans to conduct a drive here in February for $2,000,000 for the construction of a modern, 200-bed general hospital under Jewish auspices, "as a contribution to the health and welfare of our community" was announced this week. The organizational committee of the Jewish Hospital Association, functioning under the auspices of the Jewish Welfare Federation of Detroit, consists of Sidney J. Allen, Maurice Aaronson, Irving W. Blumberg, Fred M. Butzel, Irwin I. Cohn, Israel avidson, Harry Frank, Max Osnos, Leo Siegel, Abraham Srere, Frank A. Wetsman and Henry Wineman. Dr. (J.J.) Golub, noted hospital consultant, recommended that the community plan for a 200-bed general hospital for acute diseases — an institution that would be well-planned, scientifically equipped, soundly administered and medically staffed by qualified and promising physicians in the medical and surgical specialties. MILESTONES October 28, 1949 Birth Oct. 2 — to Mr. and Mrs. Monte M. Korn (Eleanor Karbal), twins, a son, Lawrence David, and a daughter, Linda Ruth. Bar Mitzvah Mr. and Mrs. Max Bednarsh of 2903 Webb announce the Bar Mitzvah of their son, Moische, Saturday, October 29, at Congregation B'nai Jacob, Linwood at Richton. A dinner in hishonor will be held at home, at 6 pm, Sunday, October 30th. Engagement Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Wolfe of Pasadena Avenue annouonce the engagement of their daughter, Marilyn, to Frederick Allan Cherney, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Cherney of Glendale Avenue. A June wedding is planned. Marilyn is the granddaughter of Joseph Bernstein of The Jewish Daily Forward. Marriages BARON-LIPTON: Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lipton of 19491 Greenlawn announce the marriage of their daughter, Nancy Diane, to Leonard Baron, son of Mr. and Mrs. Morris Baron of 3144 Oakman Boulevard. Obituaries NANCY SUE SINCLAIR, 15, of 17193 Tracey, died Oct. 22. Funeral services were held at Hebrew Benevolent Society. Rabbi Morris Adler officiated. Survived by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Max Sinclair, a sister, Audrey and grandmother, Mrs. Edith Back. The Detroit Jewish News Foundation's goal is is to digitize every issue of the Jewish News, dating to March 27, 1942, and make them available and searchable to the public. The Foundation will also support and sponsor forums, town hall meetings and other educational events to best utilize and share this historical community resource. To assist the Foundation in its work, simply go to the website www.thejewishnews.com and click on the word "donate" at the top right portion of the home page. The Detroit Jewish News Foundation, inc. is a 501 (c) (3) non-profit organization. .1N July 19 • 2012 29