FAMILY DINING Restaurant Millinj ouic cm/to/7w% a ,r/ap-/ff ant ig - 6aith8 tAil eco-Yeattl Parshat Nitzavim-Vayeilech: Deuter- onomy 29:9-31:30; Isaiah 61:10-63:9. T his week's Torah portion begins by listing those who were present when the Torah was given at Mount Sinai. Included in this list are hewers of wood and carriers of water, groups seemingly out of place with the more prominent chieftains, elders, judges and the great men of Israel. Why single out and include these ostensibly lowly indi- viduals and give them pride of place alongside the leaders of Israel? Multiple explanations come to mind. Most obviously, per- haps, the Bible seldom shies away from an opportunity to speak out on behalf of the downtrodden. Indeed, hewers of wood and carriers of water have, for centuries, epitomized servitude and degradation, among Jewish and non-Jewish readers of the Hebrew Bible alike. Writing in 1838, for example, former President Andrew Jackson invoked this very phrase in his critique of and warn- ing against the widening economic gap between a corrupt commercial elite and everyone else: "All who wish to hand down to their children that happy repub- lican system bequeathed to them by their revolutionary fathers, must now take a stand against this consolidating, corrupt- ing money power and put it down or their children will become hewers of wood and carriers of water to this aristocratic rago- cracy [sic]:' For Jackson, these downtrodden indi- viduals epitomized enslavement and the mistreatment of society's lower strata. For other commentators, the labor performed by hewers of wood and car- riers of water was itself virtuous. Rabbi David Kimchi (aka RaDaK), comment- ing on Joshua sentencing the Gibeonites to be the Israelites' hewers of wood and carriers of water in perpetuity, noted how this punishment eventually led the condemned Gibeonites into a noble endeavor: As long as the Children of Israel were encamped and not living on their appor- tioned land, the Gibeonites served them as hewers of wood and carriers of water; but after every Israelite settled in his towns and on his land, they remained on as hewers of wood and carriers of water for God in the Tabernacle:' Maimonides, too, underscored this sense of virtue in his code of law: A per- son should always bear hardship rather than make himself a burden on the com- munity ... Even a distinguished sage who becomes poor should involve himself in a productive occupation — even a degrad- ing one — rather than appeal to the com- munity for assistance. "There were great sages who were hewers of wood, porters of beams, water- carriers for gardens and iron-smelters and makers of charcoal, but they did not ask anything from the community, nor did they accept gifts that were given to them:' Most telling perhaps is the fact the Bible includes hew- ers of wood and carriers of water as a means of clarifying a seemingly extraneous term from the verse before: You are all standing at Sinai (atem nitzvim hayon kulchem). Lest there be any doubt that all of Israel participated in this transcendent experi- ence, and lest some claim that certain Israelites experienced Sinai more than others, the Torah juxtaposes those regard- ed as society's lowest rung with the social and political elite. All of Israel participate in the covenant equally, menial workers side-by-side with sages and leaders. Some commentators carried this notion of equality a step further. The 16th-century kabbalist Moshe Alshich of Safed, commenting on the Talmud's description of heaven as "a topsy-turvy world, the upper class underneath and the lower on top' (Olam hafuch ra'iti, `elyonim lemata ve-tachtonim le-ma'ala), insisted that the perception of leader and sage being superior to wood-hewer or water-drawer is a earthly point of view ... but "when all stand before God, there is no higher and no lower; what seems low here, is no less lofty and significant there:' God does not see anyone as lowly, least of all menial laborers. As the High Holidays approach and Jews stand before God in the synagogue, it is useful to note a certain similarity between Jews of all stripes standing in great numbers side-by- side before God in the synagogue, await- ing Divine judgment and looking forward to a happy and healthy new year. ❑ Wayne State University Professor Howard N. Lupovitch is director of the Cohn- 29221 Northwestern Hwy. (at 12 Mile) Southfield. 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