Parshas Bechukosai
Understand it Very Well
By Rabbi Label Lam
These are the statutes and the judgments and the teachings (Toros-
plural of Torah) that HASHEM gave between Himself and the Children of
Israel at Sinai through the hand of Moshe. (Vayikra 26:46)
Toros: One (Torah) Written and one (Torah) Oral. This informs that both
were given to Moshe at Sinai. (Rashi)
This is a critical and oft underappreciated nugget of information. Not one
Mitzvah in the entire Torah is capable of being carried into action given
only the parameters provided in the text. There are almost 30,000 details
that comprise phylacteries and 5,000 in the ubiquitous mezuzah with little
information to guide to their uniform completion. What's called "killing"?
When does life begin? When does it end? What one person calls "family
planning" another may legitimately define as “murder!”
The Torah cries out for explanation. There must, by definition, have been
a concomitant corpus of information that accompanied the giving of the
laws and that is what we call the "Oral Torah". Rabbi Samson Raphael
Hirsch uses the analogy that the Written Torah is like the notes to a
scientific lecture. Every jot and squiggle has significance. If properly
understood it can awaken the actual lecture. The notes remain useless to
someone who has not heard the lecture from the Master. Therefore in the
Oral Torah is the sum of the lecture while the Written Torah is merely a
shorthand record. Without an Oral Torah that book the whole world holds in
such high esteem, the Bible is rendered in-actionable. It becomes a frozen
document that cannot be lived. Unfortunately, so many over the ages have
become lost due to a failure to appreciate this single point and its
significance for our very survival as a people.
When my wife and I were engaged, at the party there was a cousin of hers
that has written voluminously about the holocaust. He himself survived,
somehow, seven concentration camps. One of the Rabbis encouraged him to
speak. He claimed to be unprepared and not a good English speaker. He
spoke amazingly well.
First he looked out at a room filled with newly observant Jews and
wondered aloud, "Where do you people come from?" He then quoted the
Talmudic principle, "Torah returns to those who have hosted it." He
explained, "If you are sitting here today then it's probably because you
have some great ancestors who were willing to and did give blood to keep
this Torah alive." He went on to talk about my wife's and his illustrious
family tree.
Then he said that had he known he was going to speak he would have brought
with him a document he held in his hands that morning that answered a
question that had been nagging him for almost four decades. "We all know
Hitler's "final solution" for European Jewry. What was his global scheme?
Where was his plan to eliminate the rest of world Jewry?" He then
paraphrased what he had learned from that document. Here is a printed
transcript with a partial English translation:
"This document transmits a memorandum dispatched by I.A Eckhardt from the
chief of the German Occupation Power. It is an order dated October 25,
1940 from das Reichssicherheitshauptamt-the central office of the German
Security Forces to the Nazi district governors in occupied Poland,
instructing them not to grant exit visas to Ostjuden- Jews form Eastern
Europe. The reason behind this order is clearly spelled out: the fear that
because of their "Othodoxen einstellung" their orthodoxy, these Ostjuden
would provide "die Rabbiner und Talmudleher" - the Rabbis and the teachers
of the Talmud, who would create "die geistige Erneuerung" the spiritual
regeneration of the Jews in America and throughout the world."
The Oral Torah is essential for our existence as a people. It is our most
vital organ and instrument for survival. Without it we are immediately
lost. It makes sense that those who plan our demise understand it very
well!
DvarTorah, Copyright © 2007 by Rabbi Label Lam and Torah.org.