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    DO YOU EVER “SLAUGHTER” ANOTHER JEW?

    No Gashes. There

    is a fascinating

    verse in this week’s

    Torah portion,

    Reah:  : You are children of the

    Lord, your G-d. You shall neither cut

    yourselves nor make any baldness between

    your eyes, for the dead. (Deut. 14:1) The

    custom of many pagans was to cut

    themselves in demonstration of grief over

    the death of a loved one. To vent their

    agony, they would make incisions in their

    flesh, pull out their hair, and flay their skin.

    The Torah prohibits this behavior. There

    must be limits to grief. This is the meaning

    of the Hebrew word “sisgodedu,” to scrape

    off the flesh. The Talmud, however, adds a

    second meaning to this commandment:

    -                         :  ,

          . The Torah is saying: Do not splinter

    yourself into separate groups. (“Sisgodedu,”

    from the root word “agud” or “agudah,”

    means groups.) This is a prohibition against

    the Jewish people becoming divided.

    Practically, this is a prohibition against one

    Jewish court dividing into two and guiding

    the community in a conflicting fashion,

    creating division and conflict. One practical

    example would be this. If a synagogue has a

    certain tradition of how to pray, one may not

    come and begin praying in a different

    tradition without the consent of the

    community. But there is something strange

    here, and the question was first pointed out

    by the 16th century Jewish sage and leader,

    Rabbi Yehuda Leow (1512-1607), known

    as the Maharal, chief Rabbi of Prague (who

    one of the most influential Jewish

    personalities of his time, and author of

    major works on Jewish thought.) The

    Talmud and the Midrash often present

    various interpretations for one biblical term

    or verse; but nowhere do we find two

    interpretations that are completely

    disconnected. On the simple level,

    “sisgodedu” means scraping off your skin.

    Now the Talmud tells us that it also means,

    “don’t split up into separate groups.” How

    do these two divergent instructions come

    together in a single word? Why would the

    Torah communicate such two disparate

    ideas in one word-lacerating your body and

    dividing a community? Or to put it more

    poignantly and humorously, the sages, it

    seems, by imposing this second

    meaning are “violating” the very

    injunction they are trying to convey.

    They take a simple word in the verse

    and they “splinter” its meaning to

    connote divergent interpretations that

    seem to lack any common streak? In

    words of the Maharal: “Every man of

    wisdom and understanding will be

    amazed at the relationship of their

    [the sages] words with the simple

    meaning of the text, at a depth that is

    truly awesome. Yet, the man who is a

    stranger to this wisdom, will wonder

    at their unlikely reading of the verse, their

    words seeming implausible to him.” One

    Organism Yet it is here that we can once

    again gain insight into the depth of Torah

    wisdom. The truth is, that the two

    interpretations are not only not divergent,

    they are actually one and the same. They

    both represent the same truth-one on a

    concrete, physical level; the other on a

    deeper, spiritual level. The Torah prohibits

    us from cutting our skin as a sign of

    bereavement. Our bodies are sacred; our

    organism is integrated, precious and holy;

    we must never harm it. We must not

    separate even a bit of skin from our flesh.

    Even difficult moments of grief don’t allow

    us to give up on our life and on the

    sacredness and beauty of our bodies.

    But that is exactly what we are doing

    when we allow our people to become

    splintered. The entire Jewish nation is

    essentially one single organism. We

    may number 15 million people, and

    come from different walks of life,

    profess extremely different opinions,

    and behave in opposite ways, but we

    are essentially like one “super

    organism.” When I cut off a certain

    Jew from my life, when I cut myself

    off from a certain Jewish community, I

    am in truth cutting off part of my own

    flesh. When I cut my skin, I am

    lacerating my body. When I cut you off

    from me, I am lacerating my soul.

    Because our souls are one. Only G-d I

    once read the following powerful

    story. In the late 18th century, in

    Eastern Europe, there was a terrible

    conflict between the Chassidim and

    their opponents, the Misnagdim, who

    suspected the Chassidim in heresy and

    blasphemy. The chief opponent was

    the Vilna Gaon, the famed Rabbi

    Elijah (1720-1797), from the

    Lithuanian city Vilnius, who issued a

    ban (cherem) against Chassidim. He

    excommunicated them from the

    Jewish community. It was a terrible

    division which continued for decades.

    The Misnagdim came to one of the

    greatest students of the Vilna Gaon,

    Rabbi Refael Hakohen Katz, the Rabbi

    of Hamburg and author of Toras

    Yekusiel (1722-1803), and asked him

    to sign the ban. He refused. They said:

    “But your own Rebbe, the Vilna Gaon,

    signed it, and your Rebbe is like an

    angel of G-d!” This was his response: There

    is a famous question on the story of the

    Akeida, the binding of Isaac, in Genesis. G-d

    instructs Abraham to bring up his son Isaac

    as an offering. Abraham complies. At the

    last moment, as he is about to slaughter

    Isaac, The Torah states: “And a heavenly

    angel of G-d called out to him, and said:

    Abraham! Abraham!… And he said: ‘Do not

    stretch out your hand against the lad, nor do

    anything to him.” At the last moment, Isaac

    is saved. There is something strange about

    this story. The instruction to bring Isaac as

    an offering came directly from G-d. G-d

    Himself told Abraham to offer his son to

    Him. Why did the reverse stop-order come

    from an angel and not from G-d? The

    answer, said Reb Refael, is this. If G-d

    wants to tell you not to touch a Jewish child,

    sending an angel will suffice. But if He

    wants you to “slaughter” another Jew, an

    angel can’t suffice! G-d Himself needs to

    come and tell you to do it. If you are going to

    “slaughter” another Jew, make sure you hear

    it from G-d Himself. To let Isaac live, the

    instruction could be communicated via an

    angel. To let Isaac die, G-d needed to show

    up Himself. “My Rebbe is an angel of G-d,”

    Reb Refael said. “But I will not sign a ban

    against another Jew,” even when an angel

    tells me to do so. To “slaughter” a Jew I need

    to hear it from G-d Himself. [The source of

    the above story is Toras Yechiel by Rabbi

    Schlezinger Parshas Vayeira. Chut

    Hameshulah, a biographey of the Chasam

    Sofer, page 27. In the latter the name of the

    student of the Vilna Gain is given as Reb

    Zalman of Valazhin, who was one of the

    most beloved students of the Vilna Gaon.

    There he also adds that when the Vilna

    Gaon heard this response, he himself

    abstained from any further action against the

    Chassidim! It is also interesting to note, that

    according to many sources, the famed

    Chafetz Chaim, Rabbi Yisroel Meir Kagan,

    who dedicated his life to increasing Jewish

    unity, and his works spread among all Jews,

    was a grandson of Reb Refael of Hamburg.]

    Be Careful Sometimes we get in to fights

    with people over idealistic reasons. We

    “slaughter” people-with our words or

    actions-and we feel that we are acting on

    behalf of an angel. We feel angelic about

    our actions. Be wary, says the Torah! If

    you are going to cut someone off from your

    life, you want to hear it from G-d Himself. If

    not, let it go.