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PARASHAT
TETZAVEH 5763-2003
The
Primacy of Jewish Education
Rabbi Ephraim Buchwald
In last week's parasha, parashat Terumah, we read of the
appeal for donations to build the Tabernacle--the portable
sanctuary used in the wilderness, also known as the Mishkan.
In Exodus 25:1-2, G-d instructs Moses: "Daber
el B'nai Yisrael, v'yikchu lee t'rumah, may'eyt kol ish
asher yid'venu leebo, tick'chu et t'rumati,"
Speak to the children of Israel, that they should take
for me an offering, from any person whose heart stirs
him, you should take this donation. These donations, which
consisted of gold, silver, acacia wood, and onyx stones,
were designated for the building and the furnishing of
the Tabernacle, which included the ark, the menorah, the
table of showbread, the altar, and the other features
of the Tabernacle.
In this week's parasha, parashat T'zaveh, in Genesis 27:20,
there is a second appeal which begins with the words:
"V'ata t'zaveh et B'nai Yisrael, v'yikchu ey'leh'cha
shehmen zayit zach katit la'ma'or, l'ha'alot ner tamid,"
and you should command the children of Israel,
that you should take for yourselves pure olive oil that's
pressed for the lighting, in order to ignite the perpetual
flame of the menorah. According to tradition, the oil
and the light of the menorah represent wisdom and holiness.
In effect, the Torah is telling the people that when it
comes to building a Tabernacle, furnishing a Temple, or
erecting a religious edifice, it's all voluntary.
Donors may contribute as much as their heart's desire.
But when it comes to lighting a menorah, when it comes
to the light of wisdom and holiness, when it comes to
the light of Jewish education, donors have no choice.
Jews must contribute--there is no choice in the matter!
From virtually all vantage points, the Jews of America
are experiencing a "Golden Age"--unparalleled
in all Jewish history. Not since the 12th and 13th century
in Spain, have Jewish people, anywhere in the world, excelled
and flourished as have the Jews of contemporary America.
And although the Golden Age of Spain is often looked upon
as the paradigm of Jewish communal success, by any objective
standard, the medieval Jews of the Iberian Peninsula could
hardly measure up to the successes of those Jews living
today in "the land of the free and the home of the
brave."
In virtually every field of endeavor: business, medicine,
academia, entertainment, and politics, the achievements
of American Jewry are unprecedented. Jewish "Baby
Boomers" who grew up in awe of, and with reverence
for, the vaunted accomplishments of the previous generation
of American Jews: Albert Einstein, Dr. Jonas Salk, Louis
B. Meyer and David Sarnoff, could hardly imagine that
these achievements would be equaled, let alone eclipsed,
by a future generation of Jews in America. And yet, a
new generation of stars, with stellar achievements, continue
to profoundly impact on America and American culture:
Henry Kissinger, Steven Spielberg, Alan Greenspan, Barbra
Streisand, Joseph Lieberman, Michael Eisner, Michael Dell,
Steve Ballmer to name but a few.
Until very recently, four of the eight presidents of Ivy
League universities were Jewish. 22% of Nobel prizes in
science have been won by a people that represent about
2/10 of 1% of the world's population, and only 2% of the
American population.
Ours, is a generation of achievement without precedent
in all of Jewish history. And yet, to paraphrase a recent
address by one Jewish leader, ours is a generation that
is uniquely ignorant without precedent in all Jewish history;
America's Jews are wonderfully educated in the ways of
the world, but abysmally ignorant in the ways of our people.
There are Jews today who are thoroughly erudite in the
most obscure aspects of astrophysics, Swahili poetry,
anthropology, and the most sophisticated economic algorithms,
who could not recognize what "Leviticus 24:3"
means.
And so, from a Jewish point of view, for all practical
purposes, America's Jews are in severe distress and peril.
While our parents prayed for a melting pot, Jewish life
in America has become a meltdown. And how sad it is, because
with the loss of Jewish values and traditional Jewish
training, America's Jews are losing the magic that in
so many ways propelled the exceptional achievements of
our people. America's Jews are losing those values for
which we have been renowned for the past 200 years in
America: Excellence in education, extreme charitability,
stability of marital and family life, and abhorrence of
violence. As America's Jews become further estranged from
their traditions, America's Jews are subtly, but inexorably,
losing these special qualities that were once inextricably
bound to their Jewish identities.
These are propitious times for America's Jews to respond
to this daunting challenge. American Jewry, who have traditionally
rallied behind every important ethical and moral cause,
should, for once, rally for themselves, for their own
Jewish identities, and for their own Jewish survival.
And since Jewish learning is a prerequisite for Jewish
living, the proper response is an uninhibited clarion
call for Jewish literacy.
Today, the most critical and compelling aspect concerning
the question of Jewish survival in America is the challenge
of providing quality Jewish education for our children.
It is now absolutely indisputable, that aside from Yeshiva
and intensive Day School education, every other form of
Jewish training for young people in America has proven
to be an unmitigated disaster. I have often said, only
half in jest, that if the Jews for Jesus were smart, they
would pay to send every Jewish child to an afternoon Hebrew
School, because with rare exception, these schools have
proven to be most effective means of turning Jewish kids
off to Jewish life!
The Midrash Rabba, the legendary interpretation of the
Torah in Genesis parashat Toledot, relates that a non-Jewish
philosopher, Avnomos Hagardi, a first century contemporary
and friend of Rabbi Meir, was approached by the non-Jewish
leaders of his generation and asked, "Could you suggest
a way to defeat the Jewish people?" Avnomos replied,
"L'chu v'chazru al ba'tay chnay'see'ot,"
Go to their synagogues, go to the Jewish houses of study,
and if you hear the voices of children learning Torah,
there's no way that you can defeat them! Because this
was the promise of their forefather, Isaac, who said to
them: "Ha'kol, kol Yaacov," the voice
is the voice of Jacob. As long as the voice of Jacob is
found in the synagogues and in the houses of study, "ein
ha'yadayim y'day Esav," the hands of Esau can
not prevail.
If we are to survive and flourish, we must resolve to
reorder our priorities. We must resolve to support Jewish
education to its fullest. We must resolve to make personal
sacrifices so that our Jewish educators can live lives
of less privation. We must resolve to demand from the
general Jewish community, the wealthiest cultural group
in the U.S., to be forthcoming with serious funding for
Jewish education. It is absolutely criminal, that in this
day and age and in this country, the wealthiest Jewish
community in all Jewish history, there is still no Jewish
communal fund to guarantee a Jewish education for every
Jewish child who seeks one. (There's a Jewish National
Fund to plant trees. There must be a mega Jewish Educational
Fund to plant Jewish lives!) Furthermore, we must resolve
to educate our children and grandchildren to see Jewish
education as the foremost calling of our people, and to
encourage them to choose a career in Jewish education,
and eradicate the sense of stigma and opprobrium that
is often associated with a career in Jewish education.
Finally, we must resolve to make our first priority reaching
out to the already committed, which in some instances
means to reach out to ourselves, to insure that casual
Jews become passionate Jews, that the passion not be relegated
to the Rabbis and to the educators, but that the excitement
and thrill involved in the perpetuation of our heritage
permeate each of our homes, our schools, and our lives.
The Torah in this week's portion, T'zaveh, clearly
exhorts the Jewish people: "V'ata t'zaveh,"
You shall command! We have no choice in the matter. We
have to keep the menorah, the candle, the light of wisdom,
of holiness and of Jewish education burning brightly.
May
you be blessed.
Copyright 2007 National Jewish Outreach Program www.njop.org
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