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June 11/05 —
Shabbat Naso: God’s Healing Angels
Every
culture identified insiders and outsiders, those select few who
represent communal ideals and the despised few whose differences
make them seem threatening to the rest of us. For the vast majority,
straddled between the ideals and the rejects, life is an effort to
seem more like the former and to distance us from the latter. The
emotional security of the majority seems to require construing some
unfortunates as demons, rather than as fellow human beings simply
trying their best to get along.
A
universal human weakness, this drive to demonize as a way of feeling
better about ourselves, is not some recent innovation. Rather, it is
found in all societies, and even in our holy Torah. What is
surprising is not that it is there, but how an enlightened Jewish
tradition responded to the temptation to label and to expel.
In
Parashat Naso, the Torah relates God’s command to the Israelites “to
remove from camp anyone with an eruption or a discharge and anyone
defiled by a corpse. Remove male and female alike; put them outside
the camp so that they do not defile the camp of those in whose midst
I dwell.”
This
passage contains a troubling thought: That we should respond to
those with physical differences or troubles by banishing them from
the midst of the community. Can it be that the God of the Universe
is repulsed by physical deformities or imperfections? Does God
really want us to expel these people to the fringes of our
communities? Can we blame them, then, when they walk away from their
Judaism if their experience of Judaism is one of rejection and
expulsion?
This
topic is explored in Midrash Ba-Midbar Rabbah, the ancient rabbinic
commentary to the Book of Numbers: “When the Israelites came to the
wilderness of Sinai, God said, ‘Is it consonant with the dignity of
the Torah that I should give it to a generation of cripples?’” The
modern reader can’t help but cringe at the portrayal of a God so
callous to those of us who are unable to walk, or hear, or see, or
write without mechanical assistance. Is this the God of compassion
and mercy and love we pray to on Shabbat and our Holy Days? In fact,
the Midrash sets us up to expect God to justify their expulsion.
Yet
that’s not what happens. The Midrash continues, “What did God do?
God bade the angels come down to Israel and heal them.” Rather than
expelling the Israelites who were disabled, God effected a way to
cure them and reintegrate them into the community.
We too
need to find ways to deal with our propensity to judge based on
appearances. Like God, our primary efforts must be to assist people
in not having to be defined by a physical disability. By providing
the funds for research and for distributing the necessary aids, we
can allow more people to learn, to work productively, and to dream
and then to live their dreams.
We can
help each other to achieve salvation. We can make of ourselves God’s
healing angels.
But
there will doubtless remain people who cannot live “normal” lives,
others who won’t look like everyone else, and others whose
disabilities do prevent them from melting into a crowd. So the task
of becoming God’s healing angels, while always a priority, cannot be
our only task. The other priority must be to learn to see the
individual, not his or her appearance, as paramount. None should be
defined by their illness, their challenge, or their affliction.
Here,
our Torah again points the way, offering us a collection of heroes
who were disabled and glorious-Jacob with his limp, Moses with his
speech defect, and Miriam with her skin disease-all offer examples
of human giants who tower precisely because they are not viewed
through the prism of their disability. It’s not that those
disabilities weren’t real or a continuing part of who they were, but
their generation was somehow able to see those disabilities as but
one aspect of complex and truly wonderful people. The reality of
their disabilities didn’t solidify into a mask that hid the person
from the community.
The
Mishnah tells us “don’t look at the flask, but at what it contains.”
In teaching ourselves to see the inner sparks that light a person’s
soul, rather than merely glancing at the casing that holds those
precious assets of personality, aspiration, and caring, we can act
like God in the wilderness, healing when we can, and transcending
limits when we cannot.
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