Judaism And The Environment 101
Food for Thought
Resources on Judaism and the Environment
"If I am not for myself, who will be for me?
But if I am only for myself, then what am I?
And if not now, when?"
- Rabbi Hillel, Mishneh Avot, first
century CE
Like all peoples and faith communities, the Jewish people
has had an evolving relationship with the physical world. Because we have
traveled through time and place for more than thirty centuries, ours is
a rich and diverse tradition.
Right now we're at any interesting moment in history.
There is, on the one hand, a growing awareness of the need to manage our
planet's resources more carefully, and an intuition that as well as acting
as individuals and as citizens, we also have the resources of Judaism
and the Jewish people to draw upon. On the other hand, our postmodern
perspective is a different one than a biblical one, and in its contemporary
form, the conversation between Judaism and environmentalism is young -
all sorts of issues, open questions and problems abound.
Consider first:
- The
beginnings of a Jewish environmental ethic emerge out of Bereishit,
- Genesis - through the two creation stories, which set up models
of our relationship as human beings with the rest of creation,
and which obligate us to tend and to protect the world.
-
Our agricultural roots, celebrated on holidays and in sacred texts,
are intended to connect us to the land.
-
The cycles of the Jewish year are grounded in the natural world
and our connection to it
-
Shabbat - stopping and resting on the Sabbath - teaches that there
are higher values than production and consumption. Resting on
Shabbat - one day in seven - lies at the heart of a healthy relationship
with oneself, one's friends and one's family.
- The
biblical concept of shmitta - having the land rest on its seventh
year - provides an equivalent model of rest for the land itself.
-
The biblical concept of peah - leaving the corner of the field
unharvested for the poor to pick themselves - connects ecological
issues with the need for people to live free of hunger, and with
their basic needs met.
- Protecting
G!d's creation is a theme throughout subsequent Jewish philosophy,
literature, liturgy and law. Scholars and rabbis from Maimonides
to Reb Nachman of Bratzlav and from Rav Kook to Abraham Joshua
Heschel have taught and written about this relationship.
-
Our liturgy is rich in natural imagery, from blessings that give
us a framework for awareness and appreciation for the wonders
and sanctity of creation to the image of the Torah itself as a
tree of life.
But consider also:
- Jewish
environmentalists see bal tashchit - the prohibition on wanton
destruction - as providing a halachic basis for a prohibition
of contemporary behaviors which are destructive to the environment.
But - like many legal issues, Jewish or otherwise - bal tashchit
can be interpreted in different ways. Is it a strong enough foundation?
What does it really mean?
- The
Biblical basis for Jewish environmentalism is human-centered in
many ways, and to that extent conflicts in some respects with
the perspective of some radical contemporary environmentalists.
-
The Jewish community worldwide, and especially in the US, is relatively
economically successful. That means that, per person, we're using
a disproportionate amount of the world's resources - more cars,
larger houses and so on. How do we balance an awareness of the
finitude of some of the earth's resources with our own (enjoyable,
habitual) patterns of consumption?
-
Environmentalists argue that people should have fewer children.
Statistically, most US Jews outside of ultra-orthodox communities
do have fewer children - but many believe that that is, for the
future of the Jewish people, unhealthy, and that we need to have
more. Is there a way to square the environmental argument for
smaller families with a Jewish desire to respond to the losses
our people has suffered in the last hundred years?
-
Many Jewish teachings about land are focused not on land in general
but on eretz yisrael - the land of Israel - in particular. What
does that mean when half the world's Jews don't live in Israel?
And how do we respond to environmental depradation in Israel itself?
And how does a country built around aliyah - inward immigration
- now deal with being so crowded that there are strong environmental
arguments for limiting growth in many ways?
-
Jewish tradition clearly permits the eating of meat (even though
Jewish vegetarians argue that that is not the Biblical ideal).
But we also know that eating meat is environmentally destructive
in many ways...
To learn more about what Judaism teaches us about environmentalism, and how you can become involved
in activism, the Coalition
on the Environment and Jewish Life (COEJL) is a wonderful resource.
And check out some of the projects all over the world being organized
by the beneficiaries of the Cross-USA Jewish Environmental Bike Ride
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RESOURCES ON JUDAISM AND THE ENVIRONMENT
Chai - assists the Israeli animal protection community in their efforts to
improve the condition and treatment of Israel's animals
COEJL (Coalition on the Environment and Jewish Life) - engages Jewish
institutions and individuals in bringing the moral passion of Jewish
tradition and social action to environmental stewardship in order to
preserve the integrity of creation, advance social justice, protect future
generations, and strengthen the Jewish community
Teva Learning Center - a Jewish environmental education center for day
schools, hebrew school and synagogue groups
EcoJew - a site for environmental activism in the Jewish community of
California with resources that can help all of us
The Arava Institute for Environmental Studies - a
regional center for environmental leadership on Kibbutz Ketura in Israel.
www.jewishsimplicity.org
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