Ki Tavo
Every year I am impressed and frightened even more by the description of Jewish
history that appears in this week's parsha. Ramban almost eight hundred years
ago stated how wondrous and chilling the prophesies of Moshe were in their
precise accuracy and clarity of vision and outlook. The description of the
Jewish future that we encounter here is so frightening as to be disheartening.
Who can withstand such enmity, persecution and genocide?
A cynical
professor of mine once said to me that Jewish history is "books and blood." This
is a vast oversimplification but it does contain a kernel of truth. A large
element that contributed to the abandonment of Jewish practice and faith, if not
even Judaism itself in Western and later in Eastern Europe during the eighteenth
and nineteenth centuries, was the unremitting enmity and persecution of the Jews
by the general society. Put simply, many Jews were no longer able or willing to
bear the burden of the tochachah - of the grinding poverty and violent bigotry
that was the lot of European Jewry.
They opted out, hoping that they
would thereby escape the Torah-predicted fate of the Jewish people. The irony to
all of this was that the German annihilation of the Jews during the Holocaust
was not based on religion but rather upon race and ancestry. Thus Jews who
converted to Christianity also found themselves standing on the railroad
platform at Auschwitz. The tochachah hunted them down as well.
However a
careful reading of this parsha will allow us to adopt a more hopeful and
sanguine view of our future. The Torah guarantees us our survival as a people -
not necessarily as individuals per se, but as a people. As a people, we are
indestructible and eternal. Eventually, the Lord will not forsake us for we will
return to treasure Him and His Torah in faith and practice.
The seven
haftorot of comfort and consolation which lead us from the tochachah of Tisha
B'Av to the greatness of the High Holy days and Succot all reaffirm the
prediction of God's mercy and redemption towards Israel. The Lord does not allow
us to be vanquished physically or spiritually. "Will a woman forget her infant?
So, too will I not forsake you," states the prophet Yeshayahu.
A loving
reconciliation between God and Israel is predicted by all of our prophets from
Moshe to Malachi. The wait may be long and nerve-wracking, but the outcome is
certain and sure. This is no less the message of the tochachah than are its most
dire predictions. To paraphrase Rabi Akiva who saw the ruins of the Temple
strewn on the ground before his eyes, we can also state: "If the terrible
predictions have proven to be so unerringly accurate in detail and form, then we
can rest assured that the prophesies of comfort and triumph are also true even
as to their most minute detail." This faith of Israel has sustained us
throughout our long night of exile. It continues to sustain us now in the midst
of our angst and travails.
Shabat shalom.
Rabbi Berel Wein