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In English, when you wish to refer to a group of people who
originate from the same geographical location and share a common
culture, you call them a nation or a people. In Torah vernacular,
the children of Israel, the descendents of Yakkov/Jacob are referred
to as an am, edah and goy. Traditionally
am has been translated as people or nation, edah
customarily is rendered as congregation, and goy is commonly
interpreted as nation.
It is axiomatic that the terms employed in Torah are precise.
Yet, before we begin to explore the nature of these three terms
we ought to ask ourselves, what is it that creates a nation?
In a time of great nationalistic pride, where it seems that every
ethnic group which converses in a distinct dialect aspire for
their own homeland and sovereignty, we need to re-ask the question,
how do we define a people? Common language is ruled out from
the mere fact that there are many nations that share a language
and yet are diametrically opposite in terms of government and
culture. How about culture? But what is culture? Years back,
culture meant what is called 'high culture,' the fine arts, classical
music, live theatre, but, take America for example, for the most
part these forms of entertainment are shared by a very small
group of Americans. True, there are those who argue that there
is an American 'core culture,' such as consuming great quantities
of fast food, watching a lot of television and movies, and rooting
for your local sports team. So suppose one does not enjoy fast
food, barely watches TV and is not a sports fan, would this person
be considered less of an American or unpatriotic?
The going out of Egypt is viewed as the birth of the nation
of Israel; the preceding enslavement were the labor pains, and
the exodus, the birth. So let's observe the language the Torah
employs when discussing the nation's birth and see if we can
unearth a pattern that bespeaks nationalistic development and
spiritual evolvement.
Prior to the exodus, when Moshe/Moses is first being appointed
as the redeemer, the Torah says; "And Hashem said; I have
surely seen the affliction of my people who are in Egypt, and
have heard their cry because of their taskmasters; for I know
their sorrows." (Exodus 3:7) The precise phrase the Torah
uses is ami- my am- my people.
The narrative unfolds. The children of Israel, still in Egypt,
receive the mitzvah of korban pesach - the divine
invitation to offer a sacrificial lamb. The Torah says; "Speak
to all the congregation of Israel, saying; In the tenth day of
this month they shall take every man a lamb, according to the
house of their fathers, a lamb for a house" (12:3). The
phrase used here is adas, the plural of the word edah
- as in congregation.
Following the exodus, as the people of Israel stand at the
foot of Mount Sinai, the Torah speaks once more; "
if
you will obey my voice indeed, and keep my covenant, then you
shall be my own treasure among all peoples; for all the earth
is mine; And you shall be to Me a kingdom of priests, and a holy
goy (nation)" (19:5-6). The term used in this, the
third statement, is goy-nation. This goy categorization
is apparently the climax. Indeed, at the very beginning of their
collective journey, when the forefather Abraham first encountered
the Divine, he was told "and I will make you into a great
goy-nation" (Genesis 12:2). The message of the objective
was clearly defined, the metamorphoses of his descendents into
a great 'goy,' which was eventually achieved when they
stood at Sinai and were receiving the Torah.
So there are three evolving stages, The first stage is that
of the children of Israel as referred to by 'am'that
is the pre-mitzvot, pre-Torah stage. The Jewish nation,
as a people, are afflicted with suffering and in an ontological
condition of deep exile. The second stage occurs when they are
introduced to mitzvot, and are called 'edah.' And
finally, as they are about to receive the Torah, they are identified
as a goy.
Am is the weakest definition of a people. In fact,
the word am means weak, as in gechalim omemus-barely
lit coals. Then comes edah, from the root word ed-witness,
and then the term goy as in g'viyah-one body.
In a pre-mitzvot, pre-torah reality, in a situation
where there were noor littledistinct laws and rituals,
what forged them together as a people was their common enemy.
Being communally oppressed in Egypt, their external predicament
pressed them together into a unified group. Indeed, there are
nations and people that coalesce as one group solely because
of outside oppression and persecution. This is an am,
a nation of sort, but a shallow one indeed. Take away the outside
influences and the internal structure of the nations crumbles.
Beyond am is edah, it is where a group of people
beyond geographical circumstances are unified by abiding laws
and shared customs. An edah is an assemblage of people
whose lives become a testimonial to a higher order, divine law
or an overarching state law. With regard to the children of Israel,
they become a witness to Torah. In the words of Rav Saddiah Gaon,
the tenth century philosopher, "the nation is not a nation,
only with Torah." Upon receiving the mitzvah of karbon
pesach, they can be called an edah.
Ultimately a true nation is a goyas in one body.
This occurs when a group of individuals who share a common law
and aspire to a common goal evolve into, metaphorically speaking,
one goy, one body. The group becomes so linked to each
other that it is as if they exist with one body, albeit with
different functions. If one limb is damaged, then the body as
a whole aches. This transpired at the foot of the mountain where
they camped, as the Midrash extrapolates from the verse,
"ke'ish echad, be'lev echad"-as one person with
one heart.
Thus far we have explored what constitutes the nation. But
what of a Jew as an individual? Suppose there is a Jew who does
not, as of yet, espouse an outward willingness to be a living
edah. The individual may not wish to be part of the goy,
with that nation's national and spiritual destiny and ambitions.
While they may no longer identify themselves as part of the Nation,
they are still Jewish in Torah Law, and for that matter, they
are still considered a Jew to an anti-Semite. So what is it that
makes an individual a Jew, even when the person himself no longer
wishes to express any Jewishness?
Some modern philosophers, such as the French existentialist
Jean Paul Sartre, would like to suggest that the Jew is only
the Jew because of the anti-Jew, the anti-Semite. To him, if
there would no longer be the anti-Semite, there would no longer
be the Jew. "What is it, then, that serves to keep a semblance
of unity in the Jewish community
if they have a common bond,
if all of them deserve the name of Jew, it is because they have
in common the situation of a Jew, that is, they live in a community
which takes them for Jews" (Anti-Semite and Jew. Chap 111).
So the Jew, as an individual, and to Sartre, as a community,
only exists because of externalities. But such reading is merely
superficial, indeed one of Sartre's weaker books, as it underscores
the importance of the law, culture and custom, and certainly
the divinity of Torah.
Being that adherence to Torah and her values cannot be the
sole root of Jewish identity since even those Jews who do not
claim Torah as their own and as a way of life are still considered
Jews, perhaps it is Jewish culture that creates the Jew. But
what is Jewish culture? A lot of the Jewish culture that we know
in the West is not Jewish culture per se, rather Ashkenazic/
European Jewish culture. Jews from Africa or the Middle East
have an altogether different culture. They do not eat gefilta
fish or chicken soup for Shabbas dinner, nor is their native
language interlaced with Yiddish terminology, such as schlep,
kvetch, or yiddisher kop.
Blaise Pascal, one of the greatest minds of the seventeenth century,
the person who when asked by Louis XIV for proof of God's controlling
hand in the historical process, responded, "Why, the Jews,
your Majesty, The Jews!" penned these words about the Jews:
" I see first of all that they are a people wholly composed
of brothers
are entirely descended from one individual,
and being thus all one flesh and members one of another comprise
a powerful state of a single family: this is unique" (Pensees).
I believe that this description; viewing Jews as part of a
family, descendents from one individual is right on the mark.
Clearly, this is aligned with the definition of the Jews as bnei
yisrael-the children of Israel, the offspring of the patriarch
Yakkov/Jacob.
Within the nucleus of a family there are always different
types of children; some of them are more obedient than others,
some more involved in the path of their parents than the others,
while some more rebellious. The diversity within the family unit
is part and parcel of the family dynamic and what keeps it so
interesting. Clearly, this sense of family extends itself outward
and embraces those Jews who chose Judaism, as they too become
part of the family, so to speak, like marrying into the family.
For this reason the initiation process for the one who wishes
to join is a bit more difficult than for the one who is born
into it, as the individual needs to prove himself, and accept
upon himself or herself the Torah, the good that comes along
with being in the family, as well as the harsh reality of persecution,
prejudice and anti-Semitism. But once joined they become a part
of the family as any other memberthis is sufficient, without
taking into consideration the more mystical interpretation that
the convert is part of the family to begin with.
All members of the family are eternally part of the family,
whether they are committed or not, involved or not. They may
lack outwardly a connection, but they are forever part of the
Nation, and always a Jew.
As the physical mirrors the meta-physical, those who are part
of one family are not merely genetically related but are spiritually
connected, and the physical relationship is but a manifestation.
Tellingly, every group of people, every nation shares a common
overarching 'soul' which is reflected in the group's collective
ambition, goal, and trajectory. This spiritual commonality shows
up in the uniqueness of the music these people enjoy, the food
they traditionally eat, and the general life style of the group.
In an interview, the Noble Laureate Joseph Brodsky was asked
about his connection with Judaism and he replied "there
are a number of elements in my life that define me as a Jew.
The passion for justice, and my love for the intellect."
These words echo the words of the great Albert Einstein, who
is quoted in Ideas and Opinions, as saying, "The pursuit
of knowledge for its own sake, an almost fanatical love of justice,
and the desire for personal independencethese are the features
of the Jewish tradition which make me thank my stars that I belong
to it."
Ever since the patriarchs, Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, and the
matriarchs, Sara, Rebecca, Rachel and Leah challenged their polytheistic
surroundings and, with self-abnegation, relentlessly sought justice,
taught and inspired monotheism, and thus accountability and responsibility,
transforming their mortal reality and themselves into paragons
and archetypical figures, it has been encrusted into the fiber
of their 'family,' penetrating the most profound levels of our
consciousness, a deep level of faith; both an innate faith in
the Creator and faith in the abilities of mankind to spiritually
evolve and pursue justice. In fact, it was the Jew who gave the
world these very ideas of faith, progress and justice. To quote
Thomas Cahill's best selling book, "Most of our best words,new,
adventure, surprise, unique, individual, person, vocation, time,
history, future, freedom, progress, spirit, faith hope, justiceare
the gifts of the Jews."
The collective goal and ambition of the Jew is to bring redemption
to this world, to bring peace, light and harmony to a world of
seeming chaos, darkness and confusion. Every letter in the Hebrew
alphabet has a number equivalent. The word yisrael, comprised
of five letters, yud/10, shin/300, reish/200, aleph/1 and lamed/30,
equals 541. The same as the Hebrew word for light or aleph/1,
vav/6, reish/200, and darkness, v'chosech, vav/6, ches/
8, shin/ 300, chaf/20, grand total 541. Indeed our national goal
is to inspire a fusion between light and darkness. As a family,
we continue to be a light unto the nations. Bringing light where
there is darkness, warmth where there is cold, and a ray of hope
when despair threatens to overwhelm.
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