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On Universalism (Column 188)

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Originally published:
This is an English translation (via GPT-5.4). Read the original Hebrew version.

With God's help

Dedicated to my dear nephew, Uri George Paterzeil,

a mathematician in the making

A few days ago I saw an article claiming that our media gives preference in its reporting to Jews who are killed over Arabs. Here is the gist of the subheading:

It is easy to imagine that if Mahmoud Abu Asbah, who was killed by rocket fire in Ashkelon, had been Jewish, his picture would have opened the broadcasts and reporters would have been standing outside his home. The Israeli media has a different agenda when it comes to non-Jewish fatalities. They are not "all our sons," and they do not bring ratings either.

Shocking, is it not?… Well, actually, not to me. At the outset I will try to explain why, and afterward I will touch a bit on the roots of the matter.

The ratings

The simplest answer is contained in the question itself: it does not bring ratings. The media, by its nature, deals with what interests the public. I have always wondered why we are told about every actor or singer who dies in a car accident or from illness, not to mention a politician or media personality, while the greatest Torah scholars, scientists, or philosophers are not really of interest to anyone. A philosopher, a well-known rabbi, or a scientist may get some small item at the end of the paper or a brief one-time remark at the end of the news broadcast, but people of real stature and exalted character, great Torah figures, or thinkers who do not belong to the "right" camp will not even get that. This is indeed annoying, but within the framework in which our media operates, the sanctimonious complaints above strike me as downright disingenuous.

Whether we like it or not, the media reports according to ratings. Not only in the news, of course. Television channels devote hours to reality entertainment, and very little, if any, to intellectually serious programs. I have never once heard a media report about a brilliant solution to a logical puzzle or about an innovative conceptual or scholarly insight in the Talmud. Even about scientific news you will hear almost nothing beyond a few descriptions (in many cases infantilizing) of what the reporter thinks is an impressive scientific discovery. Our media considers it more important to report what so-and-so said about so-and-so, who is dating whom, and who broke up with whom, simply because that gets ratings.

I entirely share the criticism of ratings culture, but it seems to me that within the existing (sub-)culture, raising claims about underreporting an Arab hit by a rocket in Ashkelon is simply ridiculous. It seems to me part of the obsession with racism; I mean those who try morning and night to show us our miserable condition ("It reminds me of dark days, Germany of the 1930s," and the like). Certain people derive a pathological pleasure from exposing racism at every turn, whether it exists there or not. In my view, that belongs more to the department of psychiatry than to that of ethics or philosophy.

What the media ought to report

Beyond the common criticisms of ratings culture, which as noted I share on the principled level as well, there is an incorrect claim here even if we had an ideal media. As a rule, let me say at the outset that the media has no obligation whatsoever to equality in reporting. To the best of my judgment, media reporting is supposed to bring one of two things to the public's attention: either what is important (even if it is not interesting), or what is interesting (even if it is not important). The first is the media's fundamental value, and the second is a service to the public. Therefore there is certainly room to criticize the media if it fails to bring what is important because it is not interesting. That is what we discussed above (ratings culture). By the same token, there is room for criticism if something interesting is not brought because it is not important. That is a failure in the media's service to the public (and also in the media's own interest: ratings). But if it does not bring what is neither important nor interesting, I see no grounds for criticism.

Now think about it: obviously it is important (to some degree) and interesting (to some degree) to know that a person was hit by a rocket. But why is it important to know his personal details? Does his name have news value? Never mind his name and details, but does a live, gloomy report from outside his house have any added public value? All of these are plainly unimportant items of information (indeed, they are not really information at all). The thing that has clear news value is the fact that a person was killed by the rocket strike. That is all. One can also mention that he was an Arab from Halhul. That too has some news value, even if only as a curiosity. By the same token, it is not important to know the name of a Jewish resident of Ashkelon or Ashdod if he were struck, and certainly not what his family or friends feel. After all, it is obvious to all of us that the unnecessary live reports from outside the victim's home are a media attempt to squeeze honey from a rock. Such reports are meant to wring a bit of public emotion out of the victims, stir up ratings, and fill a little airtime.

The conclusion is that such reports are certainly not important, and at most they are interesting. As stated, an interesting report that is not important is not really a journalistic value, but at most a service to the public. That is assuming that it really is interesting. But here that obviously depends on who the victim is and whom it might interest. Details about such a victim are certainly of interest to his friends and relatives, and it is reasonable to assume that a Jewish victim has such circles among viewers of Channel 1 news. But a victim who is a resident of Halhul has very few relatives and friends who watch Channel 1 or 2 news, and so it is hardly surprising to me that the system does not see fit to devote substantial space to such reports.

The conclusion is that a detailed filmed report on a Jewish victim is not important but perhaps a bit interesting, whereas a similar report on a Palestinian victim from Halhul (beyond the mere fact that he was injured or killed) is neither important nor interesting. So why on earth should the media devote detailed coverage to it? Let the PLO news or the Halhul local paper do that (that would be far more appropriate). And again, I do not mean in the slightest to belittle the value of a human life, of any nationality and from any place whatsoever. I am simply describing the facts as they are and what follows from them.

It is the way of our media to bring reports that are interesting and not important. With that we must make our peace, at least as a service to the public. But when it does not bring a report that is neither interesting nor important, I am only glad. I certainly have no criticism of that.

The lack of equality

What remains is the feeling of inequality. After all, if they do this for a Jew, why not do it for an Arab as well? I understand that inequality in reporting can arouse unpleasant feelings, but the media has never been committed to equality. A demonstration of a few dozen leftists will sometimes receive media focus out of all proportion compared to demonstrations of tens of thousands from the Right, which are sometimes not mentioned at all in the mainstream media. Here it is not even ratings, but simply the social milieu of the news editors and presenters. Here, precisely, there is room for criticism, because as I explained, the two relevant criteria for news reporting are public interest and importance. Any other criterion (such as the social and ideological affiliation of the news editor) is not a relevant consideration.

What accounts for the inequality in reporting? If there is any such inequality here at all, its basis lies in the public's attitude toward the two situations: as I explained, the public of news consumers on Channel 1 or 2 is interested in the details of a Jewish victim and less interested in the details of a Palestinian victim, certainly if he is a resident of Halhul. The difference in levels of coverage in this case lies not in the media but in us. But even regarding the public, I do not think there is anything wrong with its being more interested in those close to it and less interested in those far from it, and certainly much less in those who belong to the very people that sends these rockets at us. Is the American press supposed to report the details of the civilians hurt in the bombing of Dresden in Germany during World War II in the same way as it reports American soldiers or civilians who were hurt? I remind you that there too there were masses of innocent casualties, and nevertheless it was clear to everyone that their personal details were simply not relevant to the American news-consuming public. I assume that the news about Dresden at the time included the facts and a bit of surrounding color. Certainly not live coverage from outside the victims' homes. You know what? There was not live coverage even of the victims in Poland or even in Britain. The reason is that there was no public interest in the details of those victims in the U.S. And despite that, I am fairly convinced that nobody at that time wrote an indignant article on any website about that racism and inequality.

A side note

This is the place to make another similar remark. In an article I saw a few days later, we were told that landlords refused to rent a house to an Ethiopian family because they disliked the smell of the injera they eat:

After they signed a contract and transferred checks, the landlord called Sarah Argao and her partner to check whether they prepared "all the foods of the community." When Argao answered that sometimes her mother brings her injera, the landlord apologized and informed them that the agreement was canceled and the payment would be returned to the couple. "I am shocked. Enough with racism."

Immediately, of course, the predictable claims of racism arise here too, which is probably baseless. If the tenants had seemed unable to pay to the landlord, he would not have rented them the house. More than that, if that same family kept a dog, nobody would have said a word about a refusal to rent them a house (this happens every day). Why? Because the landlord does not want his house filled with dog hair or dog odors. So why should a person have to agree that the walls of his house absorb the smells of foods he dislikes? That is his taste and it is his house, and he has the right to act according to his taste. What does that have to do with racism?! Of course, it is always possible that this is a pretext concealing pure racism underneath, but I did not see in this article even a shred of evidence. To accuse someone, or even to suspect him, of racism requires some evidence.

In passing, I will note that if a person rises to a high moral level and is nevertheless prepared to absorb the inconvenience so as not to hurt people, blessed be he. But there is a great distance between that and the determination that someone who is not prepared for this is a racist.

Discrimination against Arabs

At first I planned to devote the column to these two remarks about racism and inequality, but afterward I thought there is a more basic and deeper point here that is worth dwelling on. I will begin with the unequal attitude of Jews toward Arabs.

I have already mentioned here in the past that discriminatory and unequal treatment in the State of Israel (both by individuals and by the state) toward Arabs is not necessarily an expression of racism. These are our declared enemies, who have been spilling our blood for more than a hundred years. Quite apart from the question of who is right in this conflict, it seems simply ridiculous to me to expect a person who, together with his friends, family, and people, has been under violent attack from them for more than a hundred years to relate to them equally and to take an interest in their fate exactly as in the fate of his own people. I wonder whether the diligent reporter expects Palestinian television to devote to Jewish victims of terror the same amount of coverage that it devotes to Palestinian victims of IDF bombings. The term sanctimoniousness seems too weak to me to describe this absurd demand. Even regarding our fellows, the demand "love your fellow as yourself" ("love your neighbor as yourself") sounds almost impossible (and not for nothing does Rabbi Akiva formulate it negatively: "what is hateful to you, do not do to your fellow" ["what is hateful to you, do not do to your fellow"]). But with respect to our enemies, this already seems a truly bizarre demand.

My claim is that the different attitude toward Arabs in Israel is first of all a natural result of the conflict, and as such it does not necessarily have a racist background. That does not mean that racism does not sometimes peek out among us; it does. But in most cases, treating such an attitude as racism is mere tendentious propaganda, or at best a misunderstanding. Moreover, I hope it will not surprise you if I say that I too think there is no place for discrimination against Arabs simply by virtue of their being Arabs, and that I too very much dislike these phenomena. And if with respect to private citizens this is still tolerable, with respect to the state and its institutions it is of course illegitimate. But by the same token, I object to dragging the name of racism into every place without any distinction. The discriminatory attitude in these cases is usually a natural reaction of one people fighting another people. Even if at times the natural reaction is unworthy and it is desirable to refrain from it and struggle against it, anti-racist grandstanding in these cases is propaganda or ignorance.[1]

On universality

The deeper basis for this obsessive criticism stems from universalism. Left-wing people are often accused of lacking national attachment (many of them admit as much). I think this is not true of all of them, but it is certainly true as a generalization. The Left (for present purposes, I mean the Left in all its forms: both liberal and communist) definitely tends more toward universalism than the Right.[2] That is hard to deny. I am not even sure it is bad, but it is a fact. The basic feeling at the root of universalism is that a world in which no distinction is made between nation and nation and between person and person would be a better and more moral world, less violent and more just and generous. Therefore we must overcome the particularism that is ingrained in us (evolution is against us here), and behave equally toward all creatures in the world.

It seems to me that here too, as in other contexts, the leftist thesis sounds lofty in theory, but in practice it does not really work. You may say: even if it does not work, what is wrong with it? It surely cannot do harm. A little aspiration for peace and equality never killed anyone. Well, actually it can. It becomes clear to me again and again that, at least in some respects, when it does not work the situation becomes worse than without it. Utopias are impressive, enchanting, and idealistic things, but they are also very dangerous and very harmful. Incidentally, this is the main difficulty with this type of criticism, since my arguments criticize a person or a group for being too good and too idealistic.

Instead of elaborating, I will bring here passages from what I wrote to my dear nephew Uri (to whom this column is dedicated) for his bar mitzvah (Haifa, the Sabbath of Nitzavim, nearly ten years ago). I tried to describe to him the differences between the outlooks he receives at home (which tends toward universalism) and the more particularist outlooks he sees among us, his uncles, and to consider the meaning of the dispute and its importance. As you will see, this is a description of two positive sides, but in my opinion sometimes being too positive can cause harm.

The Sermon from the Mount (Carmel)

Last week's Torah portion begins with the verse:

You are standing today, all of you, before the Lord your God: your tribal heads, your elders, and your officers, every man of Israel; your little ones, your wives, and the stranger in your camp, from your woodcutters to your water drawers.

Before God stands a great multiplicity and diversity of people and groups. But their significance as a single unit derives from the fact that they all stand before God, before a great idea, and before values.

In the family in which you are growing up there are different shades, whose outlooks, at least on certain issues, differ greatly. And yet, it seems to me that all of them stand before ideas (sometimes opposing ones, but not always) and act to realize them. That is already something shared that you can take with you.

But there is also an advantage in what separates, not only in what is shared. I was once young and I have grown old, and I have not seen anyone who is always right about everything (except for one, whom I occasionally see in the mirror). Therefore the fact that there is diversity also contributes to the shaping of ideas, values, and ideals, and does not merely draw nourishment from them.

One of the things that is very important for someone who lives in an intellectual and ideological environment, religious or secular, is the ability to criticize, weigh, formulate a position, and decide independently. Sometimes that is difficult. Very few do it. And yet, family diversity may help you become such a person.

At the center of the difference between the two poles in the family is the attitude toward questions of universality (= relating to all human beings as equals and as belonging to the same circle of concern) versus particularism (= relating to one's surroundings in a model of circles, one around another). In the family in which you are growing up there is a tendency toward the universal, toward equal regard for every person of every kind. We, who believe in a different path, have learned to value and appreciate that path, and no less the people who walk in it, despite disagreements on certain points. And yet, I want to present and raise another angle here. I will reveal to you a secret that will surely surprise you (do not tell anyone): your mother and I have had a few arguments in the past, one or two. But as far as I remember, the only argument we ever had under screen names on an internet forum was about this issue.

If we move to the portion you read, the portion of Ha'azinu, already at the beginning God turns there to heaven and earth as though they were human beings:

Give ear, O heavens, and I will speak; let the earth hear the words of my mouth. May my teaching drop like the rain, may my speech distill like the dew, like showers upon fresh growth and like abundant drops upon the grass.

The inanimate world enters here into the human drama. It listens, and serves as a witness to the word of God. In fact, God speaks to us through it and by means of it. Today there is an approach called eco-ethics (= ecology on an ethical rather than utilitarian basis), which advocates a respectful and considerate attitude toward living beings, plant life, and the inanimate, not only for the sake of improving human life, but also for their own sake.

Rabbi Kook, who was the first Chief Rabbi of Israel (back when chief rabbis were still expected to know how to read), in his work 'The Vision of Vegetarianism and Peace,' speaks about the attitude toward plant life. There he supports the eco-ethical conception, but he also says that one must be very careful when taking this path. He writes that equal regard for every creature, which in itself is certainly positive and worthy, may (though not necessarily) lead to an improper attitude toward those who are located in circles closer to us. That is human nature, even if we do not always like it, and therefore we must take it into account. Someone who is overly scrupulous about caring for living beings, plants, and the inanimate may arrive at a dismissive attitude toward human beings. There are examples of this.

The world was created in concentric circles of concern (= circles with a common center), one within another. Parents care first of all for their children, then for the wider family, then for neighbors, and then for those beyond the family, the city, the country, and the world. A person will usually not sell his house in order to save the life of a neighbor who needs an expensive operation, but he will do so for his children, his wife, and his family members. Jewish law tells us "the poor of your own city come first" ("the poor of your own city come first"), meaning that we must give priority to concern for the immediate circle around us, and only afterward care for the broader circles. This may seem problematic, and there is no doubt that sometimes it also leads to distortions and discrimination, but it seems to me that on balance it is still more correct this way. I think that if we distribute responsibility by means of distinct and hierarchical circles, the world will be better than if it were run according to an extreme universalist approach. This is a certain division of the burden, even though sometimes it may indeed lead to distortions. It is important to understand that concern for the inner circle does not stem only from preferring it to the others; at its root lies a conception that, in the end, such a way of dividing the burden can lead to a better situation with respect to all the circles, that is, to the whole world.

This does not mean that we may ignore more external circles. On the contrary: to the extent possible (especially when this does not come at the expense of the inner circles), one should care for every person, and perhaps also for every creature. There was once a righteous Jerusalemite named Rabbi Aryeh Levin, who was known for going to visit lepers who had been ostracized from human society (out of fear of being infected by them, and also because of the stigmas attached to that disease). He also supported and cared for prisoners, and all kinds of unfortunate and needy people, and became an actual legend of kindness (I know that is a capitalist concept) and good-heartedness already in his lifetime. Rabbi Aryeh Levin recounts that when Rabbi Kook came to the Land, he went to greet him, and they took a walk together. While they were walking, Rabbi Aryeh Levin absentmindedly plucked a leaf from a tree standing there by the way. He recounted that suddenly he saw Rabbi Kook deeply shaken, and when he asked him what this meant, Rabbi Kook rebuked him and told him that one must not pluck a leaf just like that, for no reason, that is, unless we need it for our use. God created the leaf too, and there is no reason to harm it for no reason. Rabbi Kook did not ignore the outer circles (including plants), but he nevertheless thought it important to preserve the hierarchy among them. When human beings need that leaf, of course it is permissible and proper to pluck it and use it.

Universality versus particularism is only one example, but I think it is not an accidental example, one among several others; rather, it expresses a very deep foundation of the difference between us. I think this dispute has two sides, and I would be happy if at least we agreed on that claim. Each of us needs to find and define his own balance between these poles, and there are certainly disputes about what the correct balance point between them is, but that is already another story.

To conclude, I return to the issues with which we have dealt here. My feeling is that someone who relates to every victim from every circle in the same empathetic way and with the same degree of attention may lose the ability to offer genuine empathy. Someone who takes an equal interest in every trouble and distress in the world may lose the capacity to share in his friend's distress. Ordinary human beings, unlike exceptional people of rare moral stature, are consigned to living in different circles that stand in a hierarchy. It is not for nothing that we were created this way, by God and/or by evolution, blessed be it, because this is the best prescription for the survival of us all and for a better life for us all. Whoever can rise above this without paying the price, blessed be he, but it is not right to call on everyone to behave this way. In my understanding, that may lead to real devastation.

[1] Some hate the other, and some hate their own people (and therefore accuse them of hating the other merely because he is other, even when there is nothing to it). I do not know which of the two groups is the greater saint.

[2] There is room to discuss the place of anarchism on this map, but this is not the place for it.

Discussion

Amichai (2018-11-25)

As hunter-gatherers, it’s understandable why human beings developed a preference for their close circles and do not act in a rational and egalitarian way. Living in packs developed and sharpened instincts toward those close to us. In this context, universalism is rational (all people are equal), whereas nationalism (or tribalism) is more animalistic (preferring those who are genetically/tribally close). Since universalism ignores this basic dimension, it is bound to fail.
The poor of your city take precedence” is not only an instruction of the Sages but a familiar reality everywhere in the world: people donate not to what is intellectually important, but to what they feel is close. That is of course how ratings work too.
(By the way, regarding the first part, the Bible and the Gemara also gave us many details about various people in narrative form, and did not suffice with presenting the practical principles… Is that so foolish? Or simply human nature?)

Moshe R. (2018-11-25)

It seems to me that the reason universalism is a less good approach is that human emotion is too limited to contain the amount of suffering there is in the world. Therefore, a universalist person will end up shutting himself off to the sorrow surrounding him—as a necessary defense mechanism—and his gain will turn out to be his loss. We simply are not built to save the whole world and feel intense empathy for every living creature.

Y.D. (2018-11-25)

Amichai,
If we had continued being programmed like hunter-gatherers, we would still be in the jungle. The reason we left the jungle is that we stopped conducting ourselves in a programmed way and started programming ourselves. I’ll give you a list of behaviors you won’t find among hunter-gatherers:
– Charging into enemy fire in war.
– Refraining from raping foreign women or killing foreign men (a common practice among hunter-gatherers).
– Dying for the sanctification of God’s name.
– Pure science.
And so on and so forth. Man did not remain a hunter-gatherer, and there is no reason why he should continue to be enslaved to hunter-gatherer patterns.

Shammai (2018-11-25)

A small correction: Rabbi Akiva דווקא uses the positive wording, “And you shall love your fellow as yourself.” It is Hillel who formulates the rule in the negative (“What is hateful to you,” etc., in the story of the convert who came to convert).

Yishai (2018-11-25)

I invite the author of the article to stand outside the home of the Arab from Halhul. I’m sure they’ll welcome him warmly.
And I think this is actually relevant – I agree that if a Jew had been killed they would have sent more reporters, but it seems to me that if an Israeli Arab had been killed, a few would have come too. The idiotic idea of sending reporters into hostile Authority territory in order to cover the mourning over the death of a citizen of that same hostile Authority is so idiotic that it’s hard to let it pass.

mikyab123 (2018-11-25)

Indeed.
My mistake.

mikyab123 (2018-11-25)

Well, not quite that far. I didn’t understand him to be actually proposing that reporters be sent there. He is only saying that for a Jew they would send reporters to his home, whereas for the Palestinian they would not even say his name.

mikyab123 (2018-11-25)

True, but it’s not only emotion. Even if we could contain all the sorrow, we have no ability to act on behalf of the whole world.

mikyab123 (2018-11-25)

I didn’t understand the remark/comparison from the Gemara. Does the Gemara report the news? Do you know the details of every person killed from every Roman cohort? What does one have to do with the other?

Amichai (2018-11-26)

There are many places where the Gemara gives us the names of random people, and there is no logical explanation for what benefit this gives us. The only explanation I can think of is that there was some value of “public interest” in it at the time it was written. I’m not knowledgeable enough to pull out many sources, but one that comes to mind is that Rav Nachman swore that he saw a man named Chasa die. Is knowing the name Chasa useful to us? (Gematria…?)
Ultimately, every action we perform is intended to increase our degree of happiness. The mathematician says his discoveries are important, when in fact he wants positive feedback from society. And so too the rabbi, the musician, and every other person. Ratings are simply a reflection of what the “market” wants—which piece of information brings the maximum enjoyment to the maximum number of people.

Michi (2018-11-26)

Again, I do not understand the claim. If there is no reason for it in the Talmud either, then I have a difficulty with that as well. What are you trying to argue—that because it appears in the Talmud it is proven that these details have value? Even if we assume so, the editors of the news broadcasts apparently think otherwise. Do you have a claim against them?

Y.D. (2018-11-26)

The arrow of time points strongly in the universal direction.

Benny (2018-11-27)

Adam Smith thinks you’re confusing cause and effect. The reason universal suffering does not interest us is because we have no tools to deal with things on a universal level

'My firstborn son, Israel' – Nationalism requires universalism (2018-11-29)

BS"D, 21 Kislev 5779

Jewish nationalism is unique in that it is mission-oriented.

The people of Israel are meant to be the “heart among the nations,” spurring the nations to follow in the path of the “father of a multitude of nations,” who calls in the name of the Lord and commands “to keep the way of the Lord, to do righteousness and justice.”

And the “father of a multitude of nations” needs a “firstborn son” who will give guidance and a personal example to his younger brothers. The role of humanity’s “elder brother” was given to Israel, as Moses said to Pharaoh: “Thus says the Lord: Israel is My firstborn son.”

The two roles of the firstborn are fulfilled by a nation that calls in the name of the Lord, to whom God is near, and whose laws constitute a model of justice and social responsibility. A nation that is a “kingdom of priests,” whose leaders are men of faith and pursuers of peace, and even the rest of the people are a “holy nation,” with God present in all that they do. A successful and developed nation in practical life, founded and guided by a compass of faith and values.

From here derives a double obligation: special love for the children of Israel, who “are called children of the Omnipresent,” and a fair and respectful attitude toward every “person who was created in the image,” so long as he is not a terrorist or an enemy.

With blessings, Sh. Tz. Levinger

Circles of love that keep widening (2018-11-29)

BS"D, 22 Kislev 5779

And beyond the special affection for the people of Israel by virtue of the greatness of their mission, there is also the healthy natural feeling that love grows from the near to the more distant. A person is closest to himself; from there the circle of love expands to his family members, his friends, his society and community, to his people and his land, and from there to all humanity.

The closer the circle – the more natural the feeling of love, and therefore the stronger it is. The morality of the Torah comes and develops this natural foundation. Do you love yourself? Excellent! Now expand the circle a bit: “Do not hide yourself from your own flesh.” Has that become natural? Expand it still further and love your fellows too! Invest in “the poor of your city,” and from there you will also open up to “the poor of another city,” and so on. The circles of love grow and widen, and “the hotter the oven – the more it warms its surroundings,” near and far.

This secret was not known to Greek culture (and following it, Western culture), which broke through the walls of the home and turned the entire world into a “global village,” in which all life is externalized and personal, familial, and national identity is blurred.

The victory over Greek culture begins at home. One small home, a father and his five sons – it was they who lit the small spark that in time swept the nation after it, toppled the Seleucid Empire, and brought about a national and religious revival of the nation. Not for nothing do we celebrate the victory over the Greeks not with torchlight parades in the streets, but with “a lamp for each person and his household,” a small lamp that keeps increasing.

The commandment of the Hanukkah lamp bears the stamp of the Sages of the generation of the Greek decrees – Yose ben Yo'ezer, who taught: “Let your house be a meeting place for the sages,” and Yose ben Yochanan, who taught: “Let your house be open wide.” The small lamp that each Jewish family lights at the entrance to its home signifies that this home is illuminated and gives light with the light of Torah. Lighting at the entrance of the house signifies the call to “those standing outside”: Our home is open wide; you are invited to be illuminated with us!”

With an illuminating Hanukkah blessing! Sh. Tz. Levinger

Correction (2018-11-29)

Paragraph 1, line 2:
… from the near to the far…

השאר תגובה

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