On the evening of Tuesday, January 12th 2010, Haiti was hit by a devastating earthquake, measuring 7.0 on the Richter scale, making it the worst in the region in more than 200 years. It struck about 10 miles southwest of the capital of Port-au-Prince and has left thousands dead as well as the Haitian population of approximately 3 million people in need of relief.
In response to this massive earthquake, AJWS has created the Haiti Earthquake Relief Fund to support its network of grantees as they address the urgent needs of the affected population. For more information, visit www.ajws.org/haitiearthquake.
As concerned global citizens and as Jews, it is our moral obligation to respond to humanitarian crises. The following texts explore these obligations.
1. What happens when people are ill that makes visits so important? What is the role of human interaction in the process of healing?
2. How do you think this text would respond to terminal illness?
3. What social justice themes emerge from this text?
What could the word areivim mean in this context?
What does the metaphor of the boat teach us about the nature of living as part of a community?
The key to this text is to understand the word areiv. In legal terms, it means a guarantor: one who guarantees an obligation and has a legal duty to fulfill it. Simply by virtue of being a Jew, I am responsible for you and you are responsible for me. I promise to take care of you and you promise to take care of me.
Another meaning of areiv is being mixed up or bound together with something. That is, Jews are bound together not just legally but emotionally, historically, and culturally.
Living as part of the community can necessitate giving up individual freedom. Our independence extends only to the extent that it does not
compromise the welfare of the group.
Have you had experiences in which you have felt bound up, or responsible, for other Jews?
Do you feel responsible for other communities or groups in the same way? Which other communities and why?
1. Who are the players in this text – seen and unseen?
2. What power dynamics are at play?
3. Wealthy countries have a history of inflicting harm on poor countries in order to take their natural resources, their cheap labor, and often their lives. How can we hold our own governments accountable for their actions across the globe?
1. Who are the players in this text – seen and unseen?
2. What is an act of loving kindness? How is it unique compared to any good deed?
3. What social justice themes emerge from this text?
1. How are leket, shich'chah and pe'ah ways to practice righteousness and justice?
2. What are the limitations of the kind of direct giving that leket, pe'ah and shich'chah represent?
Original |
---|
"Build your home in such a way that a stranger may feel happy in your midst."
|
1. What does this task require?
2. How has Israel incorporated this statement?
3. How does this statement relate to the current status of foreign workers in Israel?
1. Who are the players in this text – seen and unseen?
2. This text has powerful implication on how we relate to those around us. What are some ways we can implement this thinking into our daily lives? our politics?
Original |
---|
Jews are commanded to open their homes to visitors, particularly the poor and the learned. Jews are not to convert their homes into fortresses protecting the nuclear family from invasion, but to sensitize their children to other people by inviting visitors regularly into their homes. The house is not to be a refuge but a bridge – if the analogy can be imagined, a kind of spiritually self-aware hotel.
|
1. Who are the players in this text – seen and unseen?
2. What power dynamics are at play?
3. What social justice themes emerge from this text?
When reading these texts, please consider the following questions:
- These texts refer to direct encounters with people in need. Given our ability to access images and testimonies of people affected by disasters, how might we expand this obligation to those farther away?
- What can we learn from these texts about our obligation to respond to the needs of non-Jews?
Babylonian Talmud, Sanhedrin 73a
Translation | Original |
---|---|
How do we know that if a person sees another person drowning, mauled by beasts, or attacked by robbers, s/he is bound to save him? From the verse, “You shall not stand idly by the blood of your neighbor!” (Leviticus 19:16). [AJWS translation] |
מניין לרואה את חבירו שהוא טובע בנהר, או חיה גוררתו, או לסטין באין עליו, שהוא חייב להצילו - תלמוד לומר לא תעמד על דם רעך (ויקרא י"ט).
|
Rabbi Yerucham Levovitz, as quoted in Smiling Each Day, Rabbi Avraham Twerski (New York: Mesorah Publications, 1993)
Original |
---|
The seismograph has taught us that a tremor in any part of the world can be felt by a sufficiently sensitive instrument everywhere in the world. The same is true of a person’s deeds. One should not think that his actions do not affect others. Everything one does in some way affects everyone else in the world. [Avraham Twerski translation] |
Rabbi Yerucham Levovitz (1873-1936) was the head of the Mir Yeshiva in Poland in the early 20th century.
- It can feel overwhelming to try to respond to disasters of this magnitude. How can we help ourselves and each other stay committed to addressing the immediate needs of the victims and to supporting the rebuilding and community development efforts?
/* Style Definitions */ table.MsoNormalTable mso-style-name:"Table Normal"; mso-tstyle-rowband-size:0; mso-tstyle-colband-size:0; mso-style-noshow:yes; mso-style-parent:""; mso-padding-alt:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt; mso-para-margin:0in; mso-para-margin-bottom:.0001pt; mso-pagination:widow-orphan; font-size:10.0pt; font-family:"Times New Roman"; mso-ansi-language:#0400; mso-fareast-language:#0400; mso-bidi-language:#0400; We know that human communities will always have to face natural hazards, whether floods, droughts, storms or earthquakes. But today's disasters owe as much to human activities as to the forces of nature. Indeed the term ‘natural’ is an increasingly misleading.
A wide variation in the number and intensity of natural hazards is normal and to be expected. What we have witnessed over the past decades, however, is not nature’s variation but a clear upward trend caused by human activities. There were three times as many great natural disasters in the 1990s as in the 1960s, while disaster costs increased more than nine-fold in the same period.
We know why the trend is upward. Ninety per cent of disaster victims worldwide live in developing countries, where poverty and population pressures force growing numbers of poor people to live in harm's way -- on flood plains, in earthquake-prone zones and on unstable hillsides. Unsafe buildings compound the risks. The vulnerability of those living in risk-prone areas is perhaps the single most important cause of disaster casualties and damage.
Second, we know that unsound development and environmental practices exacerbate the problem. Massive logging operations and the destruction of wetlands reduce the soil’s ability to absorb heavy rainfall, making erosion and flooding more likely….
Above all we must never forget that it is poverty, not choice, that drives people to live in risk-prone areas. Equitable and sustainable economic development is not only a good in its own right, but also one of the best forms of disaster insurance.
- According to Annan, why are poor people more prone to being affected by natural disasters?
- How can this understanding inform our approach, not only to disaster relief but also to international development?