Sefaria Torah Talks: Dara Horn, Acclaimed Novelist & Hebrew Literature Professor
Dara Horn, Sefaria Torah Talks
I think that every generation struggles to find two things: intimacy and authenticity... Embracing the idea that there's this constant dynamic struggle for those things, and that it isn't true that there were people in the past who had this perfect intimacy and authenticity, that all of those people were always struggling with those things -- I find it very comforting.
This one-on-one Torah study with Dara Horn, Ph.D. is a part of our Torah Talks project. In this session, Dr. Horn shares her reflections on the limits of language and revelation, and brings the words of Hebrew and Yiddish writers together in conversation with this rabbinic text.
This sheet includes memorable quotes from our study session with Dara Horn. We encourage you to add these quotes to your own Sefaria sheets by clicking them and selecting “Add to Sheet” in the resource panel (instructions here)!
Dara Horn, PhD is the recipient of two National Jewish Book Awards and author of six books, including the novels In the Image, The World to Come, All Other Nights, A Guide for the Perplexed, and Eternal Life, and the essay collection People Love Dead Jews: Reports from a Haunted Present. Her books have been selected as New York Times Notable Books, Booklist’s 25 Best Books of the Decade, and San Francisco Chronicle’s Best Books of the Year, and have been translated into eleven languages.
אנכי ה' אלקיך. ולא נאמר אני, כי אילו היה כתיב אני, היה משמע שגילה אז הקב"ה לישראל את כל אורו בשלימות ולא יוכלו אח"כ להעמיק בדבריו, כי כבר גילה הכל,
אך הכ"ף מורה שאינו בשלימות ורק דמות ודמיון הוא להאור שיגלה הקב"ה לעתיד, וכל מה שישיג האדם יותר עמקות בד"ת יראה שעד עכשיו היה בחושך.
וע"ז מרמז היום והלילה, היום היינו שהש"י פותח שערי החכמה לאדם והלילה היינו שלא ידמה האדם שהשיג הכל בשלימות, כי כל מה שהשיג הוא כלילה נגד היום הבא אחריו וכן לעולם,
וממילא הכל הוא לילה נגד האור שיפתח הקב"ה לעתיד.
וזה שנסמך מאמר לא תעשה לך פסל ...והענין בזה כי מלת פסל הוא דבר מחותך במדה וקצב ובהשלמה בלי חסרון שום דבר בעולם וזאת אינו נמצא רק בתורת מרע"ה, אבל בשכל אנושי אין באפשר לתקן דבר כזה בשלימות הגמור...כי לא נגלה לאדם שום דבר עד תכליתו.
The text does not say “Ani,” for if it had done so, it would have suggested that the Holy Blessed One revealed all of God's light to Israel, in its fullness, and that thereafter they would not have been able to go deeper in God's words, for God had already revealed everything.
Thus the kaf [separating ani from anochi – ed.] teaches that it was not in its fullness, but rather an image, a likeness, of the light that God will reveal in the future. And all that a person will grasp in going deeper in the words of Torah will show that, until this point, they were in darkness.
Day and night suggest this reality. The day is when God opens the gates of wisdom to people. The night is so that the person will not think that they have grasped everything in its entirety. For all that they have grasped is like the nighttime, when compared to the daytime that will come afterwards.
Thus everything is nighttime in comparison to the light that God will open up in the future...
This is what is suggested by the conjunction of the verse “Do not make an idol (pesel).”...The idea here is that the word pesel means something which is cut, delimited, finished and without anything missing. But this is only found in the Torah of Moses. In human thought, nothing can be finished and made completely whole. ...For nothing is revealed to any person in its entirety.
Dara Horn, Sefaria Torah Talks
...because the words are so important to us, because they're the only thing we have, this is an entire culture that's really just based on text...and so what are the limitations of that, if we consider that text is a set of arbitrary conventions?
Dara Horn, Sefaria Torah Talks
I think that this idea -- that if God had just revealed God's self to everyone at that point, there would be nothing else to talk about -- I think it's Martin Buber who says that revelation had no content; it was just an encounter. And all of the the laws and the text of the Torah is really an attempt to describe an encounter that doesn't have any content, which this reminds me of, because it's saying that if you were to have this intimate encounter with God, you would not need the rest of these descriptions.
Dara Horn, Sefaria Torah Talks
[There is a linguist named] Ferdinand Saussure [who] has this theory about the signifier and the signified, where he basically says that there used to be this idea...that there was an intrinsic connection between a word and the thing that it represented...[Saussure's] big idea is that language is arbitrary - that it's almost like a parallel world to our world - so there's a tree, and then there's the word "tree" and there's no connection between those two things. The way I often explain this to my students is flavors of candies that are fruit flavors - how there's a flavor called grape. It does not taste at all like a grape...there's a convention that we've all accepted that this is grape flavor...it is only a symbolic connection to the actual thing...this problem becomes really interesting...when you're talking about God because, especially with the whole premise of God giving us the Torah, that God is somehow trying to translate God's self into language, and this is the only medium that we have. I mean also this is what Shavuot is...we're all standing at Sinai and as Jews we love doing these reenactments...we're always trying to approximate this experience...We're trying to approximate this encounter, and in a sense I think that what I think the Mei Shiloach might be suggesting here is that even from just this first word, there's already an approximation of an encounter.
Dara Horn, Sefaria Torah Talks
In most ancient cultures, there's not really much of a robust idea of individuality. And the Hebrew writer, David Vogel...was writing during the turn of the 20th century, mostly before [Hebrew] was a robustly spoken language, [and] he had to make up all these terms. One of the terms that he invented is "ha-ani sheli" which literally means "My I," and it expresses selfhood...and what's amazing to me about that it's like there was no idea of the self. And so this idea that what the Mei Shiloach is talking about in this passage about God having a self is really interesting because there isn't the sense of individuality, of subjectivity, the way that we think of it in modern times, and it's certainly not in the Jewish community which...so emphasizes community. It isn't about self-actualization of individuals, so it's interesting that this is a question that he's bringing into this idea of intimacy with God.
Dara Horn, Sefaria Torah Talks
The more you learn, the more you come out of the darkness into the light, is reminding me of [Plato's]...allegory the cave...where people are chained up in a cave and they're looking at shadows of puppets and they think that that's the world because they don't know any better, and then somebody goes out of the cave, and sees the light and then comes back and [tells everybody that] there's this whole world out there, and then they kill him...The Jewish version of that would be Shimon bar Yochai...he's in the cave studying Torah with his son because of Roman persecution...and then he comes out of the cave and...he sees some farmer passing by who's...doing something that's slightly in violation of some rabbinic law and he brings down the fire of God and burns this guy alive with his eyeballs. It's something very strange and then God's like, you need to go back to the cave because you can't handle it out here. I'm sure I'm distorting that a little bit...but the idea being that there's this idea that coming out of darkness into light is not going into this major mystical world, but rather going into our world, which I think would be consistent with the idea of the Torah as like a book that's really about living in this world.
Dara Horn, Sefaria Torah Talks
This idea of the "kaf," that this is just an approximation of God...is interesting because it seems contrary to the whole of the revelation at Sinai, which is supposed to be this big reveal. And [the Mei Shiloach's] suggestion that it actually isn't, is really interesting...It's not enough even to the people who were standing at Sinai...those people did not have a full revelation...I think the idea of the loss and recovery of a tradition is itself the tradition, that we're always looking back to sort of this idealized moment where something was achieved, but in a sense, did that ever happen?
Dara Horn, Sefaria Torah Talks
Before I had children, my relationship [with God] was more like a...parent-child relationship, and [now] as a parent myself, I see myself more as a servant of God, so it is a more of a a servant-employer relationship, which means that in the latter relationship you have less intimacy, but you have more responsibility when there's very specific work that you're supposed to be doing.
Dara Horn, Sefaria Torah Talks
I think so much of the sort of struggle with authenticity in the American Jewish community, where the source of authenticity becomes...how religiously observant you are...it becomes this weighted thing...because of the separation from the language, and what's really interesting to me about this text is that it shows even when you're reading in the [original] language, even for the people who heard this [revelation], there's this separation. There's that "kaf" in there. This is only "ke-ilu." This is only "as if" we did this, as if we heard, as if we saw the light of God, and of course, they did see, but did they see it?