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September 19, 2014 7:36 am
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The Sabbatical Year of Shmita and Spiritually Responding to Terrorism

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avatar by Avi Weiss

A field near Rosh HaAyin in Israel, left barren for the 2007-2008 sabbatical year of Shmita. Photo: Yaakov via Wikimedia Commons.

JNS.org – The sound of the shofar is in the air. The Hebrew month of Elul has come, preparing us for Rosh Hashanah. But this Rosh Hashanah, in the year 5775, will be different. This year is a sabbatical year—a Shmita year.

According to Jewish law, every seventh year the land in Israel must remain fallow. Not surprisingly, this law has inspired much debate on just how it should be implemented, but I don’t wish to get caught up in the legal intricacies here. Instead, I want to delve into the tradition’s deeper, internal meaning, as it resonates powerfully in contemporary times—especially when we consider the worldwide threat of terrorism.

The key to understanding Shmita is to reflect upon Shabbat—the Sabbath. For author and translator Dayan Dr. Isidor Grunfeld, the essence of Shabbat is to remind us of God’s mastery over the world. For instance, in our workaday world we engage in creative work; ideally that work is effective, and successful. But the concern is that, if successful, we may come to believe our achievements derive from our might and our power. We can forget that our creative energies and successes in fact come from God. And so, for one day during the week, we withdraw from productive creativity to demonstrate that it is not we who are masters of the world, but God.

So, too, the Sabbatical year, Shmita. For six years we are mandated to work the land. Here again, we could become so successful in our endeavors that we forget to credit God’s hand in the result. And so, for one year, the land remains fallow: a reminder that the earth belongs to God. In the words of the Torah: the seventh year will be a “Sabbath to the Lord.”

The blowing of the shofar is a declaration that God is Master. For many, that sound is nothing less than the strains of a holy trumpet celebrating the coronation of God, the Ruler of rulers.

In mystical literature, the shofar is a romantic flute. It’s the musical instrument used by the shepherd or farmer in the midst of nature, singing and playing beautiful music to God, reveling in the marvels of the world. This speaks to a second approach to Shabbat and Shmita. Philosopher and psychologist Erich Fromm considered Shabbat a day to take cognizance of—to celebrate—the ecological beauty of the world. “Menuchah,” argued Fromm, is the state of rest between human beings and nature. Work, or “melachah,” is any disturbance in this equilibrium. For this reason, on Shabbat we neither pluck an apple from a tree nor cut a blade of grass. In this, one day in seven, we promote perfect harmony with nature.

So, too, for Shmita. Like Shabbat, it teaches an important ecological lesson. For six years we plow, sow, harvest, and cultivate the land. Just as we can tire from our labors, the land too can grow weary. Thus, for the Sabbatical year, we step back, leave the land untouched, allow it to reinvigorate, and replenish its energy. As the Torah says of Shmita: it will be a Sabbath year “of solemn rest for the land.”

A third approach to the Shabbat-Shmita connection sees Shabbat as a day of self-reflection. In its first mention of Shabbat, the Torah states God finished His work on the seventh day. But, if God finished His work on the seventh day, He worked on Shabbat. Indeed He did, says the great commentator Rashi. In six days, or stages, God created the world. On Shabbat, God was creatively involved in assessing, in contemplating, its purpose. In the spirit of imitatio Dei, we do the same. As Rabbi Norman Lamm has written, for six days of the week we engage in the creation of the outer world; on Shabbat we engage in the creation of the inner world, seeking the inner meaning and purpose to life itself.

Abraham Joshua Heschel explains it another way. For six days, we focus on having more; on Shabbat, we focus on being more—we remember that “to have more is not to be more.” Or perhaps, for six days we are involved in the world of existence, but on Shabbat we are involved in the world of essence—of being at peace, real inner peace.

So too, for Shmita. For six years we work the land: we engage in the outer world. But in the seventh year we too need a sabbatical, to contemplate the deeper questions of meaning and purpose. As the Torah states: and the Sabbatical year will be “for you/for your sake.”

This search for inner meaning can also resonate with the sound of the shofar. The voice of the shofar does not emanate from the larynx—it emanates from the inner breath, the inner soul, that part of us that seeks the deeper purpose of life.

***

This has been a very difficult time. Recently, Steven Sotloff was beheaded by ISIS or, as the group now calls itself, the Islamic State. Steven was a courageous journalist, a Jew who even in captivity fasted on Yom Kippur. His atrocious murder follows the similar execution of James Foley just two weeks earlier. With these actions Islamic State has demonstrated that humans can become beasts—actually, lower than beasts—for no beast other than humans kill for such purposes.

When we see the video or hear the audio of these horrors, we can feel hopeless and helpless. But there is something we can do. You and I, individually and collectively, can make a difference. Each of us can respond to profanity by living lives of holiness.

Of course, there must be a strong geo-political response to Islamic State to defeat these barbarians and their ilk. That comes from governments acting in the name of their citizens. At the same time, however, we can individually contribute a complementary spiritual response to bolster our countries’ actions.

One such spiritual response is to incorporate the message of Shmita into our lives: to not take our blessings for granted, to take time to contemplate and celebrate the beauty around us. This message declares our commitment to a merciful God, who mandates that we respect the world and its inhabitants by living lives of meaning, godliness, and goodness.

Rabbi Avi Weiss is senior rabbi at the Hebrew Institute of Riverdale, Bronx, NY, and founder of Yeshivat Chovevei Torah Rabbinical School and Yeshivat Maharat.

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