Thursday, March 28th | 18 Adar II 5784

Subscribe
July 24, 2015 11:08 am
0

Holy Cow! Red Heifer Project Part of Path From ‘Mourning to Building’ Temple

× [contact-form-7 404 "Not Found"]

avatar by Deborah Fineblum / JNS.org

Rabbis from the Temple Institute inspect recently born male red angus cows in Israel. Photo: The Temple Institute.

Rabbis from the Temple Institute inspect recently born male red angus cows in Israel. Photo: The Temple Institute.

JNS.org – What weighs 400 pounds, is necessary for the coming of the Third Temple, hasn’t been seen in 2,000 years, and is completely red?

If you guessed “para aduma,” or the red heifer, give yourself a hand. And keep your eyes on Israel’s Negev desert. That’s because by this time next year, if a team of rabbis, activists, and a dairy farmer have their way, you may find there a candidate—or even more than one—qualified to perform a key function in the highly yearned-for third Jewish Temple in Jerusalem.

It has 1,945 years, to be exact, since Titus and his Roman legions destroyed the Second Temple in 70 CE. But the Jerusalem-based Temple Institute, an educational and activist organization whose stated mission is “to restore Temple consciousness” and reactivate the “‘forgotten’ commandments” of the Temple era, is doing everything in its power to get ready for the Temple of the future, creating vessels, priestly garments, the furnishings, and a huge golden menorah—all to the exact specifications set out in the Torah. The only missing piece for the institute, aside from the Temple building itself, has been breeding the requisite red heifer.

“Our immediate goal is to produce the first kosher red heifer in 2,000 years,” Rabbi Chaim Richman, international director of the Temple Institute, tells JNS.org.

Why is the red heifer such an integral part of the Temple to come?

As set out in Chapter 19 of the Torah’s Book of Numbers (“Bamidbar” in Hebrew), the cow in question is sacrificed and its ashes are used to purify those who come in contact with a human corpse. Today’s Temple Institute project stands at a rare place: where ancient Torah laws meet modern farming techniques. After decades of research, the institute has contracted with an Israeli dairy farmer who is well-versed in the ways of animal husbandry to breed the perfect red heifer. The farmer had independently imported frozen embryos from red angus cows and implanted them in Israeli black or brown cows. The Temple Institute later agreed to work with the farmer to make a kosher red heifer.

The results have been encouraging so far, Richman reports, although only male offspring have emerged to date. The hope is that some females will be produced in the next round (slated for around the time of Rosh Hashanah), and that among them, a perfectly red specimen—no more than two hairs can be black or any other color—will emerge.

“To do it right takes a lot of planning,” says Richman. “And a lot of supervision.”

Breeding the right cow, however, is just the start. After her birth, the calf must be fed special food and never be worked or impregnated. Even a cow ear tag would be considered a disqualifying blemish. By age 3, she is ready to take her place as a key player in the work of the Holy Temple.

Yet all this takes time—and money. The Temple Institute, therefore, has launched a crowdfunding campaign to support the project.

The lesson of the red heifer is particularly crucial in modern times, says Rabbi Binny Freedman, head of the Orayta yeshiva, which is fittingly situated near the site of the first two Temples in Jerusalem.

“The red heifer is all about purifying those who came in contact with death, about re-engaging in life,” he says. “It’s something we need so much in today’s world there is a battle going on between cultures of glorifying death and those who embrace life. We also see the Temple as a place where Jews come together to put aside their differences… and that is also sorely needed right now.”

But what does the average Jew think about breeding the first designated red heifer in 2,000 years? JNS.org got mixed reviews.

“I’m a bit skeptical,” Alec Schramm of Los Angeles says. “I’m concerned it could engender more zealotry and the Middle East doesn’t need more zealots. And, even if the red heifer weren’t here, I am guessing the Messiah will come when he’s ready anyway.”

“On the one hand,” says Judith Prais of London, “it seems a little premature, but on the other hand, just knowing it’s possible is good. It forces you to imagine what it would be like to have the Third Temple, to engage with the details.”

“You could argue that there are more important things that need to happen first to bring the Messianic age, like Jews getting along,” says Avi Bieler, who lives in Jerusalem. “But still, the idea of getting ready for it like this? That’s great. Kol hakavod (all honor) to them for doing it.”

Perhaps, then, it’s appropriate that the institute announced the breeding program in the days leading up to Tisha B’Av (Ninth of Av), the fast day when Jews around the world mourn the destruction of both Temples.

“It’s not enough to just mourn,” Rabbi Richman says. “We have to move from mourning to building. Creating this cow is something that moves us forward. The Jewish Temples are not myths, they stood here for a total of 800 years as a place of tahara (purity) in how we relate to each other, and peace between nations, and one will stand here again. Our goal in the heifer program, and everything we do at the institute, is to create the longing for the Temple in the heart of the Jewish people. How it comes about? That has yet to be seen.”

The cow herself is going to take some time to step forward. Even after the perfect heifer is born and proves worthy, she needs to be supervised closely for three years before coming of age to serve in the Temple.

Richman, however, isn’t bothered by the prospect of a delay.

“We’ve already waited 2,000 years,” he says good-naturedly. “We can waited a few more.”

Share this Story: Share On Facebook Share On Twitter

Let your voice be heard!

Join the Algemeiner

Algemeiner.com

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.