Yonason Goldson

I'm a Talmudic scholar and professional speaker, as well as a former hitchhiker and circumnavigator, applying ancient wisdom to the challenges of the modern world. I've published seven books, including, Proverbial Beauty: Secrets for success and happiness from the wisdom of the ages.

Homepage: http://yonasongoldson.com

Spiritual Toxicity – Parshas Re’eh

Some people can’t be described in any way other than toxic.  Unlike those who are merely unpleasant, unfriendly, or unrefined, toxic people exude an aura of such intolerability that they poison the atmosphere of any room they walk into, like chemical or biological waste.

 

It isn’t, necessarily, that these people are overtly offensive.  Just as certain people have the quality we call chein – an unquantifiable grace or charm that makes their company always welcome and brightens even the most dreary surroundings – the toxic person fouls his environment even through seemingly benign comments or actions.  A peculiar combination of self-absorption, tactlessness, insensitivity, and abrasiveness produces a personality type that would evoke pity if it weren’t so difficult to endure.

 

Yesterday, I had the misfortune to find myself next to a person who, with one thoughtless comment, nearly drove me from the room.  Recognizing that his remark originated not from malice but from terminal cluelessness, I tried to reframe the exchange rather than let it ruin my afternoon.  My mind was already on the week’s Torah portion, so I began to look there for perspective.

 

With one of the most dramatic openings of any parsha, Re’eh begins with the admonition of Moshe Rabbeinu (Moses) to recognize the blessing and the curse that the Almighty has placed before us and contemplate the consequences of the choices we will make.  Choose life!  declares Moshe, but not until he has outlined the specifics of what that choice will entail over the course of the next several parshios.

 

Moshe first outlines matters of intrinsic kedusha, including the sanctity of the land, details of the offerings upon the altar and of sacred tithes, and the preparation of kosher meat.  Only then does he shift his emphasis to matters of Jewish society, adjuring the people to do “what is good and what is right in the eyes of HaShem, your G-d.”

 

Rashi explains:  What is good – in the eyes of heaven; what is right – in the eyes of men.”  It is not enough to be sensitive to the Temple service, the laws of kashrus, and the requirements of a relationship with one’s Creator; the Jew must be equally concerned with how his conduct is perceived by his fellow men.

 

And so Moshe goes on to warn against imitating the rites and customs of the gentile nations who surround us, lest exposure to their moral value system comes to uproot our own.  He warns against following a false prophet who, by misrepresenting the Torah, convinces us that the Word of G-d is subject to reinterpretation and revision.  He warns us to be wary of both individuals and communities that seek to impose new values and laws, always in the name of truth or love or brotherhood or innovation.

 

Moshe reminds us that G-d has chosen us as a treasured people, who remain treasured by virtue of our virtuous conduct – through our self-restraint, through our faithfulness and commitment, through our mercy and generosity and genuine concern for our fellow Jews.

 

We are therefore obligated to contemplate not only how G-d sees us but how our fellows see us.  We have to be willing to look carefully enough to recognize whether others perceive us as walking biohazards.  We then have to be willing to do whatever is necessary to clean up our mess.  This doesn’t mean that we flatter others or conform to popular opinion.  It means that we strive to define our lives as examples of personal integrity and respect, to which others cannot help but respond with warmth and affection.

 

The one who finds Torah finds chein – charm and grace.  If the rest of the world doesn’t see us the way we would like them to, we have a very potent formula available to change their perception.  As we enter the month of Elul in preparation for Rosh HaShonah, it’s a message that deserves our attention.

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The Continuing Battle Against the Ego

As we enter the month of Elul and begin thinking abou the approach of Rosh HaShonah — the Day of Judgment — nothing provides more impetus for self-reflection than the awareness that the Almighty conducts Himself toward us the way we conduct ourselves toward others.  Here is an example of how nothing can be harder, and how nothing can be easier.  This is the kind of hope and change we ought to be thinking about.

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Too good to be true

Hard to believe, but a 9-year-old little-league pitcher has been disqualified for throwing the ball too fast.  Against a record of eight wins and no losses, the other team gave up before the game even began.  Faced with the injustice of vastly superior talent, the league organizers ruled that the pitcher with the extraordinary arm would not be allowed to play.

Somehow, I suspect this never happened to Sandy Koufax.

Do we really want to teach our children that we will penalize them for ability and achievement while protecting them from stiff competition?   Kind of reminds me of what I wrote a couple of days ago about the Olympics.

It’s ironic that the boy played in New Haven, home of Yale University, one of the three most prestigious — and competitive — schools in the country.  Even more ironic is the link at the bottom of the article:  See photos of Olympic champion Michael Phelps.

Should the IOC should take away Phelps’s medals and distribute them among less talented athletes?

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The Politics of Modern Messianism

I won’t pretend I’m impartial in the upcoming presidential election, but the purpose of this site is not to endorse candidates.  Nevertheless, this is too good to pass up, especially for those of us without television sets.

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China, fried in Greece, Part 2

Despite the brazen rulebreaking and manipulation of its world audience (which I discussed in Part 1) China has gotten what it wanted:  the attention of the international community through its slick hosting of the Olympics and its cache of 51 gold medals, reportedly the biggest haul since the Soviet Union took 55 golds in Seoul 20 years ago.

That the United States came out on top with 110 total medals to China’s 100 (although a distant second in golds with 36) is no surprise.  The US stands alone among modern nations — now that the USSR is no more:  no other existing country has won the total medal count since Hitler’s Germany in 1936.

It’s ironic to note that Germany, which did so well back then, garnered only 41 total medals and 16 gold, and that once-dominant Russia came in a distant third with 23 gold out of a total 72.  Although the US often comes in second, it is perenially either second or first, where other nations have their moment and then decline, much like the history of the world.

And so I wonder:  why does the US often miss out on first place but always manage at least second?

What did Fascist Germany, Socialist Russia, and modern China with its bizarre hybrid of capitalist-socialism all have in common?  They were totalitarian, which is an often used and equally often misunderstood term.

Totalitariansim is not merely dictatorship.  It is a system in which the state assumes total control — like socialism on steroids — often with the intent of benefitting the people.  In many ways, Hitler, Mussolini, Lenin, and Mao were idealists, truly believing that they would create a paradise for their people even as they wrought misery all about them.

Such a system can be effective in the short run.  All these countries had, as China currently has, a period of economic, political, and military dominance.  But these flares of prominence and prosperity don’t last long, because the state cannot affect lasting success — that must come from the people themselves, who must be motivated to make it happen.  Over time, totalitarianism leeches away all personal motivation.

In contrast, the United States, for all its faults, has always been a meritocracy — those who work hard usually succeed through a mix of talent and discipline.  Over time, America and Americans usually come out on top.  And so, although the state-sponsored training programs of Nazi Germany, Soviet Russia, and contemporary China tend to succeed, the programs themselves don’t last because the system that makes them work doesn’t last itself.

It’s interesting to note that the system of Torah government is also a meritocracy.  Yes, the Torah provides the rules and guidelines to protect the poor and the weak, but it is left to Jewish society as a whole — not just the leaders — to make the system work.  In this way, every Jew shares the responsibility for a healthy society, and society fails when too many individuals fail to carry their own weight.

Whether training for Olympic gold or spiritual greatness, it is individual effort — within a structure of collective responsibility — that carries the day.

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Torah im derech eretz

Examine the interrelationship between Torah study and involvement in the secular world in my latest Pirkei Avos column.

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Pirkei Avos

If you’ve been trying to access articles on Pirkei Avos, my apologies. I’ve just discovered the problem and, I think, corrected it. Please take a look by clicking the link at the top of the page.

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The battleground of the “heel” — Parshas Eikev

And when you will listen to these laws and you will guard and perform them, then HaShem, Your G-d, will safeguard for you this covenant and this kindness…

 

So begins this week’s Torah portion, employing a most unusual form of the word “when:”  eikev – literally, heel.

 

Rashi offers this now-famous explanation:  when you will observe even the insignificant commandments, those that a person will [be inclined to] trample under his heel…

 

Which commandments are insignificant?  Obviously:  none.  And not so obviously:  all.

 

Every one of us finds certain rules and conventions and laws against which our natural sensitivities rebel.  For whatever individual reasons, we rationalize our rejection of the edicts of authority by dismissing these precepts as irrational, unnecessary, or overly burdensome – in short, insignificant.  These are different for each of us.

 

And it is precisely these commandments that are the most important for us to keep:  it is here that the loyal servant of the Almighty demonstrates his awareness that his own intellect, however bright or clever he may be, in no way qualifies him to pass judgment on the word of G-d.

 

The sages teach that when Moshe (Moses) went out to battle the giant Og, that Moshe’s staff could reach no higher than Og’s heel.  In fact, the battle between Moshe and Og was not one of physical prowess but one of merit.  As a remnant of the giants who walked the earth before the Great Flood, Og was a perfect physical specimen — independent, self-sufficient, and recognizing no authority higher than himself.  To him, the idea that he should subjugate his own reasoning to any external code of conduct was not only inconceivable but reprehensible.

 

Thus, in his confrontation with the leader of the Jewish people, the point of Og’s vulnerability was his “heel.”  In contrast, it was the humility of the leader of the Jews – the great prophet who, despite his greatness, nevertheless subjugated his own will to the Divine Will – that earned his nation the merit to defeat this most formidable enemy.*

 

Indeed, this quality is part of our very nature, for it defines our patriarch Jacob – Yaakov, whose name derives from eikev, meaning heel.  It is our willingness to commit ourselves to uphold the word of the Almighty, even as we struggle to understand its wisdom, that sets us apart from our enemies and will ultimately enable us to prevail over them.

 

 

* Heard from Rav Uziel Milevsky zt”l

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Popularization of Kabbalah

Here’s a primer on the origins and expansion of mysiticism in my Jewish History column today on Jewish World Review.

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Jerusalem then, Iraq now

In the early days of the Second Temple, as the prophet Nechemiah organized a labor force to rebuild the walls of Jerusalem, an apostate named Sanvalat HaCharoni and his band of miscreants sought to disrupt the project by mocking the workers, then by planning an armed assault against them, and finally by plotting  the assassination of Nechemiah.  The stability that a rebuilt Jerusalem would bring to the region threatened to put an end to the power and influence they had acquired by exploiting the chaos of the previous era.

As we see from Jeff Jacoby’s latest on Iraq, there will always be those who seek to promote discord to advance their own agendas.

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