fbpx
[additional-authors]
November 22, 2012

In July 2012, the Bible Society in Israel [“Messianic Jews”] “>a teacher in Beit Shemesh led his students in burning a copy of a Hebrew translation of the New Testament that had been given to a student by missionaries. In another episode in 2008, “>Appeal to the Christian Women of the Southern States, which was filled with religious references. When copies reached Charleston, the postmaster seized all the copies and publicly burned them. This increasingly fanatical defense of slavery fueled the secessionist movement – South Carolina was the first state to secede and the state where the Civil War started, with the attack on Fort Sumter in 1861. In 1953, Wisconsin “>recent Quran burning here in the United States was extremely disturbing. This practice insults the core religious faith and humanity of “>1821 play, Almansor, a Moor [Spanish Muslim], commenting on Christians who publicly burned the Quran, says that this burning is but a “prelude,” and adds: “Where men burn books, they will in the end burn people.”


Holy books are sacred even when we disagree with them or with their advocates. We should not only respect other religions and people of other faiths; we should seek to learn from them. While we, as Jews, are committed to being firmly rooted in the Torah and to Judaism, we still must have the humility to open our minds and hearts to the teachings of other faiths.


The Mishnah (Pirke Avot 5:17) teaches: “Every dispute which is for the sake of Heaven in the end will be permanently established. And every dispute which is not for the sake of Heaven in the end will not be permanently established.” When religious people are arguing with good intentions to pursue the truth, they should be listened to. The Rambam taught that we should “accept the truth from wherever it is found.”


The Maharal, the great 16th-century Jewish philosopher in Prague, taught (Baer haGolah, chapter 7):


It is proper, out of love of reason and knowledge, that you do not [summarily] reject anything that opposes your own idea, especially so if [your adversary] does not intend merely to provoke you, but rather to declare his beliefs… And even if such beliefs are opposed to your own faith and religion, do not say to him, “Speak not and keep your words.” Because if so, there will be no clarification of religion. Just the opposite, tell him to speak his mind and all that he wants to say so that he will not be able to claim that you silenced him. Anyone who prevents another from speaking only reveals the weakness of his own religion, and not as many think, that by avoiding discussion about religion you strengthen it. This is not so! Rather, the denial of one who opposes your religion is the negation and weakening of that religion… For the proper way to attain truth is to hear [others’] arguments which they hold sincerely, not out of a desire to provoke you. Thus it is wrong simply to reject an opponent’s ideas; instead, draw him close to you and delve into his words.


We should also remember that attempts to repress other religious beliefs that we disagree with frequently backfire, and that these religious factions grow even stronger as a result. A poignant Midrash teaches:  “Do not be so quick to destroy the altars of non-Jews lest you be forced to rebuild them with your hands” (Midrash Tannaim Devarim Mechilta 4). The Roman Empire, through brutal episodic efforts at suppression, only strengthened the faith of Jews and Christians; similarly, the Roman Catholic Church, through the Inquisition, torture, and executions, only strengthened the faith of Jews and, during the later Reformation, Protestants. On the most self-interested and pragmatic level, we must never be destructive to other religious factions because those people will come to hate us and may seek to harm us (mishum eivah). Rather the halachah is that we must pursue the ways of peace (darchei shalom) in all that we do.


We must draw closer to others with different theologies, to be respectful and to learn. The last thing that should ever happen is a public desecration of the works of another faith. The great majority of Jews and Israelis believe this, and no attention should be paid toward the extremists acting against Jewish values. We must speak out against others who shows intolerance to others and who shame their sacred texts in acts of spite. We can heal the world together when see decency and dignity in all people and show respect to their theologies even when we disagree with them.

Even when we are provoked and our tolerance is tested, we must rise above. The Torah's “ways are ways of pleasantness and all its paths are peace,” (Proverbs 3:17).

 

Rabbi Shmuly Yanklowitz is the Founder and President of “>Jewish Ethics & Social Justice: A Guide for the 21st Century.” Newsweek named Rav Shmuly

Did you enjoy this article?
You'll love our roundtable.

Editor's Picks

Latest Articles

More news and opinions than at a
Shabbat dinner, right in your inbox.

More news and opinions than at a Shabbat dinner, right in your inbox.

More news and opinions than at a Shabbat dinner, right in your inbox.