One
of the things I used to love about Star Wars as a child was it very clearly
defined good and evil. Darth Vader – dark and forboding, face covered by a
mask, was evil. Luke Skywalker, wearing a white outfit, was good. Yes, it
blurred the lines somewhat, and by the end of Return of the Jedi when Vader
tried to atone for everything he had done, we understood that good people can
become bad and that bad people can become good. Nonetheless, a polarized system
of good and evil was clearly established. You either fought for good, or for
evil. That’s very comforting, especially during childhood, because it makes the
world a much easier place to live in. It makes morality a simple on/off
exercise of either being righteous or being wicked.
The
play Cyrano de Bergerac, by Edmond Rostand, ends in a similar way. In his final
speech, Cyrano rallies against compromise. Cyrano didn’t see the world with
nuance, he saw black and white, right and wrong. I lapped it up as a teenager,
propelled as I was at the time into a confusing world. Such things were
comforting. Perhaps that’s even part of the reason why Judaism appealed to me
so much at that time as well. The Bible certainly contains nuance in terms of
interpretation, but in terms of morality, not so much. There’s God’s way and
then there’s the wrong way. You’re either for God or you’re not.
Shabbat
Zachor is the epitome of that. The Shabbat before Purim, we read from two
scrolls – one for the weekly Torah reading and one to read of Amalek. Remember
what Amalek did to you, we read. The connection with Purim is because the Book
of Esther (3:1) says that Haman was a descendant of Agag, which was the name of
the King of Amalek. To quote Aish HaTorah’s commentary on this, “Haman’s desire
to wipe out the Jewish people was an expression of his long-standing national
tradition.” Indeed, they say that “Amalek attacked the Jews out of pure hatred
– Amalek lived in a distant land and was under no imminent threat.” In other
words, Jews good, Amalekites evil. It’s really a very simple system of
morality.
With
such a mindset, of course, one can excuse all sorts of horror because it’s done
in the name of righteousness. So, ethnic cleansing – which is basically what
Torah commands of the ancient Israelites as they go into the land – is seen as
a righteous endeavor. The consolidation of evil into one convenient package outside
of the self carries with it the potential for evil itself. It also makes dialogue virtually impossible.
Midrash tells us that when Esau was getting old he called his grandson Amalek and
told him that he was unable to kill Jacob but now he entrusted the mission of
exterminating them to him and to his descendants. It’s actually a disturbing
story because it means that anyone descended from Amalek is immediately assumed
to be a potential murderer of Jews. Politically, this has carried into
modernity, with repeated references by Israeli right-wingers to Palestinians
being descendants of Amalek. The consolidation of evil dehumanizes, which in
turn leads to the potential acts of evil I mentioned before.
Aish
HaTorah’s commentary is explicit in the difference between Jews and Amalekites.
It quotes Talmud’s response to Amalek, particularly one word – Amalek happened (or in Hebrew, karcha) upon you (Deut. 25:18). It explains
that word means coincidence, so Amalek is associated with randomness and
subjective thought, while being a Jew means believing in absolutes. Life doesn’t
happen by chance, as Amalekites think, but rather everything happens because
God wills it. There are consequences to this kind of thinking. If you believe
that God determines everything, then great, you’re good. But if you don’t, if
you dare to think that God doesn’t control all and that sometimes bad things
just happen, then even if you don’t intend to kill Israelites, you’re still
basically acting or at least thinking like an Amalekite. This is taking things
even further, from judging an entire people according to their deeds to know
judging them by their thoughts, even if they haven’t expressed them!
Amalek
therefore became the symbol of human evil in Judaism. Torah and then Talmud
consolidate evil into one people who, most importantly, they felt were still
amongst them. Was Haman Amalek? Was Rome Amalek? Were the Crusaders Amalek? Was
Hitler Amalek? Basically, anyone who opposed Judaism was connected in their
evil behavior.
I
have a number of profound difficulties with this. Firstly, Judaism firmly
believes in teshuvah, in returning to
God, or repentance. It believes that no-one is born wicked and that everyone
has free will. And yet at the same time, it holds that the descendants of
Amalek not only act in certain ways, but even think in certain ways. It
essentially shuts off any possibility of atonement for anyone descended from
Amalek.
A
second difficulty is the blatant racism of it. Sure, differing cultures around
the world view the world differently, their understanding of reality and of
humanity is different. But the very idea that there is one race of people who
are hell-bent on evil is textbook racism. Our traditional was profoundly
racist. Does that mean we’re bound to its racism? Of course not, but we have to
acknowledge that millions of Jews around the world who take it literally feel
that they are bound to that code of ethics and aren’t even aware that it is racism.
A
third difficult with this is that it gives permission to call anyone evil.
Sure, there are evil people in this world, and indeed a majority of people in
one nation can be led to evil without even realizing it. We have seen this in
recent history. But the idea of Amalek is insidious because it means that
anyone can be accused without any potential recourse. Once someone is labeled a
descendant of Amalek, there is no potential defence that they can provide for
their actions. Whatever they say is an Amalekite lie.
A
fourth difficulty is that over time Amalek transcended nationalism and in the
eyes of the ultra-Orthodox became a tool for internal Jewish intolerance. As
Aish HaTorah state on their website, “in describing
the actual battle with Amalek, the Torah says: "When Moses raised his
hand, Israel was stronger. And when Moses lowered his hand, Amalek was
stronger" (Exodus 17:11). Moses' raised hands symbolize the Jews raising
their eyes heavenward in a commitment to God and Torah. "When Moses' hands
are lowered" ― i.e. the Jewish people take a secular approach to life ―
then we lose. It is a direct inverse proportion: Turning away from God
automatically causes Amalek to rise, and vice-versa.” What do they mean by
this? If you are Orthodox, you are with God. If you’re not, you’re Amalek. This
isn’t an appreciation of the nuance of progressive spirituality, I read this as
a declaration of non-Orthodox Jewish communities not only turning from God, but
being as evil as those who would destroy us.
There
is evil in the world. There is evil in this country. There are people who do
evil things. There are people who were raised to be hateful and violent. We
dare not deny the existence of evil. But consolidating evil and then accusing entire
peoples or groups of being inherently and unchangeably evil or indeed of being
descendants of evil-doers with a continued evil mission… that is a different
thing. That is, perhaps, an evil thing in and of itself. I get that this
country is extremely polarized at the moment, and that individuals are groups
have deliberately been creating such a society for years. And I think we should
call out individuals, or even organizations, that cause harm. But we must at
the same time be aware of when we’re consolidating evil merely because it makes
it easier for us to address a situation, because pointing the finger is far
easier than the difficult discussions and compromises with people with whom we
profoundly disagree that are necessary to bring about social change.
One of the reasons I am proud to be a Reform
Jew is because I am entitled to think in a modern way, and I am not theologically
or philosophically bound to thinking in divisive ways that disparage entire
peoples, or that can be used to basically call anyone who disagrees with me
evil. Ultimately, when two sides of a profound disagreement both feel entitled
to call each other Amalek, then the term ceases to have any meaningful value at
all, other than to continue hatred.
So,
this Shabbat Zachor, I’ll remember Amalek. Not as a hate-filled people who went
out of their way to attack the Israelite people, because that literally makes
no sense militarily or politically. Instead, I’ll remember Amalek as a creation
of Torah, as a way of thinking about others that immediately brands them as
evil, and it is that Amalek that I shall try to blot out from the face of the
earth.
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