We at Tikkun are proud to announce that Rabbi Arthur Waskow and his wife and partner Rabbi Phyllis Berman will be co-leading High Holiday services with Rabbi Michael Lerner on Yom KippurSept. 13-14. You don’t have to be Jewish and you don’t have to live in the Bay Area to decide to do the High Holidays with Rabbi Lerner and Beyt Tikkun Synagogue-Without-Walls which will be holding the services at Zaytuna Institute and the Pacific School of Religion one block north of the U.C. campus (people in the past have come from as far away as Israel, Australia, Russia, South Africa, Canada and South America).

Registration information will be on line at www.beyttikkun by the end of June, but it’s not too early to mark your calendar now and decide to come: Rosh HaShanah (1st eve: Sept. 4, 1st and 2nd day: Sept 5& 6) plus Yom Kippur Sept. 13-14. It’s an experience you’ll never forget–spiritual depth from 3 of the most spiritually creative rabbis in the world today, with the traditional music and prayers, plus extraordinary teachings that merge Jewish tikkun-olam commitment with Kabbalistic/mystical and yet extremely rational insights about how to live and how to connect to dimensions of reality that add meaning to your life!!! Please don’t miss it. To get a taste of Rabbi Waskow’s teachings, read the material below. To get a taste of Rabbi Lerner’s teachings, read his 1994 national best-seller Jewish Renewal: A Path to Healing and Transformation or his 2006 national best seller The Left Hand of God: Taking Back our Country from the Religious Right (or read the Core Vision of the Tikkun Community’s interfaith and secular humanist welcoming at www.tikkun.org). To contact Rabbi Lerner directly: RabbiLerner.Tikkun@gmail.com

 

Privacy from Rulers: Tents of Ancient Israel, Cell-phones of Today
By Rabbi Arthur Waskow *

What does the arrangement of tents in an ancient Israelite encampment have to do with the ultramodern question of whether the US government should be peering into the ultramodern phone and Internet records of hundreds of millions of Americans?

Or to put it another way, are there any spiritual and religious roots to the notion of personal and household privacy?

To start from Torah: Many Jewish prayer services begin with aquotation from a non-Jewish shaman, himself quoted in the Torah (Num 24: 5; this passage of Torah will be read two weeks from now, on June 22).    King Balak had hired an expert shamanic curse-hurler, Balaam, to curse the People of Israel who were swarming across the wilderness after their liberation from slavery under Pharaoh. But Balaam tuned in to a spirit-channel that insisted: the Israelites, in their commitment to YyyyHhhhWwwwHhhh, the Breath of Life, must be blessed rather than cursed.

So as Balaam gazed down upon the Jewish encampment, he proclaimed, “Mah Tovu Ohalecha Yaakov –— How goodly are your tents, O Jacob!” When the rabbis of Talmud (Baba Batra 60a) read this story, they asked what was so “goodly” about the tents, and answered that the doors of the individual tents did not face each other. So no family could see into another family’s tent. Each household protected its own privacy and that of all the others.

The ancient Rabbis lived under the boot of the Roman Empire, which had a  spy system to penetrate any possible bands of troublesome dissidents. So perhaps they also saw that King Balak was disturbed precisely by this household privacy: How dare these people keep secrets from the king?!

But Balaam saw that privacy was “goodly” and delightsome because it was attuned to the uniqueness of each person, just as the uniqueness of each species is what makes all life fit together into eco-systems.

Now let’s jump a few millennia, to the year 1761 of the Common Era, in the town of Boston on the edges of the British Empire. British law provided for the Crown to ask for a “writ of assistance,” a general search warrant that had no particular allegations of criminal activity, did not need to specify a particular individual or particular places or effects to be searched, and had no end date.

Once a writ of assistance had been issued, no subject of the king had privacy.  King Balak would triumph, Balaam would go away shame-faced, and the Godwrestling folk, the runaway ex-slaves, would be enslaved once more.

Not so fast, said the people of Boston and the other American colonies. They rebelled against the writs of assistance.

They won. And after they agreed on a new Constitution, some among them wanted to make sure no central government could act like the king they had vanquished.

So they insisted on adding to the Constitution the Bill of Rights, including the Fourth Amendment:

“The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.”

Now here we are, two centuries later, and the king – even one who said he would support the Bill of Rights against his predecessor’s invasion of it –– is claiming it is all right to scoop up all the data about whom I am phoning, who is phoning me, where we are, and how long we talk.

Is this harmless because it does not include the actual words inside the call or email?

Let’s explore:

The New Yorker reports, “As Jameel Jaffar, deputy legal director of the American Civil Liberties Union, put it, imagine if the government required every American to report to the government every night who they spoke to, or texted, for how long, and from where. People would be furious, but that’s precisely the information the N.S.A. is collecting from telecom companies. And it’s precisely why the government desperately wanted to keep the practice a secret.”

Or let’s make it more concrete: You are trying to start a political campaign for Congress in a district where some government official likes somebody else. You are testing out the waters by meeting with possible supporters, experts in street theater and radio ads and fundraising. Now the hostile official knows who you are talking to, how often, and where. Is it easier to break up your campaign?

Or another: J Edgar Hoover was famous for blackmailing members of Congress and Presidents to increase his power, by gathering information on their sex lives. He was constrained to following just a few people at a time by the high cost in staff and money it took to do that. But now, with super-computers and thousands of programmers hoovering up the data for some future J. Edgar  —-

Or let’s bring it home, from big-time officials and political activists to our neighbors down the block:  “Your phone records show you make a call each month to a guy we know is selling dope. Would you want your boss to know? Just let me know if any of your co-workers are belly-aching about the pay scale, and I’ll keep my mouth shut …”

That’s life under King Balak. Or King George III. Or King George W. Or, sad to say, King Barack.  And for that matter, King Verizon. King Facebook – which may use the data to turn citizens into advertising targets. Or some Silicon Valley worker who doesn’t mind a little blackmail.

What shall we do?

For an answer, back to the deeper wisdom of the Bible. The blessing Balaam called out has two more words in it: “Mah Tovu Ohalecha Yaakov, Mishkanotecha Yisrael — How goodly are your tents, O Jacob, your ‘mishkans,’ Yisrael!”

What is a Mishkan? It is an inner shrine for the Divine Indwelling Presence. And Yisrael is the same person/ peoplehood as Jacob – only Yisrael has turned from struggling to dominate his  brother,  in favor of wrestling with God’s Own Self. Yisrael, the Godwrestler, has undertaken the deeper spiritual struggle to achieve a higher consciousness.

So each tent, each household, is protecting its own integrity from outside invasion whole growing its own truth within. And these truths are One because they see the deepest connection with the One Who binds all life, all truth together: the One named YyyyHhhhWwwwHhhh Who is the Interbreathing of all life.

This One is precisely not a king, Big Daddy, who is invoked by High Priests, Popes, Corporate CEO’s, or Big Brother Rulers to dominate the people from above. This One is the very breath we breathe: the breath we breathe in from what the trees breathe out, the breath the trees breathe in from what we breathe out. A scientific as well as aspiritual truth.

How does this Unity cohere with the privacy of each tent, each separate sacred Mishkan?

As the Rabbis – who lived under the boot of the Roman Empire — also taught, “When Caesar stamps his image on a coin, all the coins come out identical. When the One Who is beyond all rulers stamps the Divine Image on a coin [a human being, and today we might add,a species} — each coin comes out unique.”

Unique – and interwoven.  Uniqueness  — and its privacy —  is not only a social and emotional blessing, but also a spiritual blessing. Spiritual and political in the same breath.

And the uniqueness shines forth not despite the sharing of our Unity, but because of it. The Infinite can only be refracted through diversity.

And the uniqueness shines forth not despite the sharing of our Unity, but because of it. The Infinite can only be refracted through diversity.

So to face those rulers who want to use computers not for liberation but to serve Big Brother, a courageous people takes a deep breath.  Each of us in our own Mishkan of the Holy Indwelling Presence takes a unique breath that goes forth into the world, breathing awind, a hurricane, of change. We shape our breath into words we breathe with each other, a chorus of Yes that to Big Brother speaks aNo.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Rabbi Arthur Waskow, Ph.D., director, The Shalom Center<http://www.theshalomcenter.org>; newest books,  a new and revised edition of Seasons of Our Joy (Jewish Publ Soc, 2012) and Freedom Journeys: The Tale of Exodus & Wilderness Across Millennia, co-authored with Rabbi Phyllis Berman (Jewish Lights Publ., 2011). See also Waskow, “Jewish Environmental Ethics:Adam and Adamah,” in Oxford Handbook of Jewish Ethics and Morality (Elliot N. Dorff and  Jonathan K. Crane, eds.; Oxford University Press, 2013).

More

Comments are closed.