Talmudology on the Parsah, B'shalach: Amalek Forever

After the Israelites successfully defeat an attack from the Tribe of Amalek, Moses commemorates the battle with an Altar and a promise.

17: 14-16 שמות

וַיֹּ֨אמֶר יְהֹוָ֜ה אֶל־מֹשֶׁ֗ה כְּתֹ֨ב זֹ֤את זִכָּרוֹן֙ בַּסֵּ֔פֶר וְשִׂ֖ים בְּאזְנֵ֣י יְהוֹשֻׁ֑עַ כִּֽי־מָחֹ֤ה אֶמְחֶה֙ אֶת־זֵ֣כֶר עֲמָלֵ֔ק מתַּ֖חַת הַשָּׁמָֽיִם: וַיִּ֥בֶן מֹשֶׁ֖ה מִזְבֵּ֑חַ וַיִּקְרָ֥א שְׁמ֖וֹ יְהֹוָ֥ה ׀ נִסִּֽי׃ וַיֹּ֗אמֶר כִּֽי־יָד֙ עַל־כֵּ֣ס יָ֔הּ מִלְחָמָ֥ה לַיהֹוָ֖ה בַּֽעֲמָלֵ֑ק מִדֹּ֖ר דֹּֽר׃ 

And the Lord said to Moses, Write this for a memorial in a book, and rehearse it in the ears of Yehoshua: that I will utterly blot out the remembrance of Amalek from under the heaven. And Moses built an altar, and called the name of it Adonay Nissi [the Lord is my Banner] for he said, Because the Lord has sworn by his throne that the Lord will have war with Amalek from generation to generation.

The Two Accounts of the Battle with Amalek

It is important to note that in the Torah there are in fact two accounts of the Battle with Amalek. In this week’s Torah reading the battle with Amalek is described in rather bland terms: “וַיָּבֹ֖א עֲמָלֵ֑ק וַיִּלָּ֥חֶם עִם־יִשְׂרָאֵ֖ל בִּרְפִידִֽם” - “Then Amalek came and fought Israel at Refidim.” But later in the Torah the ugly tactics that Amalek used are described in more detail:

דברים 25: 17-18

זָכ֕וֹר אֵ֛ת אֲשֶׁר־עָשָׂ֥ה לְךָ֖ עֲמָלֵ֑ק בַּדֶּ֖רֶךְ בְּצֵאתְכֶ֥ם מִמִּצְרָֽיִם׃

אֲשֶׁ֨ר קָֽרְךָ֜ בַּדֶּ֗רֶךְ וַיְזַנֵּ֤ב בְּךָ֙ כל־הַנֶּחֱשָׁלִ֣ים אַֽחֲרֶ֔יךָ וְאַתָּ֖ה עָיֵ֣ף וְיָגֵ֑עַ וְלֹ֥א יָרֵ֖א אֱלֹהִֽים

Remember what Amalek did to thee by the way, when you were come out of Egypt: how they met you by the way, and smote the weakest, all that were feeble in thy rear, when thou wast faint and weary; and he feared not God

It is this later account, the one in which Amalek attacked not Israel’s army but its weakest citizens which became seared into the Jewish imagination as an example of cowardice and evil. This behavior is met with a response: to utterly destroy Amalaek.

דברים 25:19

וְהָיָ֡ה בְּהָנִ֣יחַ יְהֹוָ֣ה אֱלֹהֶ֣יךָ ׀ לְ֠ךָ֠ מִכל־אֹ֨יְבֶ֜יךָ מִסָּבִ֗יב בָּאָ֙רֶץ֙ אֲשֶׁ֣ר יְהֹוָה־אֱ֠לֹהֶ֠יךָ נֹתֵ֨ן לְךָ֤ נַחֲלָה֙ לְרִשְׁתָּ֔הּ תִּמְחֶה֙ אֶת־זֵ֣כֶר עֲמָלֵ֔ק מִתַּ֖חַת הַשָּׁמָ֑יִם לֹ֖א תִּשְׁכָּֽח׃ 

Therefore it shall be, when the Lord your God has given you rest from all thy enemies round about, in the land which the Lord your God gives you for an inheritance to possess it, that you shall blot out the remembrance of Amalek from under heaven; you shall not forget.

And so the account in this week’s parsha of the military victory over Amalek was turned into a humiliating defeat when described in Devarim. And ever since, Amalak became the embodiment of an altogether different type of evil, one that must be forever recalled and forever annihilated.

The Realistic and the Metaphorical Approaches

There have been two streams of interpretation about the events that occurred, what Avi Sagi described as the realistic and the symbolic. The former is perhaps best exemplified in the commentary of the Portuguese medieval exegete Isaac Abarbanel (1437–1508). Amalek had no reason to attack the Israelites, and what is perhaps worse, when they did attack they targeted the weakest civilians. It was the tactics of Amalek that led the Torah to decree their destruction.

פירוש אברבנאל על התורה, דברים 25:17

שנלחם עמהם מבלי סבה, כי הנה הלוחמי' מהם שיעשו מלחמותיהם כנגד האויבים הבאים עליהם לקחת את ארצם ולכבשם ילחמו להנצל מהם, ומהם שילכו לכבוש ארצות גוים אשר לא להם ועל זה ילחמו, אבל עמלק לא היה לו סבה מזה במלחמתו, כי הנה ישראל לא היו עוברים בארצו ובאים להלחם בו לשיצא להלחם בם, וגם לא היה להם ארצות שילך עמלק לכבשם ולחמדתו אותם ילחם בם, אבל היתה לבד מלחמתו בדרך בצאתם ממצרים, ר"ל שהוא יצא לשטן להם בדרך, עובר ומתעבר על ריב לא ל…הנה עמלק לא עשה כן אבל בא וילחם בפתע פתאום וזהו אשר קרך בדרך ר"ל במקרה פתאום בלתי שיעיר בך דבר…שהיה מפחיתות עמלק ופחדו שלא יעצור כח להלחם בישראל פנים בפנים, אבל נלחם עם החלשים שהם הבאים באחרית המחנה ויירא מגשת אל העם מלפניו וזה עם היות ישראל עיף ויגע, וזהו ויזנב בך כל הנחשלים אחריך כי נחשלים הוא כמו נחלשים ככשב כבש, וזכר עוד מפחיתותו באמרו ואתה עיף ויגע

In contrast, the metaphysical approach views Amalek as a concept, as evil embodied, rather than a historic population (although they certainly were the latter). And there is both a human and a divine battle against Amalek, as outlined in the Zohar:

זוהר 2:66א

אָמַר רִבִּי יִצְחָק, כְּתִיב כִּי מָחֹה אֶמְחֶה, וּכְתִיב (דברים כ״ה:י״ט) תִּמְחֶה אֶת זֵכֶר עֲמָלֵק. אֶלָּא, אָמַר קוּדְשָׁא בְּרִיךְ הוּא, אַתּוּן מָחוּן דּוּכְרָנֵיהּ לְתַתָּא, וַאֲנָא אֶמְחֶה דּוּכְרָנֵיהּ לְעֵילָּא

Said R. Isaac: ‘Here it is written: “For I will utterly blot out”, whereas in another passage it says, “Thou shalt blot out the remembrance of Amalek” (Deuteronomy 25:19). The Holy One, blessed be He, said in effect: “You shall blot out his remembrance on earth, and I will blot out his remembrance on high”.

Sagi explains the genesis of this metaphysical battle:

If Amalek stands for metaphysical evil and the people of Israel represent metaphysical good, any unjustified war, motivated by groundless hatred for the people of Israel, comes to symbolize the metaphysical struggle. The identity of the concrete Amalek may therefore vary and is in fact irrelevant, whereas the metaphysical war between good and evil goes on unchanged, with the people of Israel always symbolizing the good.

And then he makes this excellent point:

The punishment meted out to Amalek is thus not immoral; rather, it expresses the hope that good will prevail. The moral problem raised by the biblical story is solved by demonizing the concrete Amalek and, in the course of history, extending the concept of Amalek to include all the enemies of Israel.

Rabbi Shimshon Raphael Hirsch (d. 1888) was another advocate of the “Amalek as a metaphysical” approach:

 


Shimshon Raphael Hirsch. במעגלי שנה II, 191.

 

Amalek hates Abraham, who fight for justice against many nations and kingdoms. But Abraham does not fight for these values with the sword or the bow, but rather through peaceful means. There are only two choices here. The sword demands that all divine, humane, ethical and moral values are sacrificed, or at least ignored until victory has been proclaimed. But the voice - God’s voice calling out to human beings from beyond and within themselves, the categorical imperative of the divine moral law."

Nicolas Poussin ca. 1625. Joshua Fights Amalek. Oil on canvas. Hermitage, St. Petersburg

Amalek identified as…

Over the centuries, the metaphysical approach seems became the dominant one. This allowed for any number of real or perceived enemies of one’s own, of the Jewish People, or even part of the Jewish People themselves, to be identified as a spiritual heir of Amalek, and thus, worthy of annihilation. Here are but a few examples:

Muslims

The identification of Muslims with Amalek was not made by the Jews. It comes from the Christian Byzantine chronicler Theophanes (d. 818), who wrote in his Chronographia that “while the Church at that time was being troubled thus by emperors and impious priests, Amalek rose up in the desert, smiting us, the people of Christ.” (Theophanes also suggested that Mohammed suffered from epilepsy, but that is another story.) Later, Pope Urban II used the Amalek image when he addressed his Crusaders at Clermont in 1095: “With Moses, we shall extend unwearied hands in prayer to Heaven, while you go forth and brandish the sword, like dauntless warriors, against Amalek.”

Native Americans

The Puritan preacher (and the “chief agent of the mischief” in the Salem Witch Trials) Cotton Mather (1663-1728) thought of the native Americans, who he referred to as “Indians,” as Amalek. And just like Pope Urban II, Mather borrowed the story from this week’s parsha to rally his troops:

And for a close, Let me mind you, that while you Fight, Wee'l pray. Every good man will do it, in secret and in private every day; and publick Supplications also will be always going for you. We will keep in the Mount with our Hands lifted up, while you are in the Field with your Lives in your Hands, against the Amalek that is now annoying this Israel in the Wilderness

The French

After the one-armed Horatio Nelson’s victory over the French Navy at the Battle of the Nile in 1798, The Bishop of London could hardly contain himself. “The Man of God, who lifted up his hands to heaven, while Israel fought with Amalek, finds an equal piety with our Admiral… It was a pious confidence in God that induced Moses to lift up his hand [sic] to heaven, while Israel fought with Amalek. It was a like faith that influenced our valiant Nelson, and other Admirals and Generals, while they courageously prevailed over our enemies.” But there was more:

But not to lose sight of the beautiful parallelism between Moses and our Admiral, I must remind you that their piety and faith in God are highly alike and conspicuous. After the Amalekites were smitten before Israel, the Lord commanded Moses “to ‘write the Victory, for a Memorial, in a Book.’ And he built an Altar and called the name of it “Jehovah Nissi” which signifies “the Lord is my Banner.” Thus Moses acknowledged the Lord of Hosts as the God of the armies of Israel….And surely there is not one here present, nor one person in this kingdom, in whose heart there is the least spark of sensibility, who could read the Admiral’s account of the victory without feeling such palpitations as never fail to excite tears of joy. These are his words: “Almighty God has given victory to the British fleet…”

These sandy deserts, where the Israelites cried for water, and where Moses stood with his rod lifted up to Heaven, are comparatively near the spot where, as the papers stated, fifteen hundred of the French army, under General Bounaparte [sic], died of famine and thirst; where the splendid victory, for which this day we bless God, was obtained; where Admiral Nelson, like another Moses, lifted his one hand to Heaven, while his fleet nobly fought, and, as Israel prevailed.
— Abraham Jobson. The Conduct of Moses, when Israel fought with Amalek, compared with that of Admiral Lord Nelson...Cambridge, F. Hodson 1798.

Armenians

Yes, you read that correctly. Armenians. According to the late Elliott Horowitz, (from whose book Reckless Rites many of the references for this post were taken,) the first identification of Amalek as the Hebrew word for Armenian is found in the tenth-century chronicle Yossipon. I could not find it, but I am sure it is there, somewhere.

Christians

Identifying Christians with Amalek was a terribly dangerous thing for the Jews of medieval Europe to do. So they used a kind of code word, or what today, we might call a dog whistle: Christianity=Esau=Amalek. One of the earliest to identify Amalek with Christianity was Nachmanides:

רמב’ן על התורה שמות 17:9

כי המלחמה מן המשפחה הזאת היא הראשונה והאחרונה לישראל, כי עמלק מזרע עשו (שם לו יב), וממנו באה אלינו המלחמה בראשית הגוים, ומזרעו של עשו היה לנו הגלות והחרבן האחרון, כאשר יאמרו רבותינו (ע"ז ב:) שאנחנו היום בגלות אדום, וכאשר ינוצח הוא, ויחלש הוא ועמים רבים אשר אתו, ממנה נושע לעולם, כאשר אמר (עובדיה א כא) ועלו מושיעים בהר ציון לשפוט את הר עשו והיתה לה' המלוכה

The first and final wars against Israel stem from this family, as Amalek is of the descendants of Esau. It is from him who stood at the head of the nations [in power] that the [first] war came against us. From Esau’s descendants, [namely, Rome], the [present] exile and the last destruction of the Sanctuary came upon us, just as our Rabbis have said that today we are in the exile of Edom. When he will be vanquished, together with the nations that are with him shall be weakened, we shall be redeemed forever, just as [the prophet] said, “And saviors shall come up on Mount Zion, to judge the mount of Esau; and the kingdom shall be the Eternal’s.” (Obad1:21)

Horowitz wrote that “in asserting that Edom/Esau “together with the nations that are with him shall be weakened, we shall be redeemed forever” Nahmanides presumably meant European Christendom under the spiritual rule of Rome, whose defeat, then, he saw as a prerequisite to Israel’s ultimate redemption” (Reckless Rites 127).

However, Nachmanides added an important - and novel - caveat to the fight against Amalek-Christianity. It was to be limited to the time when there was a Jewish king ruling over his people:

רמב’ן על התורה שמות 17:10

ויש מפרשים כי כאשר תהיה יד על כסא ה' תהיה מלחמה לה' בעמלק, וכן תהיה מדור לדור והענין, כי כאשר יהיה מלך בישראל יושב על כסא ה' ילחם בעמלק, והוא רמז לשאול המלך הראשון, וכן מדר דר, לאמר כי כל מלך בישראל חייב להלחם בהם עד שימח

The purport of this is that when there will be a king in Israel sitting upon the throne of the Eternal, he shall wage war against Amalek, thus alluding to Saul, the first king [of Israel]. And so shall it continue from generation to generation, that every king of Israel shall be duty-bound to fight with them until their name will extinct.

This interpretation, incidentally, is found nowhere in classic rabbinic thought, though it had been suggested by an earlier commentator, Joseph ben Isaac Bekhor Shor, who lived in the twelfth century.

Following the savage anti-Jewish riots of the twelfth century, several liturgical poems (piyyutim) called for God to avenge the blood of murdered Jews. One of these is the piyyut אמוני שלומי ישראל by Hillel ben Yaakov of Bonn. After witnessing the pogrom at Blois in 1171, he too used the code word of Esau to identify the Christians who had perpetrated the mass murders.

הַקֹּל קוֹל יַעֲקֹב בִּצְוָחָה וּבִנְהִימָה, מִדַּם שֶׁשָּׁפְכוּ יְדֵי עֵשָׁו לְהִנָּקְמָה

Jacob's voice was cries out and wails, for the blood spilled by the hands of Esau to be avenged

שְׁפִיכַת דַּם חֲסִידֶיךָ לְעֵינֵינוּ תוֹדִיעַ, וְעַד מָתַי תִּהְיֶה כְּגִבּוֹר לֹא יוּכַל לְהוֹשִׁיעַ, אוֹיְבַי רִיב תָּרִיב וּדְמֵיהֶם תַּשְׁפִּיעַ, אֵל נְקָמוֹת יְיָ אֵל נְקָמוֹת הוֹפִיעַ

The shedding of the blood of your righteous before our eyes will be known, and how long will you be a hero who cannot save, fight my enemies and make their blood flow, God of vengeance, God of vengeance appear!

The Confederate Army

In 1864, Rabbi David Einhorn (1809-1879) preached at the Knesset Israel synagogue on Shabbat Zachor, the Shabbat before Purim. It was the Confederate army that was Amalek. Here is an excerpt:

Amalek is represented in the Bible as the arch-foe of Israel, for he inflicted upon them the most unheard of cruelties, without having been in the least offended by the party attacked; he assaulted the champions of God when they were in a defenceless condition, in a state of utter exhaustion. To carry on a war against such a relentiess foe is an act of selfdefence, not of vengeance. Hence the war-cry: "War for God with Amalek from generation to generation!" It was a war for the existence of God's people, and hence a war for God Himself. In consequence of this arch-enmity against God and His people, Amalek has assumed the type of the evil principle among Israel. It is Amalek's seed, wherever the evil and wicked rule; wherever, especially, rude violence with cheaply bought courage makes war upon defenceless innocence, and wherever a majority in the service of falsehood directs its blows with ruthless fist against the very face of a weak minority. And thus even to-day the war-cry is heard: "God's is the war with Amalek from generation to generation!" Let us then consider how this war should be carried on in our own country and under existing circumstances.

First, — the necessity is presented to us of a war against the Enslavement of Race, which has brought the Republic to the verge of destruction, against an Amalek-seed which is turned into a blood-drenched dragon-seed. Or is it anything else but a deed of Amalek, rebellion against God, to enslave beings created in His image, and to degrade them to a state of beasts having no will of their own? Is it anything else but an act of ruthless and wicked violence, to reduce defenceless human beings to a condition of merchandize, and relentlessly to tear them away from the hearts of husbands, wives, parents, and children?

…God commands no war against the black color, but against the dark deeds of Amalek.

The Nazis

The number of examples of this are simply too numerous to count. Here is the Holocaust Memorial in the Hague. It was designed by Anat Ratzabi, and incorporates an earlier monument known as The Amalek Monument, which surely wins an award for the most inappropriately named Holocaust memorial ever. The Amalek Monument was created in 1967 by Dick Stins and unveiled again in 2007 after a renovation.


The Amalek Monument in the Hague. Dick Stins 1967.

Detail from the Amalke Monument in the Hague.

Jews who wear knitted kippot

In 2013 Rabbi Shalom Cohen, then a member of Shas’s Council of Torah Sages and the head of the Yeshivat Porat Yosef, declared that those who wear knitted skull caps (כיפה סרוגה) were Amalekites. His proof came from the verse this week’s Torah parsha “כִּֽי־יָד֙ עַל־כֵּ֣ס יָ֔הּ” - The Lord has sworn by his throne,” where, he taught, the word כס is an acronym for כיפה סגורה. No, I am not making this up.

“כתוב כי יד על כס יה מלחמה לה’ בעמלק, אמרו חכמים שאין הכיסא שלם כל עוד יש עמלק, מה זה ‘כל עוד, ואין הכיסא שלם’? כס זה כיפה סרוגה, שומעים?, כל עוד ויש כיפה סרוגה אין הכיסא שלם, זה עמלק, מתי יהיה הכיסא שלם? כשאין כיפה סרוגה
— רבי שלום כהן, ראש ישיבת 'פורת יוסף' וחבר מועצת חכמי התורה, 7/13/2013

Israel’s Minister of Education Yossi Sarid

Sitting next to Cohen when he declared Jews who wore knitted skull caps to be Amalek was Rabbi Ovadia Yosef, from whom Cohen had apparently learned a thing or two. On March 3, 2000 (just before Purim that year) Rabbi Yosef targeted Yossi Sarid (1940-2015), who was then leader of the Meretz party and Israel’s Minister of Education: "God will uproot him just as he uproots Amalek; that is how he will uproot him. Haman is cursed? Yossi Sarid is cursed."

The name of Amalek was invoked to remind us of the ubiquitous nature of antisemitism, the only hate in the world directed against people who are unknown to those seething with hate for us. People like the Houthis in Yemen who never saw a Jew in their life, yet are determined to destroy the Jewish state; Nazis in Germany who traveled hundreds of miles away from home to kill Jews in Belarus, Lithuania, Hungary, and Morocco even though they had never seen or known much about those Jews, that is the kind of evil we speak about when invoking the memory of Amalek.
— Elchanan Poupko. The Amalek blood libel. Times of Israel, Jan 15, 2024.

The Arab Armies battling the State of Israel

Here too, there are countless examples of the identification of Arab armies with Amalek. One that caught my eye was written by Mordecai Richler in 1994.

Mordecai Richler, This Year in Jerusalem. Knopf 1995. 204

But we will conclude with another description of Amalek as the Arab enemies of the State of Israel. It was published in 1956 by Rav (“The Rav”) Joseph Soloveitchik in his essay Kol Dodi Dofek. He identified the ever present enemies of Israel as Amalek, in a passage that, following October 7th, is remarkably prescient, not only for accurately describing the aspirations of our enemies, but also the silence of the “pious liberals.” Read it and be afraid. Be very afraid.

The ‎evil ‎intentions of the Arabs are not only directed against our national independence but against ‎the ‎continued existence of the Jewish presence in Israel. They aspire to exterminate (God forbid) ‎the ‎‎Yishuv — men, women, children, infants, sheep, and cattle (cf: I Samuel 15:3). At a ‎meeting ‎of Mizrachi (the Religious Zionists of America), I repeated, in the name of my father (of ‎blessed ‎memory), that the notion of “the Lord will have war against Amalek from generation ‎to ‎generation” (Exodus 17:16) is not confined to a certain race, but includes a necessary attack ‎against ‎any nation or group infused with mad hatred that directs its enmity against the community ‎of ‎Israel. When a nation emblazons on its standard, “Come, let us cut them off from being a nation ‎so ‎that the name of Israel shall no longer be remembered” (Psalms 83:5), it becomes Amalek. In ‎the ‎‎1930’s and 1940’s the Nazis, with Hitler at their helm, filled this role. In this most recent period ‎they ‎were the Amalekites, the representatives of insane hate. Today, the throngs of Nasser and ‎the ‎Mufti have taken their place. If we are again silent, I do not know how we will be judged ‎before ‎God. Do not rely on the justice of the “liberal world.” Those pious liberals were alive fifteen ‎years ‎ago and witnessed the destruction of millions of people with equanimity and did not lift a ‎finger. ‎They are liable to observe, God forbid, the repetition of the bloodbath and not lose a ‎night’s ‎sleep.‎

Amalek. Forever.

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Tu B'Shavt ~ A New Year for Health

The opening Mishnah of Masechet Rosh Hashanah includes this:

ראש השנה ב ,א

באחד בשבט ראש השנה לאילן כדברי בית שמאי בית הלל אומרים בחמשה עשר בו

On the first of Shevat is the New Year for the tree; [the fruit of a tree that was formed prior to that date belong to the previous tithe year and cannot be tithed together with fruit that was formed after that date;] this ruling is in accordance with the statement of Beit Shammai. But Beit Hillel say: The New Year for trees is on the fifteenth of Shevat.

 Declaring different kinds of New Years goes back to the Talmud. But this practice was updated in a remarkable way by a Russian Jewish immigrant to the US in the early twentieth century. Tonight, we mark the fifteenth of Shvat, the date that, according to Bet Hillel, is the new year for the tithing of trees, and we will tell his remarkable - and overlooked - story, of it has everything to do with Tu B’Shvat.

Twice a year on the fifteenth day of Shevat and on the eighteenth day of Iyar all the Jewish children from 3 to 13 years of age should undergo a thorough physical examination by the local Jewish physicians free of charge.
— Charles Spivak

Charles Spivak and the fight against tuberculosis

Hayyim Haykhl Spivakovski (1861-1927) immigrated to the US from Russia, where he became Charles Spivak. He graduated from Jefferson Medical College in Philadelphia in 1890 (and his thesis, on talmudic theories of menstruation won a prize), and after his wife contracted tuberculosis in 1896 he moved with her to Denver. There she could take advantage of the high altitude which had been shown to help fight the disease. This began his life-long mission to fight the tuberculosis and improve the care of the many Jewish refugees from eastern Europe who contracted it. 

From here.

From here.

Spivak founded the Jewish Consumptives’ Relief Society (JCRS), which provided kosher food and a Sabbath atmosphere, but was open to anyone. “We have in our institution chasidim and agnostics,” he wrote in 1914, “Jews and Christians, republicans and progressives, socialists and anarchists, men of all kinds of religious, political and economic options.” Spivak’s personal philosophy was informed by “a unique blend of Yiddishkeit [Jewish values], secularism and socialism” and his approach to the distribution of funds was sometimes at odds with bureaucratic and impersonal ways that some Jewish charities functioned. “We may not be able to return him [the patient] to his family as a useful working unit,” he reminded his benefactors, “we may actually waste money without any hope for any return, nevertheless, we feel that he or she must receive our care and attention, that whole-souled and whole-hearted charity is, after all, the only true, pure and unalloyed charity.” He estimated that of among the 3.3 million Jews then living in the US about 4,600 died each year from the disease, and ten times that number were chronically infected, or as he put it, were “living tuberculous Jews.” It was therefore the duty of the Jewish community to support the fight for to prevent the spread of tuberculosis and search for a cure. 

Dr. Chales Spivak. From here.

Dr. Chales Spivak. From here.

In that opening Mishnah of Rosh Hashanah, we read that are several different dates that mark the beginning of different new years. The first day of the Spring month of Nissan is the new year for kings, which is used to date legal documents. The new year for trees is marked in the late winter month Shevat, which is used to count tithes, and first day of the late summer month of Tishrei is used to count the number of years since creation. In December 1918, Spivak updated this list and gave it a thoroughly modern twist. Writing in the Journal Jewish Charities, he suggested that the rhythm of the Jewish calendar could be used to improve public health and reduce the toll from tuberculosis.

Twice a year on the fifteenth day of Shvat (New Years for Trees) and on the eighteenth day of Iyar (Lag B'Omar) all the Jewish children from 3 to 13 years of age should undergo a thorough physical examination by the local Jewish physicians free of charge.  

In the evening of the respective days all organized societies in the community should hold Health meetings at which the subject of how to maintain good health and prevent disease should be discussed by health officers and physicians.

 A custom should also be inaugurated that all adults should visit their family physicians during the months of Tishre and Nisson [sic] for the purpose of undergoing a physical examination.

 Spivak’s suggestion was of course dependent on a working knowledge of the Jewish calendar, but the dates he suggested would help. The fifteenth of Shevat was often celebrated in schools, and Lag B’Omer, the thirty-third day of the period leading up to the festival of Shavuot was celebrated as a minor holiday; it marked the end of the pandemic deaths of the students of the talmudic giant Rabbi Akiva. Most Jewish adults, even those who had jettisoned traditional Jewish practice when they arrived in America, would be aware of the timing of the other two months.  The festival of Pesach (Passover) is celebrated in Nissan, and Rosh Hashanah, the start of the Jewish New Year that leads into Yom Kippur (the Day of Atonement) is commemorated in Tishrei.

Helping others, even after his death

Spivak, a member of the Denver Hebrew Speaking Society, developed liver cancer and died in 1927 at the age of 68. His generous spirit is evident in his last will and testament, where he asked that

…my body be embalmed and shipped to the nearest medical college for an equal number of non-Jewish and Jewish students to carefully dissect. After my body has been dissected, the bones should be articulated by an expert and the skeleton shipped to the University of Jerusalem, with the request that the same be used for demonstration purposes in the department of anatomy.

Apparently his request was fulfilled, and somewhere on the campus of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem is his skeleton.

Denver’s National Jewish Hospital

Spivak was not the only Jew who helped Denver’s many “consumptives.” He had traveled to Denver because of its high altitude, and in there in the 1880s a woman by the name of Frances Wisebart Jacobs raised funds to open a new hospital to treat the many “consumptives” who had traveled to the mile high city. She found support from the Jewish community, which agreed to plan, fund and build a nonsectarian hospital for the treatment of respiratory diseases, primarily tuberculosis. That hospital opened in 1899 as The National Jewish Hospital for Consumptives, and after several name changes it is now known as National Jewish Health. Today, it remains a major center for the care of patients with lung and respiratory illnesses.

“…[Pain] knows no creed, so is this building the prototype of the grand idea of Judaism, which casts aside no stranger no matter of what race or blood. We consecrate this structure to humanity, to our suffering fellowman, regardless of creed.”
— Rabbi William Friedman at the laying of the cornerstone of the new hospital. From Tom Sherlock. Colorado's Healthcare Heritage: A Chronology of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Century Healthcare, volume 1, p374.

While the Talmud declared four kinds of new year, Spivak declared a fifth. His new year for health was to be commemorated together with Tu B’Shavt, the new year for trees. In this way, he tied it to the Jewish calendar, and his memory is a reminder of the importance of getting a routine physical exam from your doctor. It might save your life.

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Bava Kamma 82a ~ Is Garlic Good for You?

     בבא קמא פב, א

...עשרה תקנות תיקן עזרא...אוכלין שום בערב שבת... משום עונה דכתיב אשר פריו יתן בעתו וא"ר יהודה... זה המשמש מטתו מערב שבת  לערב שבת. ת"ר חמשה דברים נאמרו בשום משביע ומשחין ומצהיל פנים ומרבה הזרע והורג כנים שבבני מעיים וי"א מכניס אהבה ומוציא את הקנאה

Ezra made ten regulations...That they eat garlic on the eve of Shabbat, on account of the mitzvah to have sexual relations. As it is written [Psalms 1:3]: “He shall be like a tree…that yields its fruit in its proper time,” and Rav Yehuda taught….this verse refers to a person who has sexual intercourse on every eve of Shabbat. The rabbis taught that garlic has five qualities: It satiates and warms the body and brightens the face, it increases semen, and it kills parasites in the intestines. Others add that it instills love and so eliminates jealousy (Bava Kamma 82a)

Many, many years ago I watched a rabbi liberally rubbing garlic into matzah at his home as part of Friday night Shabbat dinner. I thought it was because he liked the taste.  I may have been wrong.

Today, the Talmud (Bava Kamma 82a) lists ten regulations enacted by Ezra when he led the return of the Jewish people from Babylonia to Israel. Some, like reading from the Torah on Mondays and Thursdays, you may have heard of. Others, never became quite so popular. Which brings us to enactment #5: to eat garlic on the eve of Shabbat. The Talmud explains why Ezra decreed (presumably to the men only) that garlic should be eaten on Friday night – because it increases male fertility and Friday night is the prescribed time to have intercourse.  So is the Talmud correct? Does garlic increase fertility? You’d be surprised…

The Medicinal Properties of Garlic

In a 2005 review article from Yeshiva University and the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Ellen Tattleman noted that garlic has been used for medicinal purposes for thousands of years. Sanskrit records show that it has been in use as a medicine for at least 5,000 years, making the Chinese relative newcomers to the garlic industry, since they’ve only been using it for some 3,000 years. The Egyptians, Babylonians, Greeks, and Romans used garlic for healing purposes, and even the great Louis Pasteur noted garlic’s antibacterial activity, in 1858. In case you want to prepare this at home, it is the root bulb of the garlic plant (fresh, dehydrated, or as a steam-distilled oil) that you need to go for.  This bulb contains allicin which is formed when alliin, a sulfur-containing amino acid, comes into contact with the enzyme alliinase. This reaction happens whenever you chop, crush or chew raw garlic. The antimicrobial, lipid-lowering, antioxidant, and anti-clotting effects that have been attributed to garlic are thought to be related to this allicin and other breakdown products. We will return to these medicinal properties later, but for now let’s focus on the effect of garlic on male fertility; after all, that’s what today’s page of Talmud discusses.

Garlic and Sperm Production - in Mice

There is conflicting evidence about the role of garlic on sperm production.  Some studies have shown that it impairs the Leydig and Sertoli cells that are part of the machinery of sperm production – if you are a rat. Other studies have shown that garlic, or rather the allicin that garlic produces, can protect the testes against toxins -if you are a rat, being exposed to these testicular shriveling toxins. When it comes to the sperm themselves, again, the evidence is conflicting.  In mice, garlic has been shown both to increase and to decrease the production of sperm, and scientists have also noted conflicting results about the effect of garlic on testosterone levels.

In 2001 a group of Japanese researchers investigated the pharmacological activities of four garlic preparations, raw garlic juice, garlic powder, heated garlic juice and aged garlic extract, on testicular hypogonadism (hypospermatogenesis and impotence) induced by warm water treatment. The results showed that aged garlic extract at a 4 ml/kg  dose for a couple of weeks significantly enhanced spermatogenesis and improved impotence after warm water treatment of mice. In contrast, the other preparations were only slightly effective.  So perhaps infertile male mice should try garlic on Friday nights.

Overall, the effects of garlic on sperm production - on rodents -  are not clear.  A 2013 review in Andrologia of the impact of garlic on male fertility concludes with these remarks:

In traditional oriental medicine, garlic has been used to improve male sexual dysfunction and to recover testicular functions. But in the literature, there are very few studies about the potential effects of garlic on spermatogenesis (about ten studies), and their results are contradictory. These discrepancies could be related to three main factors (i) the type of preparations, (ii) the way of administration [sic] and (iii) the dose.

Garlic and the Quality of Human Sperm

So much for mice and rats; what about the effect of garlic on human sperm production? It turns out that you can buy a combination antioxidant widely touted to improve male fertility. It is called Menevit, and among other substances, each capsule apparently contains 333 micrograms of garlic oil.   But a 2009 study from Australia found that after three-months of therapy with Menevit® there was no significant change in sperm concentration, motility or morphology, although it did produce a significant reduction in sperm DNA fragmentation. Which is confusing because the same team reported that infertile men treated with Menevit® for the same period of time had an improvement in the levels of sperm global DNA methylation, though whether that is a marker of anything important is not clear.  If you are confused, so are the experts. Here is what one expert review concluded, in the excitingly titled Male Infertility: Contemporary Clinical Approaches:

The present body of evidence surrounding the treatment of male factor infertility with antioxidants is difficult to critically interpret because of less than ideal study design (not screening for oxidative stress at enrollment, sperm quality as a primary endpoint instead of pregnancy and a lack of concurrent placebo controls). Furthermore, the use of a large number of different types and dosages of antioxidant and the lack of adequately powered studies to analyse pregnancy outcomes precludes definitive conclusions being made… Firm conclusions relating to antioxidant therapies ability to improve sperm concentration, motility and morphology is presently impossible due to the abundance of contradictory results and inadequately controlled studies.

are there Other Benefits of Garlic?

So the evidence that garlic does anything useful to sperm production is, um, not great. But what about the other widely touted health benefits of garlic? For example, some claim that garlic lowers your lipids, and in a study published in the prestigious Journal of the American Medical Association, garlic appeared to be have a real, but modest effect on lowering cholesterol, when compared to placebo.  There is also a claim that garlic lowers your blood pressure. In a meta-analysis (which is an analysis of many trials lumped together) of 23 trials, only three showed a statistically significant reduction in diastolic blood pressure and one showed a statistically significant reduction in systolic blood pressure (approximately 3 percent) in patients treated with garlic compared with placebo. There are claims that garlic can prevent cancer, and slow the onset of atherosclerosis. Here is a summary from my colleagues at the National Center for Complementary in Integrative Medicine, part of the National Institutes of Health:

  • Some evidence indicates that taking garlic can slightly lower blood cholesterol levels; studies have shown positive effects for short-term (1 to 3 months) use. However, an NCCIH-funded study on the safety and effectiveness of three garlic preparations (fresh garlic, dried powdered garlic tablets, and aged garlic extract tablets) for lowering blood cholesterol levels found no effect.

  • Preliminary research suggests that taking garlic may slow the development of atherosclerosis (hardening of the arteries), a condition that can lead to heart disease or stroke

  • Evidence suggests that taking garlic may slightly lower blood pressure, particularly in people with high blood pressure. 

  • Some studies suggest consuming garlic as a regular part of the diet may lower the risk of certain cancers. However, no clinical trials have examined this. A clinical trial on the long-term use of garlic supplements to prevent stomach cancer found no effect.

Antimicrobial properties (inhibition of growth or killing)of 30 spices. All spices inhibit some species of food-spoilage bacteria they have been tested on, and about half inhibit 75% of bacteria. From Billing J. and Sherman, P.W. Antimicrobial Functions of Spices: Why Some Like it Hot. The Quarterly Review of Biology, Mar., 1998, Vol. 73, No. 1 (Mar., 1998), pp. 3-49

And if you are tempted to take a garlic containing pill, because "why not, it can't do any harm" please bear in mind that although it appears to be safe for most adults:

  • Side effects include breath and body odor, heartburn, upset stomach, and allergic reactions. These side effects are more common with raw garlic.

  • Garlic can thin the blood (reduce the ability of blood to clot) in a manner similar to aspirin. This effect may be a problem during or after surgery. So use garlic with caution if you are planning to have surgery or dental work, or if you have a bleeding disorder.

  • Garlic has been found to interfere with the effectiveness of  a drug used to treat HIV infection. Garlic may also interfere with other drugs, though this has not been well studied.

The more things change, the more they stay the same.

In today's page of Talmud it was claimed that garlic does many different things: "It satiates and warms the body and brightens the face, it increases semen, and it kills parasites in the intestines, and it instills love and so eliminates jealousy." How strange then to note that today the supposed health effects of garlic are widely touted.  Plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose.  

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Bava Kamma 81a ~ Open Defecation

On today’s page of Talmud we read about ten conditions which Joshua stipulated when he divided up the Land of Israel between the tribes. These include the right of all to pasture animals in a privately owned forest, the right of all to fish from the Kinneret (called then the “Tiberias”) using hooks, and the right to draw water from a new privately owned spring. But today we will discuss another of these conditions. The right to defecate in public.

בבא קמא פא, א

וְנִפְנִין לַאֲחוֹרֵי הַגָּדֵר, וַאֲפִילּוּ בְּשָׂדֶה מְלֵיאָה כַּרְכּוֹם

And people shall have the right to relieve themselves outdoors behind a fence, even in a field that is full of saffron [karkom].

The Talmud then outlines the details of this public right:

בבא קמא פא, ב

אָמַר רַב אַחָא בַּר יַעֲקֹב לֹא נִצְרְכָה אֶלָּא לִיטּוֹל הֵימֶנּוּ צְרוֹר. אָמַר רַב חִסְדָּא: וַאֲפִילּוּ בְּשַׁבָּת. מָר זוּטְרָא חֲסִידָא שָׁקֵיל וּמַהְדַּר, וַאֲמַר לֵיהּ לְשַׁמָּעֵיהּ (לִמְחַר): זִיל שִׁירְקֵיה

Rav Aḥa bar Ya’akov said: It goes without saying that one may relieve himself when necessary; this stipulation is necessary only to permit the one relieving himself to take a stone out of a wall in the field with which to clean himself. Rav Chisda said: And it is permitted to remove a stone from a wall for this purpose even on Shabbat. Mar Zutra the Pious would take a stone in this manner on Shabbat and replace it in the wall, and say to his attendant after Shabbat: Go and plaster it over, so that it would fit securely back in the wall.

So the right even extended to using the stones from another person’s wall to as toilet paper, though for extra credit it should be replaced and plastered over. Thankfully, in rich, modern, liberal western democracies, open defecation is not something most of us need to think about. But it remains a reality for much of the world's population, even here in the US.

Elsewhere in the Talmud, open defecation is discussed, well, openly:

ברכות סב, ב

וְכֵן אָמַר לֵיהּ רַבִּי זֵירָא לְשַׁמָּעֵיהּ: חֲזִי מַאן דְּאִיכָּא אֲחוֹרֵי בֵּית חֶבְרַיָּא, דְּבָעֵינָא לְמִפְנֵי

Rabbi Zeira told his servant: See who is behind the study hall, as I need to defecate…

אָמַר עוּלָּא: אֲחוֹרֵי הַגָּדֵר — נִפְנֶה מִיָּד. וּבַבִּקְעָה, כל זְמַן שֶׁמִּתְעַטֵּשׁ וְאֵין חֲבֵרוֹ שׁוֹמֵעַ. אִיסִי בַּר נָתָן מַתְנֵי הָכִי: אֲחוֹרֵי הַגָּדֵר,כל זְמַן שֶׁמִּתְעַטֵּשׁ וְאֵין חֲבֵרוֹ שׁוֹמֵעַ, וּבַבִּקְעָה — כל זְמַן שֶׁאֵין חֲבֵרוֹ רוֹאֵהוּ 

With regard to where one may or may not go to defecate, Ulla said: Behind a fence, one need not distance himself from people and may defecate immediately. In a valley or open field, one must distance himself sufficiently so that if he passes wind, no one will hear him. Isi bar Natan taught as follows: Behind a fence one must distance himself sufficiently so that if he passes wind another does not hear him, and in a valley, one must distance himself sufficiently so that no one can see him.

During Talmudic times nearly everyone defecated outside. So let’s discuss…open defecation.

Open Defecation - a Worldwide Problem

In 2018 a small team of public health and civil engineering experts conducted a survey of open defecation in the American city of Atlanta. Yes. Atlanta. America’s 37th most populous city, and home to the busiest airport in the world. They identified and mapped thirty-nine open defecation sites, the majority of which were located within just 400 meters of a soup kitchen. San Fransisco has also been challenged with open defecation on its streets. An NBC report last year found more than “300 piles of feces” throughout the downtown area, leading Dr. Lee Riley, an infectious disease expert at the University of California to conclude that areas of the city are even dirtier than the slums in some developing countries.

Image+Stop+Open+Defecation.jpg

As its name implies open defecation is the practice of defecating in the open environment rather than using any kind of toilet. Although great progress has been made in reducing the practice, it still remains a serious challenge to public health. India is likely to be the country that comes to mind in association with open defecation, but that country has in fact made tremendous strides. “Sanitation is more important than independence,” Mahatma Gandhi remarked at a time when more than three-quarters of the population defecated in the open. Just two weeks ago, on the 150th anniversary of Gandhi’s birth, the Prime Minister Narendra Modi declared India free of open defecation. India launched its Swachh Bharat (Clean India) campaign in 2014, and Modi claimed that since then “toilets have been provided to more than 600 million people in 60 months, building more than 110 million toilets…No one was ready to believe earlier that India will become open defecation-free in such a short period of time. Now, it is a reality.” Critics are not convinced that the rates of open defecation have fallen as rapidly as Modi claimed, but there is no doubt the country has made a remarkable effort to improve the situation. According to the World Health Organization, the campaign saved as many as 300,000 deaths.

Defecating in the open is as old as humankind. As long as population densities were low and the earth could safely absorb human wastes, it caused few problems. But as more people gathered in towns and cities, we gradually learned the link between hygiene and health and, in particular, the importance of avoiding contact with feces. Today open defecation is on the decline worldwide, but nearly 950 million people still routinely practice it. Some 569 million of them live in India. Walk along its train tracks or rural roads, and you will readily encounter the evidence.
— National Geographic Magazine, August 2017
The percentage of people defecating in the open air declined worldwide from 1990 to 2015, with the most dramatic reductions in some of the least developed countries. Yet nearly 950 million people still practice this public health hazard. From Nation…

The percentage of people defecating in the open air declined worldwide from 1990 to 2015, with the most dramatic reductions in some of the least developed countries. Yet nearly 950 million people still practice this public health hazard. From National Geographic Magazine, August 2017.

Open defecation, as strange as this may sound to Westerners, offers young women a welcome break from their domestic confines and the oversight of in-laws and husbands
— National Geographic Magazine August 2017.

Bathrooms with locks - a Jewish gift to humanity

Here is a Mishnah that introduces a rather radical notion for the time: lockable latrine stalls:

משנה תמיד כו,א

ומדורה היתה שם ובית הכסא של כבוד זה היה כבודו מצאו נעול יודע שיש שם אדם פתוח בידוע שאין שם אדם

And a fire was burning there [in a tunnel off of the the side of the Temple in Jerusalem]…and there was a bathroom of honor in the Chamber of Immersion. This was its honor: If one found the door closed, he would know that there was a person there, and he would wait for him to exit before entering.

Restored view of Ithidiki’s lavatory on Amorgos, built in the mid-4th century BCE. From G.P. Antoniou, Lavatories in Ancient Greece. Water Science and Technology, Water Supply 7:1; 156-164.

Restored view of Ithidiki’s lavatory on Amorgos, built in the mid-4th century BCE. From G.P. Antoniou, Lavatories in Ancient Greece. Water Science and Technology, Water Supply 7:1; 156-164.

This notion of privacy was not always shared. Prof Ann Olga Kolowki-Ostrow of Brandeis University is the world’s expert about Roman toilets, and author of the fascinating Archaeology of Sanitation in Roman Italy: Toilets, Sewers, and Water Systems. Virtually every home excavated in Pompeii and Herculaneum has its own private toilet she notes, but the Romans used two terms for their toilets, latrina and forica. The latrina was found in a home or private space and was not publicly accessible, whereas the forica was an open plan multi-seat facility. In contrast, the Mishnah and this passage of Talmud remind us that for Jews, the toilet was supposed to be a very private space.

More Advice on Hygiene

The Talmud has with more advice about what today we would call hygiene:

שטוף ושתי [שטוף] ואחית וכשאתה שותה מים שפוך מהן ואח"כ תן לתלמידך 

When you drink wine, rinse the cup first and only then drink from it; after you drink, rinse the cup and only then set it back in its place. But when you drink water, it is not necessary to rinse the cup afterward; rather, pour out some of the water to rinse the rim of the cup, and afterward you may give the cup to your student, if he wants to drink.

The Essenes and Hygiene

Although ancient Judaism often encouraged frequent bathing and the washing of shared utensils, some sects really emphasized it. One of the most well known was the Essenes, a sect that broke away from Jerusalem and whose members lived around the Dead Sea from the second century BCE to the first century CE. It was this sect that gave us the Dead Sea Scrolls, and in the these scrolls are strict rules for where the Essenes were allowed to defecate. According to a report published in Nature, these places had to be “far enough away from the camp not to be visible, sometimes as much as 3,000 cubits (1.4 kilometres) away in a northwesterly direction. They also had to bury their feces and perform a ritual all-over wash in the local waters afterwards.” The report continues:

At Qumran, following such instructions would take the Essene men to a nicely secluded spot behind a mound. And … the soil there bears the hallmarks of a latrine — and one not used by the healthiest of people.

Dead eggs from intestinal parasites, including roundworm (Ascaris), whipworm (Trichuris), tapeworm (Taenia) and pinworm (Enterobius vermicularis), were preserved in the soil. "If you look at a latrine from the past you will always find these parasites," comments Piers Mitchell, a medical practitioner and archaeologist at Imperial College London, UK.

It seems a pretty ordinary picture of ancient ill health, says Mike Turner, a parasitologist at the University of Glasgow, UK. He describes the pinworm rather aptly as "common as muck", adding that to use its presence to argue that the Essenes wrote the Dead Sea Scrolls is "an interesting bit of lateral thinking…”

[One researcher, J. Zias] is certain that the toilet was used by the scrolls' authors. He was already convinced that the Essenes lived at Qumran from previous studies of the local graveyard, which contains remains of almost exclusively men, which fits with the fact that the Essenes were a monastic sect.

What's more, the men buried there had an average age at death of 34, making them a sickly bunch. But it wasn't the toilet parasites that finished them off, Zias suggests, but their ritual of post-poo bathing in a stagnant pool.

Geography worked against the Essenes because the pool in which they cleansed themselves was filled with run-off collected during the winter months. "Had they been living in Jericho 14 kilometers to the north, where one finds fresh spring water, or in other sites whereby one has an oasis, they would have lived quite well," Zias says.

What rotten luck: a religious code that emphasized bathing, but not the cleanliness of the water itself.

Although it lacked any idea about the causes of communicable diseases, the Talmud sometimes contained what we now understand to be very good public health advice. And the requirement to remove human waste far from habitation predates the Talmud. It is found in the text of the Torah itself:

דברים 23:10

וְיָד֙ תִּהְיֶ֣ה לְךָ֔ מִח֖וּץ לַֽמַּחֲנֶ֑ה וְיָצָ֥אתָ שָׁ֖מָּה חֽוּץ׃ 

וְיָתֵ֛ד תִּהְיֶ֥ה לְךָ֖ עַל־אֲזֵנֶ֑ךָ וְהָיָה֙ בְּשִׁבְתְּךָ֣ ח֔וּץ וְחָפַרְתָּ֣ה בָ֔הּ וְשַׁבְתָּ֖ וְכִסִּ֥יתָ אֶת־צֵאָתֶֽךָ׃ 

כִּי֩ יְה-וָ֨ה אֱלֹקיךָ מִתְהַלֵּ֣ךְ ׀ בְּקֶ֣רֶב מַחֲנֶ֗ךָ לְהַצִּֽילְךָ֙ וְלָתֵ֤ת אֹיְבֶ֙יךָ֙ לְפָנֶ֔יךָ וְהָיָ֥ה מַחֲנֶ֖יךָ קָד֑וֹשׁ וְלֹֽא־יִרְאֶ֤ה

בְךָ֙ עֶרְוַ֣ת דָּבָ֔ר וְשָׁ֖ב מֵאַחֲרֶֽיךָ׃

Further, there shall be an area for you outside the camp, where you may relieve yourself. With your gear you shall have a shovel, and when you have squatted you shall dig a hole with it and cover up your excrement. Since the Lord your God moves about in your camp to protect you and to deliver your enemies to you, let your camp be holy; let Him not find anything unseemly among you and turn away from you.

How fortunate we are that we no-longer have to dig our own outside latrines, or hop behind a fence and use a stone for cleanliness. But much of the world is not as fortunate. The Gates Foundation has donated at least $200 million to fix the problem, and if you want to help, click here to donate to the World Toilet Organization. Tell them it’s in honor of Mar Zutra the Pious.

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