An Exegesis Showing  Mitzvoth, not  discussed before in this context, to Save Our Planet Using Traditional Texts  
 including
 The Positive Mitzvah of Publicly Naming  One or Ones Destroying Our Planet
  
 Rabbi Dr. Arthur Segal
  
  
 Shalom my dear Chaverim and Ketivah v' Chasimah Tovah: Peace unto you and  may you be Inscribed and Sealed into the Book of Life.
  
 Shabbat Parasha Noah, this year October 23-24, 2008, Cheshvan 6, 5770, will  be a special Shabbat when congregations and rabbis are asked to pay particular  attention in their sermons, and activities, to help promote Eco-Judaism and the  urgent saving of our Planet. This call is shofared by The Shalom Center and  Rabbi Dr. Arthur Waskow. For more information and about how you and  your congregation can participate in this, email 
office@shalomctr.org. 
   
 I invite you to read and take to heart the below. It is an exegesis using  our traditions and texts to show our moral obligation, and actual mitzvoth, to  be involved in literal Tikun Olam, the repairing of the Planet. Please stay  with me if while reading the beginning you are wondering where I am  heading.
  
  
 The month of Elul is a time of serious self-reflection for Jews in  preparation of the Autumn High Holy days, beginning with Selicoth, moving  into Rosh ha Shana, and ending with Yom Kippur. Elul is a time for Jews,  if we haven't done so each day during the year, to do a complete  written moral inventory of our souls. This ''chesbon ha nefesh'' is to  not only discover our character defects, but to find them objectionable. We  ask   G!d to remove them from us, during our Tashlich ceremony  during Rosh Ha Shana.
  
 When we do our honest Chesbon we will come across names of those that  we owe amends to or may harbor a grudge against. During the day of Selicoth, we,  if we haven't already done so, make teshuvah (amends) to those we have harmed,  and ask G!d to help us forgive those to whom we resent.
  
 By Yom Kippur our slate is hopefully clean. We can begin anew with a  new year hopefully doing more positive mitzvoth and less negative ones. For  those of us needing more time, we actually have until Shemini Atzeret {12  days after Yom Kippur} to finish this task.
  
 During the Holy Days we are continually echoing  prayers to Avenu  Malkeinu, Our Father, Our King. We promise that we will do Tsaddakah and Chesed,  Righteousness and Kindness, to help us atone for chetim, (missings of the mark)  that we have done in our relationship with the Almighty. The bad deeds that we  have done to our fellows, are not atoned on Yom Kippur, unless we do teshuvah to  those human individuals. (Talmud Bavli Tractate Yoma 8:9)
  
 One way we are taught to do Chesed is visiting the sick, called Bikur  Cholim . We are taught that the Shekanah, God's Holy Presence, in the feminine  gender grammatically, and spiritually, sits at the head of the ill.[Yoreh Deah  335]. We are also taught that each of us who visits the sick, removes  1/60th of their illness. (Talmud Bavli Tractate Nedarim  39b).
  
 We are also taught that not visiting the sick is a violation of  "You  shall not stand idly by while your fellow's blood is shed" (Lev.  19:16). We can not think that it is another's responsibility to visit and  care for the sick. We cannot think that one's children or one's neighbors will  care for the old widow, for example. We must. It would be her blood on our hands  if she fell down the stairs to make herself a cup of tea. Our Psalmist taught  "Fortunate is he who cares wisely for the needy. On the day of evil, Ha Shem  will save him" (Ps.41:2). After all, an old sick woman, might be our  own mother, needing aid.
  
 Indeed our Mother is very ill and needs our aid and care. She calls  out:
  
 Pollution, Cain, and misery
Oceans of golden mystery
Armies  boisterous and armies loud
Portraits of a vicious crowd
Talk to me,  talk to me now
Hey man, you're all that I have
Me, myself, myself and  I
Were born to work and born the die
I have chosen my anthems
Of these  I am proud
Portraits of a divided crowd
Talk to me, talk to me  now!
 [Mother Earth Is A Vicious Crowd,Patrick Dahlheimer 1991 (C) ]
  
 Our tradition has many specific rules in visiting the sick. The rich are  required to visit the poor. One should visit a number of times a day unless the  sick person needs to rest. Relatives and close friends visit in the first three  days, and others after. But if the person is seriously ill, visiting and caring  starts immediately.
  
 And interesting rule exists: One should not visit the ill during the first  3 hours of the day as many ill patients look fine and one may not see the need  to come and care for them again. Nor should we visit in the last 3 hours of the  day, as ill people look worse then, and we will not care for them, as we will  despair in their recovery. 
  
 Rabbi Akiva declared that one who does not care for the ill is a shedder of  blood (Talmud Bavli Tractate Nedarim 40a). 
  
 Certainly we can make the short leap that if we are commanded to care and  heal the sick, and that by not doing so we are murderers, we can apply these  very mitzvoth to the saving of our ill Mother Earth as well as all our human  fellows spinning on this blue-green Dreidel around the sun. Ecologically, not  caring for our sick Mother Earth will bring us to 'the day of Evil.' And there  will be no one to rescue us.
  
 The special rule of what hours to visit the sick is set so that  we neither neglect them because we think they are not ill, or because we think  that they are terminal.  We have an obligation to look at our Mother  Earth rationally and honestly, and not hold back care, because of false reports.  Our Mother Earth is not unfixable at this stage, but neither is She is terrific  form, not needing our help. 
  
 Bikur literally means to examine. We have an obligation to discover for  ourselves. When visiting a sick person, we don't just ask the nurse or doctor  how the patient is, we ask the patient, and we determine what we can do to help  them get well and be comfortable. We have the obligation to scientifically view  Mother Earth, and realize that scientist are not ''crying wolf.''
  
 Cholim of course means sick people. When the vowel at the end is changed  and the consonants  are pronounced Cholem, the word means  'dreams.'  Sick folk with fevers have delusional dreams. When they are  lucid they dream of being healed. To be healers, we cannot however be in a  delusional dream, thinking either all is Okay, or all is hopeless. Cholem is  also the vowel, the dot, than when placed over a silent vuv, makes an 'O' sound  as in the vuv in the Ivrit ''Shalom.''   When we visit the cholim we  take away their 'o' and their 'oy', and give them shalom, rest and  silence.
  
 Just as we have rules on caring for the sick in Judaism, we need to develop  rules for caring for Mother Earth. And She needs us now. We need to immediately  care for Earth, putting aside partisan politics and turf wars over private or  government grants.
  
 True Tikun Olam, means we are junior partners with G!d. We are taught that  G!d provides us with remedies and paths to save the world. An example of this is  that He split the Sea of Reeds because the Hebrews carried the Coffin of Joseph,  not forgetting him. When we study what Egyptian sarcophagi looked like with  embalmed dead in them (Joseph was embalmed, Gen. 50:26), and then read later in  the Chumash what our Ark of the Covenant looked like, we realize that  Joseph's coffin was an ark before the Hebrews built a second ark to  carry the Tablets. For most of the 40 years in B'Midbar we carried two  arks, but at the Sea of Reeds, we had Joseph's only. Both the words used for the  Ark of the Covenant and Joseph's coffin are '' aron.''
  
 And what was the merit of Joseph, Zekhut, that earned the Hebrews the  splitting of the Sea? Joseph did not give into his yetzer ha ra and said no to  Mrs. Potiphar when she tried to seduce him. As humans we do give in to daily  enticements as we over -consume the benefits of the Planet. We are seduced by  false science telling us that what we are seeing is some natural cycle that will  do Tikun on itself, as we keep on spilling carbon emissions.
  
 The Slonimer Rebbe, Rabbi Sholom Noach Berezovsky (d. 2000) , in his  Nesivot Sholom, says today's world  ''morally is like the world was at the  time of the Flood, when the spiritual filth is powerful and widespread.'' Now  for those who have studied the Chumash, Talmud and Midrash  and  know the details of what  humans were doing during Noah's  time.  We may see some parallels, but in my opinion we  morally haven't sunk to that level. Noah was the only one ''righteous  in his generation.''  We have plenty of good people today. [If you are  still reading this, you're one of them.] But ecologically we are in a behavioral  sink.
  
 The people of Noah's time were ecologically out of balance. They mated  animals of totally different species, and mixed species of plants and fruit  trees.They had no respect for the seasons. They paid no attention to how  they treated the earth as well as each other. They had no love for Mother Earth  nor for their own mothers.
  
 As we read when the water subsided, plants and trees did just  fine without human interference, as olive trees grew.
  
 Hence scientifically, spiritually, and ecologically we have to care for  sick Mother Earth. Our traditions give us not only permission, but demand that  we do. We cannot continue in ignoring the Earth,  and to  not do active Bikur Cholim and chesed and tsaddakah for our  Mother. We cannot continue to disrespectfully and foolishly  gobble Her up. We can not treat our Mother as if She is a  seductive whore like Potifer's wife, to use and discard. We will cause  the Sea that was split for us for a safe crossing into Life, crash down  on upon us, to drown us as it did to Pharaoh's army, horses and  chariots.  
  
 Just as we have specific rules for caring for the human sick, we must  develop firm rules of how we can care for Mother earth. Further just as the  Noachide covenant after the flood was given to all Humankind,[ including Shem  (Noah's son), who is the father of Semites (Shemites)], so must these rules be  for all humans on our globe. While Jews can look at our texts, as I have  done, and only using one aspect (Bikur Cholim), other faith groups can  review their texts for similar inspiration. When we read our Chumash, the  Noachide covenant was made not only with every human, and every future  generation of humans, but with all animal life, as equal partners.
  
 Hence equal partnership also depends that we learn to live in peace with  one another, and stop fighting over land and resources. If we do not we  will have no Mother Earth to give us land to live on or resources to use.
  
 One aspect of rules for caring for Mother Earth includes outing those  corporations who we know from first hand information and hard facts that are  actively, or passively, killing our Spinning Top, and life on it. I was  discussing this question with Rabbi  Dr. Arthur Waskow, one of the main  pathfinders of Jewish Renewal and founder of the Shalom Center in Philadelphia.  I am honored to be able to do post-ordination (semicha) study with him. What do  our spiritual rules of Lashon Ha Ra say to guide us?
  
 When it comes to Lashon Ha Ra's rules I usually refer to Rabbi Yisrael  Meir  Kagan  (d. 1933) and his texts. His 1873 text ''Desirer of  Life'', (Chofetz Chaim), from Psalm 34:12, earned him the name The Chofetz  Chaim. Along with his ''Guarding of the Tongue'', (Sh'mirat Ha  Lashon ), these two books outline when, in rare incidences, one can talk about  someone else.
  
 Secondhand truthful information, which would ordinarily be considered  rechilut, (spreading gossip of what one heard, as opposed being the primary  person to say it)  and not allowed to be repeated,  may  be communicated for a constructive purpose (l'toelet),  provided that it is  not presented as fact. Regarding lashon ha ra, however, communicating secondhand  information for a constructive purpose is prohibited in most cases.
  
 The Chofetz Chaim explains that ''while  achieving a positive result on the basis of firsthand information is justified  even when the chances for success are minimal, secondhand information may be  used only when one can assume that the intended result will almost certainly be  achieved. Consequently, one may inform one party in a prospective shidduch  (marriage match) or business partnership of possible major problems regarding  the other party  on the basis of hearsay, since such information will  probably be taken very seriously. For the same reason, one may warn a potential  victim of impending danger on the basis of secondhand information.  ''
  
 Conversely, one cannot publicize the  ''alleged unethical behavior of an individual with the hope that social pressure  will encourage him to change his ways or reimburse his victims''. However, and I  will bold this for emphasis, ''this would be permissible only when  one has witness to such behavior.''  The Chofetz Chaim continues  that ''the effectiveness of social pressure in persuading people to change their  ways is far too limited to justify relating secondhand negative information –  even if it is clearly stated that the information has not been  verified.''
  
 Hence, corporations, and their Jewish or  non-Jewish CEOs, and officers, can be publicized in an ad in a newspaper, if  they and/or their corporations are clearly responsible, with first hand  information, for causing harm to Mother Earth. 
  
 We are at the point where polluting our  Mother Earth, including Her atmosphere above, is murder. It kills us right now  and will kill all of us in the near future. To not announce such, when we  have truthful information, and tried at least three times to meet with them to  ask them to change their ways, would put us in the position of sinning, as we  would be letting our neighbors sin without trying to reprove them.  (Lev. 19:17 ). At that point without announcing that they are murdering,  would be allowing a rodef, a pursuer with a knife in his hand, to kill us.  (Talmud Bavli Tractate Sanhedrin 72b). And the Talmud teaches that no one's  blood is more red than another.  (Talmud Bavli Tractate Sanhedrin  74a).
  
 We truly need to teach those who profit on  the Rape of our Mother Earth are like those "who are apparently rich, but  in truth have nothing" (Prov. 13:7). And we must teach that they are  raping, and stealing and doing Chamas, to every other human on the  Planet.
  
 The  Chofetz Chaim  teaches that the Torah demands us to judge our  fellow with favor.  We are to not conclude that he has sinned. We  must try to think of an alternative way of explaining his acts. Even  when we are sure someone has sinned, we still must give him the benefit of the  doubt, that he sinned out of ignorance. We have an obligation to reprove,  if they are willing to listen.  
  Giving someone the benefit  of the doubt cannot not be done at the expense of another. If one has  witnessed with first hand evidence that one person or persons is attempting or  actually has harmed another, the Chofetz Chaim teaches that ''the need for  accuracy does not require an attempt at justifying the perpetrator's  motives. Even if the act is out of character, it must be rectified, and one  may, therefore, inform the appropriate parties.''
 The ''appropriate parties''  for a corporation , or a government, attempting to kill Mother Earth is all of  humanity. "Nor shall you take a stand against the life of your  neighbor: I am the Lord.''(Lev. 19:16). We are all neighbors on Mother Earth,  and those who are destroying it, which is practically everyone on this Planet in  some small way, make us rodefim of each other, and frankly suicidal. 
 The 4th utterance of the  Tablets states : "Honor your father and your mother, that your days may be long  upon the land which the Lord your God is giving you,"(Ex.  20:12).  Dishonoring our Mother Earth, by hurting Her, and not caring  for Her now when She is extremely ill, will literally make  humankind's  days short upon Her.
 Oh,  Mother Earth,
With your fields of green
Once more laid down
by the  hungry hand
How long can you
give and not receive
And feed this  world
ruled by greed
And feed this world
ruled by greed.
Oh,  ball of fire
In the summer sky
Your healing light,
your parade of  days
Are they betrayed
by the men of power
Who hold this world
in  their changing hands
They hold the world
in their changing  hands.
Oh, freedom land
Can you let this go
Down to the  streets
where the numbers grow
Respect Mother Earth
and her giving  ways
Or trade away
our children's days
Or trade away
our children's  days.
Respect Mother Earth
and her giving ways
Or trade away
our  children's days.
 Neil Young & Crazy  Horse
 Ragged Glory,  1990, (C)
 Shalom:
 Rabbi Dr. Arthur  Segal
 HILTON HEAD ISLAND, SC, 
 BLUFFTON, SC
 SAVANNAH, GA
 JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL
 JEWISH RENEWAL
 JEWISH SPIRITUALITY
 ECO-JUDAISM
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         Rabbi Dr. Arthur Segal distills millennia of sage        advice into a step-by-step process to reclaim your Judaism and your        spirituality in a concise easy-to-read and easy-to-follow manner.        
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         Rabbi Dr. Arthur Segal dissects each of the Torah's        weekly sections (parashot) using the Talmud and other rabbinic texts to        show the true Jewish take on what the Torah is trying to teach us. This        companion to The Handbook to Jewish Spiritual Renewal: A Path of        Transformation for the Modern Jew brings the Torah alive with daily        relevance to the Modern Jew. 
  All of the Torah can be summed up in        one word: Chesed. It means kindness. The Talmud teaches that the Torah is        about loving our fellow man and that we are to go and study. The rest is        commentary. This compendium clarifies the commentary and allows one to        study Torah and Talmud to learn the Judaic ideals of love, forgiveness,        kindness, mercy and peace. A must read for all Jews and deserves a place        in every Jewish home. 
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A Spiritual and Ethical Compendium to the Torah and Talmud    dissects each of the Torah's weekly sections (parashot) using the Talmud and    other rabbinic texts to show the true Jewish take on what the Torah is trying    to teach us. 
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 RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL
 HILTON HEAD ISLAND, SC, 
 BLUFFTON, SC
 SAVANNAH, GA
 JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL
 JEWISH RENEWAL
 JEWISH SPIRITUALITY
 ECO-JUDAISM