Re'eh(Deuteronomy 11:26-16:17)

If Dogs Could Talk

Would you rather be blind or deaf? God forbid it should ever happen, but let's say you had to make a choice between having your sense of sight be removed or your sense of hearing. Which of the two would you rather have? An idea from this week's Parsha weighs in on this question.

The very first verse (Devarim 11:26) states: "SEE, I have placed before you today, blessings and curses." Did God place anything tangible and visible before them? No, God was describing intellectual concepts of blessings and curses. So what did He mean when He said, "See"?

Obviously, the word "see" is used here to refer to a comprehension. We use "see" in reference to an understanding of something as in, "Do you see what I'm telling you?" because sight is our most reliable and strongest sense. (See Radak in Zecharyah 1:9.)

In order to explain this idea, let's take a dog and his sense of smell as an example. Since a dog's most reliable and strongest sense is that of smell, if he could speak and wanted to convey his grasp of an idea, he would say, "I smell it! Now I understand what you mean."

If sight is our strongest sense and is therefore the reason why our Parsha begins with that word, we are led to some questions. First, there are times the Torah uses the word "hear" to refer to understanding. For example, "Hear, Israel, God, Our Lord, God is One." Why wouldn't the Torah always use the word "see" in allusion to internalizing a comprehension of something if it is our most reliable sense?

In addition, if sight is our strongest sense, one should be more seriously liable for blinding someone than for deafening a person. Yet, the Talmud Baba Kama 85b, rules that if you deafen someone you must pay much more than if you blinded him. The opposite should be the case!

In order to answer both of these questions, we must introduce another factor into the equation beyond the issue of strongest and most reliable sense. That issue is communication with others.

Helen Keller once said, "If you would ask me: if I could have one of my senses back, either sight or hearing, which would I choose? I would choose hearing. Being blind cuts you off from the world but being deaf cuts you off from relating and communicating with people. I choose people over the world."

Hearing is more valuable when it comes to paying damages because losing the ability to relate and share with others is a more serious deprivation. Sight may be our strongest sense but human relationships and communication is more vital to human existence.

The Torah wishes to convey different and specific messages when it chooses to use either "see" or "hear" to mean an understanding of something. When the Torah uses the word "shema," "hear," the indication is that we are to make a commitment which involves our intellect.

"Re'eh," - to see - means we are to make a commitment that involves our emotions. To "hear" requires a greater and deeper understanding, and to "see" requires a greater reaction to an understanding that is already present.

"Hearing" requires a greater and deeper understanding because when we are able to hear someone we are able to truly communicate well with them. (As significant as sign language is for the hearing impaired, it can't fully replace the highest and deepest levels of communication between people that is experienced through hearing.) "Sight" is used to garner our emotions to a great reaction for an understanding that we already have because sight is our strongest and most reliable sense. Seeing really is believing and I can commit to something much more easily when I see it rather than if I only hear it.

This explains a most fascinating difference in phraseology between the Zohar and the Talmud. Very often, when the Talmud presents new information and facts, the introductory phrase, "Come and hear," in Aramaic "Ta Shema," is used. When the Zohar presents new information, the introductory phrase, "Come and see," "Yuh chazi," is utilized. Why the difference?

According to what we have discussed, it becomes clear. Talmud includes all of the revealed, rational Torah, which is known as "nigleh," revealed. This section of Torah entails great and profound logical thought, and understanding of the intellect. This is why "hearing" is most necessary since "hearing" achieves clear communication on a rational plain.

Zohar is the chief work of Jewish mysticism and goes beyond the realm of rationale and logic to the world of the supernatural and the hidden. It is "nistar," the concealed Torah. "Seeing" is the sense that can rouse our emotions to a great reaction and the Zohar's main function is to strengthen our passions and emotions for our soul and spirit. This is why Rabbi Avraham Yeshaya Karelitz (circa 1940, known as the Chazon Ish) would say that when learning Zohar one experiences the sweetness of our Father in Heaven.

In the first verse in Parshat Re'eh, "see" is most appropriate based on the subject matter. God is describing a ceremony of oaths for the observance of the Torah that involve blessings and curses. This ceremony wouldn't take place until much later, after the Jews would cross the Jordan River into Israel. Why then does God say, "See, I have placed before you TODAY, blessings and curses"? The blessings and curses were not being placed before them right now, so why say "today"?

There IS something that is taking place today. God is transmitting the knowledge and awareness that there will be a ceremony of blessings and curses. This event requires a tremendous amount of preparation and the Jewish people need to be made aware of this way in advance - "today." "Today" is meant for them to internalize and make a commitment that involves their emotions to prepare for the awesome event of the blessings and curses. It is not something to be dealt with in the distant future. It is to be reckoned with and prepared for now - today.

See what I'm saying?

Published: Saturday, July 27, 2002

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Visitor Comments: 4

  • (4) ruth housman , August 9, 2009

    seeing

    There are different ways of seeing. Perhaps hearing is a way of seeing, but being deaf does not necessarily mean being deaf to that inner voice, which impels us all, and I say it's the voice of love. I wondered how Helen Keller managed, and yet, she communicated, being both deaf and without sight, and she communicated her soul, more than most, in her most eloquent and sensitive words about the universe. So I am saying, when we are removed from sight or from hearing or from both, there is something inside that does work for us, and God works miracles in diverse ways, so that nobody, without hearing does not "hear" and nobody without sight, does not "see". In fact, I would say, deeply, that all senses are related and to lose one, is not necessarily what one thinks. I am so grateful for both but I know people and have worked with people who have a different way of seeing and hearing, and I would say, they do communicate. I too have been immersed deeply in that book of Splendor. This is the time of the blooming here in New England of Rose of Sharon, and I think, the messages everywhere, that we all get, are profound and even, Biblical, because everything has a one ness, a beautiful one ness, and so too man, in depriving man of a sense, there is a sense in which man is also gifted. We learn from each other and right now it's surely about "the music".

  • (3) wilson fer , August 9, 2004

    I see what you are saying. Many things our eyes can not see. Just our souls.

  • (2) Anonymous , July 29, 2002

    Great Reinforcement!

    Thanks Rabbi Leff for reminding us of these ideas and adding onto them even more.

  • (1) Anonymous , July 29, 2002

    Hearing the Vibrations - Nature Article

    Hearing the vibrations by
    HELEN PHILLIPS

    It is well known that when the brain is starved of sensory information early in life, it can adapt, and the deprived region may develop very differently. In addition, there are many reports of blind people with highly sensitive hearing and enhanced touch sensitivity brought about as they learn Braille, and deaf musicians report that they sense music through vibrations. But there has not been any direct proof that a deprived sensory region of the human brain can take over the role of any other sense. Now it seems that this can happen.

    In Current Biology, S. Levänen of Helsinki University of Technology in Espoo, Finland, and colleagues, report that vibrations applied to the palm and fingers of a deaf adult activated the parts of the brain usually responsible for hearing.

    Complete Article:
    http://www.nature.com/nsu/980813/980813-3.html

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Rabbi Boruch Leff

Rabbi Boruch Leff is a vice-principal at Torah Institute in Baltimore and is the author of the Kol Yaakov column at Aish.com.
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