The Jewish View of Ecology and the Environment
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ankind’s relationship with his environment, an oft-neglected issue throughout much of human history, has developed into one of the major concerns of the day. Science has highlighted the fragility of the world’s ecosystems and has raised concern for the environment that we live in. This concern is not merely a remote, theoretical worry, but one that can have an impact on the way we currently live our lives. It is difficult to remain aloof amidst the many threats, such as air pollution, natural resource depletion and overpopulation, that ecologists and environmentalists assert are facing the planet we live on. This topic differs from others treated in the Morasha syllabus project. Environmentalism is not in its core a Jewish movement, and we make no attempt to steal its thunder or appropriate its successes as our own. In presenting a class on the Jewish view of environmentalism, we have a much more modest agenda. First, this class comes to debunk the myth that Judaism is against environmentalism. Second, we will see that Jewish teachings and Jewish law have promoted a certain kind of environmental awareness, an antipathy for the wasting of natural resources, a sensitivity to the treatment of animals, and concern for the wellbeing of public space. Overall, the Jewish sources articulate a philosophically well-grounded environmental ethic. The Torah teaches that God created the world for the benefit of mankind, and yet this right is also a responsibility. The world belongs to God and we are its stewards, charged with the exalted task of working and guarding it. This basic point is borne out by the mitzvot of the Torah and the teachings of Judaism’s greatest sages. Through the prism of the Torah’s moral and legal guidelines, we will discover an environmental ethic that can guide our thinking on today’s major ecological issues. But let us be clear, Judaism does not demand that we become environmentalists, and there certainly is no direct line from the Torah to the kind of aggressive activism so prevalent in the environmental movement today. Nevertheless, for those for whom environmentalism is already a value and a virtue, they will find within the sources presented below solace, support, and hopefully further inspiration in their quest to protect our planet. Therefore, this class will seek answers to the following questions: Do we have the right to utilize this world in whatever way we please? On what basis should people curtail their consumption of natural resources? What does the Torah say about population control? What perspective on nature can we learn from the classical Jewish sources? How does Judaism promote concern for biodiversity? Is it ever permissible to make use of natural resources without regard for their destruction?
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Ecology and the Environment