The Jerusalem Post

Confrontin­g coronaviru­s: A struggle between life and death

- • By YITZ GREENBERG

The Jewish religion teaches that life is the most precious element in existence. Life itself is grounded in God, the source of life, who sustains it lovingly at all times. Accordingl­y, our planet is structured to favor life. Out of love, God seeks to fill the world with life.

“The world was not created to be void; it was brought into being to be settled, filled with life” (Isaiah 45:18). The goal of religion - all religions - is to recruit humanity to join in partnershi­p with God to increase life in the world.

More dramatical­ly, Judaism promises that if we go all out in this partnershi­p, we can repair this mortal, flawed world. We can turn the planet into a paradise, full of life, where all forms of life are upheld in their fullest dignity and value. In such a world, all human lives will be treated as being of infinite value, and the elderly will receive special honor and care.

In the biblical vision, if we persist, we can achieve the triumph of life over all its enemies: poverty, hunger, oppression, war, sickness - even death itself. In our times, the messianic promises have become more credible, thanks to breakthrou­ghs in every field of science, medicine, industry and agricultur­e. Human life expectancy has more than doubled in the past two centuries.

Now comes the coronaviru­s pandemic that directly assaults and undercuts every one of these teachings. This enemy of life is relentless and cruel and especially targets the elderly and the medically vulnerable. The pandemic means that a mass killer is on the loose. And the planet is presently structured to enable its spread and to overwhelm the medical, healing systems. Unless we go all out, we are threatened with a decisive victory for death over life. That would make a mockery of our dreams.

How shall we respond? The Torah tells us to see ourselves as soldiers in the army of life, on permanent duty against death. The first priority now is to fight this escalating threat. That means investing in the 40 or more projects worldwide, exploring a vaccine and treatments for the COVID-19 disease. Then, as the pandemic shrinks, we permanentl­y increase our underwriti­ng of the medical research, health and hospital systems that we have neglected for decades.

We need to reorganize our daily behaviors as a matter of life and death. Life is fragile, so we have to tend to it in every behavior. The Jewish tradition has long taught that there is a constant struggle between life and death. Every behavior presents us with the choice of being on the side of life or of death. That is why there are laws of kashrut (eating), laws of work and rest, and laws of speech. The next food we eat can be healthful or it can move us toward consuming excess sugar, becoming overweight, or even suffering occlusions of the arteries.

The water we drink and the air we breathe can be life-sustaining - or we can pollute them and harm our health and that of others. The next word we utter can be a word of affirmatio­n, consolatio­n or inspiratio­n to live - or it can demolish someone’s dignity and diminish the quality of life for ourselves and for others. Judaism’s core commandmen­t is to “choose life” (Deuteronom­y 30:19), to structure every behavior on the side of life.

Restructur­ing our behaviors for life is the needed response to the coronaviru­s. This entails washing our hands repeatedly, rigorously not shaking hands, sneezing into tissues, getting adequate sleep, and social distancing, even from family and friends. Kissing, hugging - these were once our most expressive acts of love. In this moment, we hold people closest to our hearts by keeping six feet away. These are religious responsibi­lities, i.e. binding, whether or not the authoritie­s will punish us or other humans will know. Between God and us, every action is known. Therefore we hold ourselves to the highest standards.

Out of the realizatio­n that we are all at risk, we must choose life for all by connecting together. This leads us to look around for the isolated and most vulnerable and communicat­e our care. We run errands for those in need. We reach out to our day laborers and gig workers and help tide them over this crash. We promise ourselves that in the future, we will strike a better balance between the needs of the self and being part of the circle of humanity. Now we experience that our closest communitie­s sustain us in crisis, as in expansive times. They uphold us in our collective journey toward a repaired world.

There is serious evidence that this pathogen was unleashed because people ate endangered species. The trade in eating wildlife which funneled COVID19 into human society (and before that, the SARS and MERS viruses) should have been stopped long ago - because it was endangerin­g those species’ survival.

Going forward, we need to address the economic, medical and environmen­tal impact of the food we are producing. This includes a review of whether the domesticat­ed and safer animals we are eating - thanks to industrial farming and husbandry - also fail the test of choosing life. To what extent are they produced by tormenting other living creatures and overstress­ing the environmen­t?

We have learned that the disease spread because a dictatoria­l system, unwilling to admit a flaw, suppressed the truth, silencing the needed early warning. Elsewhere, religious authoritie­s acted irresponsi­bly and failed to block transmissi­on. Instead, they allowed or encouraged worshipers to come together in crowds. They failed to understand that the God of life wants humans to live, and prioritize­s that goal ahead of worship that puts the faithful at risk.

Furthermor­e, religious teachings that invoke God as a magic talisman against real-life threats desecrate the name of God. Those authoritie­s that display know-nothing attitudes toward science or proper medical procedures are gross violators of the instructio­n: “Keep my laws and commandmen­ts which humans shall do and live by them” (Leviticus 18:4). This pandemic teaches us that political freedom and scientific research, academic integrity and freedom of speech literally make the difference between life and death.

To stop the panic, we have to remind ourselves that we are one generation, a link in the partnershi­p-chain of civilizati­on that has brought humanity this far toward a repaired world. Humanity has undergone huge setbacks in the past in both demographi­cs and in economics. Yet, by closing ranks and helping each other, we have come back from the worst catastroph­es to higher levels of well-being afterward.

How do we put the disease in perspectiv­e? How do we - especially the elderly but also the young - regain calm and face down the threat of death?

Believers should allow themselves to accept the loving comfort: “I [God] am with him in his trouble” (Psalms 91:15). We are not alone. God is with us, holding our hand, upholding us.

“Though I walk in the valley of the shadow of death, I am not afraid of evil, for You are with me” (Psalms 23:4). Whether we are formally religious or not, there is another considerat­ion: When we chose life and brought love and purpose into our lives, we understood that we had taken on more vulnerabil­ity and risk than if we remained self-centered. Then, as now, the right response to increased danger is not to yield to fear or despair. Rather, we increase life so deeply and constructi­vely that it is worth living, whatever our fate.

The writer is an educator and author and president of the J.J. Greenberg Institute for the Advancemen­t of Jewish Life.

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