Interfaith Insight - 2020
Permanent link for "Abraham Joshua Heschel, Jewish prophet for our time" by Doug Kindschi on September 22, 2020
“I felt my legs were praying.” These are the words of the famed
Jewish scholar Abraham Joshua Heschel, when he reflected on his
participation with Martin Luther King, Jr. in the Selma march for
voter rights in 1965. This week, falling between the two High Holy
Days in the Jewish tradition, is an appropriate time to recall
Heschel’s influence in the civil rights movement over 50 years ago.
Last Friday evening began Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year, and next
Sunday evening is the beginning of Yom Kippur. These days for the
Jewish community focus on introspection and repentance concluding with
Yom Kippur.
Perhaps it is a time for all of us to reflect on the failure in
our society to fully incorporate all members of our community
regardless of race, religion, or national origin. Heschel, born in
Poland and ordained as an Orthodox rabbi, received his Ph.D. from the
University of Berlin, but was then expelled from Germany and
eventually came to America. Sadly, however, his mother and two sisters
did not survive the Nazi atrocities.
Arriving in America in 1940, he served as a professor at Hebrew
Union College and then at the Jewish Theological Seminary in New York
City. Heschel published 17 books and dozens of articles and is
considered one of the leading Jewish theologians of the 20th century.
Heschel was well known for his role in the civil rights movement and
his relationship with Dr. King. He was featured along with King, John
Lewis, and other faith leaders, in the front row of the famed Selma
march to Montgomery on behalf of voter rights for African-American
citizens.
For Heschel and for King, civil rights was
an interfaith endeavor. King was also very influenced by the Hindu
organizer Mahatma Gandhi and his commitment to nonviolence. Heschel
and King met in 1963, two years prior to the Selma march, at a Chicago
conference on Religion and Race. Heschel gave the opening address and
noted that the first conference on religion and race featured Pharaoh
and Moses, but that the outcome of that summit had not come to an end.
He continued, “Pharaoh is not ready to capitulate. The exodus began,
but is far from having been completed. In fact, it was easier for the
children of Israel to cross the Red Sea than for a Negro to cross
certain university campuses.”
Heschel told the gathering that religion is to unite what divides
and that humanity “as a whole is God’s beloved child.” He called
racism worse than idolatry, an unmitigated evil, “man’s gravest threat
to man,” and “a deadly poison that inflames the eye.”
In today’s call for racial justice it is often noted that
systemic racism is a problem for the white community to address. Only
those with power can correct the inequities in the system. Heschel,
nearly 60 years earlier, addressed our collective responsibility in
language relevant today. So here follows a number of important
excerpts from his Chicago speech:
One hundred years ago the emancipation was proclaimed. It is time for the white man to strive for self-emancipation, to set himself free of bigotry, to stop being a slave to wholesale contempt.
What afflicts my conscience is that my face, whose skin happens not
to be dark, instead of radiating the likeness of God, has come to be
taken as an image of haughty assumption and overbearance. Whether
justified or not, I, the white man, have become in the eyes of others
a symbol of arrogance and pretension, giving offense to other human
beings, hurting their pride, even without intending it. My very
presence inflicting insult!
Daily we patronize institutions which are visible manifestations
of arrogance toward those whose skin differs from ours. Daily we
cooperate with people who are guilty of active discrimination.
Most of us are content to delegate the problem to the courts, as
if justice were a matter for professionals or specialists. But to do
justice is what God demands of every man: it is the supreme
commandment, and one that cannot be fulfilled vicariously.
There is an evil which most of us condone and are even guilty
of: indifference to evil. We remain neutral, impartial, and not easily
moved by the wrongs done unto other people.
It is time for the white man to repent. We have failed to use the
avenues open to us to educate the hearts and minds of men, to identify
ourselves with those who are underprivileged. But repentance is more
than contrition and remorse for sins, for harms done. Repentance means
a new insight, a new spirit. It also means a course of action.
His attitude can be summed up in his oft-quoted statement that in
a free society, “Some are guilty, but all are responsible.” As
individuals we may not be guilty of our nation’s historical slavery,
or Jim Crow laws, or specific overt acts of racism, but we are
participants in a free society with the right to vote and act in ways
to change the actions, policies, and practices of our institutions.
King referred to Heschel as a modern-day prophet and they
remained friends and colleagues in the civil rights efforts of that day.
Susannah Heschel tells of her father’s appointment as a visiting
professor at the Protestant Union Theological Seminary. His inaugural
lecture was titled “No Religion Is an Island.” Heschel may have
differed in theology with others on that Selma march, but they all
shared the religious and ethical demand for justice and the treatment
of all persons as children of God. The civil rights movement of the
‘60s was an interfaith effort. Today we must join together from our
various faith commitments to continue that religious imperative. As
Heschel relayed in his Chicago address, we must not “worry more about
the purity of our dogma than about the integrity of our love.”
Heschel’s daughter, Susannah Heschel, is a professor of Judaic
Studies at Dartmouth College and gave a lecture in 2017 on the
relationship between King and her father. She tells of her own visit
to Selma and visiting the home of Dr. and Mrs. Sullivan Jackson, where
King and others including Heschel were staying prior to the march. As
Mrs. Jackson came into the living room that morning she saw many still
sleeping, but noticed King in one part of the room praying while
Heschel was in another part, also praying. For both of them and for
most of the others, this was a religious issue. It was a justice issue
motivated by their various religious beliefs. Those early morning
prayers of Heschel transferred later to what he described as feeling
that his “legs were praying” as they marched together from Selma to
Montgomery that morning. Susannah Heschel’s entire lecture is
available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bQfJHfIBGog
Heschel concluded his talk at the Chicago conference on Religion
and Race, quoting, as King often did, the words of the prophet Amos:
Let justice roll down like waters,
and righteousness like a
mighty stream. (Amos 5:24)
During our current challenges, let us join efforts across
all religious traditions to seek such a justice for all of God’s children.