Keep Calm and Consult a Priest

Tazria By :  Hillel Gruenberg Former Director of Israel Engagement, 91快播 Posted On Apr 8, 2016 / 5776 | 讚讘专 讗讞专 | A Different Perspective

Tazria begins with a discussion of the ritual purity of a woman following childbirth and goes on to relate the treatment of leprosy. Reflecting on this juxtaposition of topics, my thoughts turned to the Zika virus, which has garnered global attention because of evidence it may cause birth defects in the children of mothers infected while pregnant.

The Centers for Disease Control advisory above reflects a measured response to an outbreak of a disease that might easily cause panic among under- (or over-) informed members of the public. The advisory omits the details of the worst outcomes associated with the disease, and explicitly directs concerned mothers-to-be to talk with a doctor, rather than to independently seek details about a potential affliction鈥攁ll too tempting, as well as potentially fraught, in our information-saturated age, as anyone who has checked WebMD for a routine rash or stomachache knows.

The text in Tazria similarly provides a restrained response to leprosy, providing a methodical, step-by-step approach to a disease that one midrash explicitly associates with the Children of Israel 鈥済oing wild鈥 (ki ha鈥檃m 辫补谤耻鈥檃; Lev. Rabbah 17:3). Putting aside the elements of this treatment that seem primitive by modern standards, this week鈥檚 parashah sets a clear standard for how leaders, in this case the priests, should deal with disease鈥攏ot only addressing the physical health of the infected or those vulnerable to infection, but also working to prevent an unnecessary panic about contagion among ill-informed members of the community.