II. Animal Welfare
THE CORE IDEA
Ki Tetzeh is about relationships: between men and women, parents and children, employers and employees, lenders and borrowers. Interestingly, though, it is also about relationships between humans and animals.
Descartes (a seventeenth-century French philosopher and scientist) thought that animals lacked souls. So he said that you could do with them as you pleased. Judaism does not believe that animals lack souls – “The righteous person cares about the nefesh of their animal,” says the book of Mishlei (12:10). To be sure, nefesh here probably means “life” rather than “soul” (neshama in Hebrew). But Tanakh does regard animals as conscious beings. They may not speak, but they do feel. They are capable of distress. Therefore there is such a thing as animal distress, tzaar baalei ḥayim, and as far as possible it should be avoided.
So we read in Parashat Ki Tetzeh: “Do not plough with an ox and donkey together” (Devarim 22:10). The ox is stronger than a donkey, so expecting the donkey to match the work of an ox is cruel. Each animal species has a unique role in the scheme of creation that we must respect.
Another law is: “Do not muzzle an ox when it is treading grain” (Devarim 25:4). What is striking about this law is that it is parallel to a similar law concerning human beings as well: “When you come [to work] in your neighbour’s vineyard, you may eat as many grapes as you desire to satisfy your hunger.... When you come [to work] in your neighbour’s standing grain, you may take the ears with your hand” (Devarim 23:25–26). The principle is the same in both cases: it is cruel to prevent those working with food from eating some of it. The parallel laws send a clear message. Animals, not just humans, have feelings, and they must be well treated.
QUESTIONS TO PONDER
1. How do the mitzvot mentioned in the parasha show an ethical concern for animals?
2. Why do you think these mitzvot are in a parasha that talks mainly about human relationships?
3. Why do you think the Torah is concerned with ethical behaviour towards animals?
IT ONCE HAPPENED…
One day as Rabbi Yehuda HaNasi was walking in the marketplace, a young calf broke free from its master and took refuge in the coat Rabbi Yehuda HaNasi was wearing. The calf was being led to the slaughterhouse that day, and crying, he looked up at Rabbi Yehuda with pleading eyes as he hid in the folds of the Rabbi’s coat.
Rabbi Yehuda said to the animal: “Go, because this was the reason for which you were created!”
At that moment, the angels in heaven declared: “Since Rabbi Yehuda HaNasi was not compassionate towards the calf, let him suffer himself!” From that day on he suffered terrible pain, until, thirteen years later, another incident occurred. On that day his maidservant was sweeping his house when she discovered a family of weasels taking shelter. She began to sweep them away and out of the house when Rabbi Yehuda HaNasi stopped her, and declared: “Leave them be! It says in Tehillim, ‘The Lord is good to all. He shows mercy to all His creations’” (Tehillim 145:9). The angels in heaven then said: “Since he showed compassion here, we will show him compassion,” and his pain ended that day.
Adapted from Talmud Bavli, Bava Metzia 85a
QUESTIONS TO PONDER
1. Was Rabbi Yehuda HaNasi wrong to send the calf to its death?
2. Why was he punished?
THINKING MORE DEEPLY
The most fascinating animal legislation in this parasha is the law of sending the mother bird away:
“If you come across a bird’s nest beside the road, either in a tree or on the ground, and the mother is sitting on the young or on the eggs, do not take the mother with the young. You may take the young, but be sure to let the mother go, so that it may go well with you and you may have a long life” (Devarim 22:6–7).
Much has been written on this command. Here we discuss only the analysis given by Rambam, fascinating in its complexity. There is a law that appears twice in the Mishna, stating that if a leader of prayer says, “Your mercies extend even to a bird’s nest,” they are to be silenced. The Talmud offers two possible explanations, of which one is that such a prayer “makes it seem as if the attributes of God are an expression of compassion, whereas in fact they are mere decrees.”
In both his Commentary on the Mishna and his law code, Rambam adopts this view. He adds: If the reason for sending the mother bird away were divine compassion towards animals then, in consistency, God should have forbidden killing animals for food. The law therefore should be understood as a decree we cannot understand rationally (a gezerat hakatuv), and has nothing to do with compassion, human or divine.
In The Guide for the Perplexed, however, Rambam adopts the opposite approach. There he rejects the very notion that there are commands without reason. It is permitted to kill animals, he says, for food, because eating meat is beneficial to human health. Sheḥita (ritual slaughter) has careful laws on the most painless way to kill an animal for kosher meat. He says:
“It is also prohibited to kill an animal with its young on the same day, in order that people should be restrained and prevented from killing the two together in such a manner that the young is killed in the sight of the mother, for the pain of the animals under such circumstances is very great. There is no difference in this case between the pain of human beings and the pain of other living beings, since the love and tenderness of the mother for her young ones is not produced by reasoning but by imagination, and this faculty exists not only in man but also in most living beings…. The same reason applies to the law which enjoins that we should let the mother bird fly away when we take the young.”
So Rambam, contrary to the position he takes in his law code, here states that the law does have compassion as its logic. Moreover, what it seeks to avoid is not physical pain to the animal but psychological distress. Rambam’s view of animals has been confirmed by recent findings in biology that suggest that many species do indeed resemble humans in their ability to form groups, engage in reciprocal altruism, and display a range of emotions. In most animal species, it is the mother that forms an ongoing bond with the young. Among animals, fatherhood is usually far less developed. So Rambam’s explanation in The Guide is empirically well founded.
However, elsewhere in The Guide, Rambam takes yet a third position. Divine providence, he says, extends to individuals only among humans. Amongst animals, it applies solely to a species as a whole. So the reason we must not cause animals pain or distress is not because the Torah is concerned about animals but because it is concerned about humans. We should not be cruel.
There is a rule laid down by our Sages that it is directly prohibited in the Torah to cause pain to an animal. This rule is based on the words (of the angel to Bilam), “Why have you beaten your donkey?” (Bemidbar 22:32). The object of this rule is to refine our behaviour, so that we should not assume cruel habits, and that we should not uselessly cause pain to others – instead, we should be prepared to show pity and mercy to all living creatures except when necessity demands the contrary.
In this view, we are forbidden to cause needless suffering to animals because this will desensitise us and lead us eventually to be cruel to human beings. Rambam thus seems to embrace three sharply conflicting views:
1. The law of the mother bird is a divine decree with no reason.
2. This law is intended to spare the mother bird emotional pain.
3. These rules are intended to have an effect on us, not the animal, by training us not to be cruel.
In fact all three are true, because they answer different questions. The first view explains why we have the laws we have. The Torah forbids certain acts that are cruel to animals but not others. Why these and not those? Because that is the law. Laws will always seem arbitrary. Why, for example, is one permitted to drive at 30 miles an hour in a city, but not 31? Why not set the bar at 29? The reason for the law is obvious: to avoid accidents. But we observe the law because it is the law, even though, under certain circumstances, driving at 40 miles an hour might seem safe, and at other times, driving at 20 would be dangerous. The second view listed above explains the immediate logic of the law. It exists to prevent needless suffering to animals, because they too feel physical pain and sometimes emotional distress as well. The third view sets the law in a larger perspective. Cruelty to animals is wrong, not because animals have rights but because we have duties. The duty not to be cruel is intended to promote virtue, and the primary context of virtue is the relationship between human beings. But virtues are indivisible. Those who are cruel to animals often become cruel to people. Hence we have a duty not to cause needless pain to animals, because of its effect on us. Hence the third proposition of Rambam.
This is a subtle and nuanced approach. Animals are part of God’s creation. They have their own integrity in the scheme of things. We now know that they are far closer to human beings than philosophers like Descartes thought.
This would not have been news to the heroes of the Bible. Avraham, Moshe, and David were all shepherds who lived their formative years watching over and caring for animals. That was their first tutorial in leadership, and they knew that this was one way of understanding God Himself (“The Lord is my shepherd” [Tehillim 23:1]).
As we saw in the last parasha, in the environmental discussion in Shofetim, Bereshit 1 gives us the mandate to “subdue” and “rule” creation, including animals, but Bereshit 2 gives us the responsibility to “serve” and “guard.” Animals may not have rights but they do have feelings, and we must respect them if we are to honour our role as God’s partners in creation.
FROM THE THOUGHT OF RABBI SACKS
Judaism gives us our moral code of a society, and it cares about social virtues: righteousness (tzedek/tzedaka), justice (mishpat), loving-kindness (ḥesed), and compassion (raḥamim). These structure the template of biblical law, which covers all aspects of the life of society, its economy, its welfare systems, its education, family life, employer-employee relations, the protection of the environment, and so on.
Future Tense, 136
QUESTIONS TO PONDER
1. What role can ethical legislation towards animals (such as the mitzvot in the parasha) play in creating a society of righteousness, justice, loving-kindness, and compassion?
2. Do you think having pets plays a role in this also?
AROUND THE SHABBAT TABLE
What are the three approaches that Rambam presents explaining the rationale of the mitzvot concerned with animal welfare?
Which of Rambam’s three approaches speaks to you the most?
How would you summarise Judaism’s approach to animal welfare?
EDUCATIONAL COMPANION TO THE QUESTIONS
THE CORE IDEA
Each of the mitzvot mentioned here teaches us to show concern for animal welfare, and to do our best to avoid causing both physical and emotional pain. Muzzling an ox, and thereby preventing it from eating while it is being used to tread grain, is cruel. Using an ox and a donkey together to plough a field is physically cruel for the donkey, which is not as strong as the ox. Taking eggs away from a mother bird causes her emotional distress.
These mitzvot encourage us to see animals as sentient beings with physical and emotional feelings. Once we become aware of this, and relate to animals in an I-Thou rather than I-It relationship, it is easy to understand why these mitzvot belong together with other mitzvot that regulate relationships, including relationships between humans.
This open-ended question should encourage deeper thinking and open conversation. In the section Thinking More Deeply, three approaches from Rambam are quoted which you may wish to reference in this discussion. They are:
Torah laws are divine and cannot always be understood rationally – they must be kept without qualification.
We have an ethical duty to all of God’s creatures – these laws are designed to spare animals emotional and physical pain.
These laws refine us as human beings, improving our sensitivity towards humans – they are intended to have an effect on us, not the animal, by training us not to be cruel.
IT ONCE HAPPENED…
Rabbi Yehuda HaNasi did not commit any sin according to Jewish law. Judaism permits the use of animals for the benefit of humankind, including for food. However, this must always be in as ethical a manner as possible, avoiding cruelty at all costs.
In this case, Rabbi Yehuda HaNasi, despite not showing direct cruelty, showed an insensitivity to the emotional feelings of the calf. He transgressed no law, but perhaps he missed an opportunity to show compassion, or at least understanding. Maybe the angels wanted him to learn an important lesson about empathy, to improve him as an ethical person, creating a greater sensitivity to the plight of animals. Indeed, this seems to have been the outcome, as we can see from the way he responded in the second part of the story.
FROM THE THOUGHT OF RABBI SACKS
The values of righteousness, justice, loving-kindness, and compassion do not only apply to humans. A society based on these values will apply them to animals as well. The mitzvot in the parasha encourage this very point. So a moral society with these values will have legislation that protects animals, and institutions to facilitate this. More than this, a society of people who embody these values will develop a greater sensitivity by keeping laws that protect animals. By being kind to animals, we are more likely to be kind to humans. See Rambam in Thinking More Deeply.
Pets are a great opportunity to cultivate an I-Thou relationship with an animal, fostering a sensitivity to an animal’s needs, which will help to develop one’s ethical and moral character. A pet can increase love and compassion in a family, benefitting all family members.
AROUND THE SHABBAT TABLE
Rambam takes three different approaches to these mitzvot. Rabbi Sacks explains why the different points made by Rambam are not contradictions, but rather, they teach a more complex and nuanced approach to this area of Torah law. Rambam is clearly suggesting that there are aspects of all three approaches in the mitzvot. The approaches are:
Torah laws are divine and cannot always be understood rationally – they must be kept without qualification.
We have an ethical duty to all of God’s creatures – these laws are designed to spare animals emotional and physical pain.
These laws refine us as human beings, improving our sensitivity towards humans – they are intended to have an effect on us, not the animal, by training us not to be cruel.
While each person may be intellectually and spiritually attracted to one of these approaches more than another, it is important to allow room for all three in one’s outlook, just as Rambam does.
In the first chapter of Bereshit, the Torah commands humankind to “subdue” and “conquer” the world and its resources, including animals. This means that humans are allowed to eat animals for nutrition, and use other aspects of them as a resource (such as their fur or skin for clothing). However, in the second chapter of Bereshit, the Torah commands humankind to “serve” and “protect” the world. In the Covenant & Conversation essay on Parashat Shofetim, Rabbi Sacks suggests that this means ecological conservation and protection. A balance between these two approaches leads us to maintaining sustainable development. Our ethical approach to animals is the same. We are permitted to use animals for our own benefit, but only in an ethically responsible way, and this includes avoiding cruelty.