|  |                Parshas Emor      
          Divine Service With a Smile1   
 | They shall not make a bald spot  on their heads, and they shall not shave a corner of their beard. In  their flesh they shall not cut a cutting. They shall be holy to their  G-d…for the fire-offerings of Hashem…they offer, so they must remain  holy[2]. 
 There is not much new here. All of these prohibitions have been  stated before, and apply to everyone, including the vast majority of  people who are not kohanim[3]. Why does the Torah need to carve out a  special place for these laws in regard to kohanim?
 
 Two of the three prohibitions deal with our reaction to death. Many  religions, old as well as new, have a special relationship with death.  Death is where G-d takes over. G-d asserts His power specifically in  overcoming life, which He abandons to the whims of Man. By dealing  illness, death and destruction, G-d forces Man to recognize Him and fear  Him. He remains, however, foreign to life, from which He is excluded as  an active force.
 
 Even faiths that theoretically involve G-d in all matters of life  are often unsuccessful in having adherents pay much attention to  anything but the finality of death. Priests are called upon by people to  minister to the dead or dying who had no use for them in the bloom of  life. The most impressive ceremonies address the aftermath of life  rather than life itself; places of worship are often literally  juxtaposed to graveyards. Sometimes, the ceremonies for the dead will  compel the faithful to think of their mortality while they are still  living, and concern themselves with their hope for immortality – of life  after death.
 
 The Torah wants us to preoccupy ourselves with life, not with death.  The kohen must serve as representative of the values of a full, rich  life, enjoying its myriad blessings in the context of service of Hashem  while elevating them towards His values. The kohen is the symbol of  living to our fullest capacity, of avoiding the countless half-deaths we  inflict upon ourselves when we remain limited and bound by our physical  urges and flaws of character. The Torah insists that the kohen remove  himself from the entire arena of death.
 
 When the living gather to perform the final acts of chesed to a  lifeless body whose soul had departed for the next world, the kohen does  not preside. Moreover, he stays away entirely. He makes only two  exceptions. When a close relative dies, the bonds and responsibilities  of family trump those of responsibility to the rest of the community. He  therefore participates in the burial of parents, siblings, children and  spouse. If he should chance upon lifeless remains that no one else  attends to – a meis mitzvah – he foregoes his priestly role and takes up  the primary role of fellow human being, responding to the image of G-d  that would otherwise be desecrated.
 
 Others reacted to death by proclaiming that they were irrevocably  diminished through their loss. They did this by tearing out hair and  creating bald spots, or by cutting into their flesh. Both of these  practices are forbidden to ordinary Jews. Our pasuk tells us that they  are doubly forbidden to the kohen. He can never wear messages about  death upon his body. Whatever he broadcasts has to be a message about  life.
 
 Ancient religions also paid homage to the very human foibles of  their gods, who often lost themselves in hedonic abandon to their  sensuality. Glorifying the sensual thus celebrated the various gods.  Some of this preoccupation with the sensual has survived thousands of  years of history and remains part of some modern faiths.
 
 Here, too, the Torah wants the kohen to have nothing to do with such  mistaken deviance. It is forbidden for all Jewish men to shave the  “corners of the head,” the boundaries that separate between the various  bones of the head. The upper bones encase the more cerebral and  intellectual functions; the lower ones participate in eating, the most  common form of sensual gratification. The prohibiting against shaving  keeps the lower bone, symbol of more animal-like behavior, modestly  concealed and covered. Here too, the Torah wishes this emphasized in the  appearance of the kohen. He must remain a symbol of devotion to higher  concerns that generate elevation rather than capitulation, and life  rather than death.
 
 Unlanded Gentry4
 
 You shall count for yourselves from the morrow of the Shabbos…seven  weeks…fifty day. You shall convoke on this very day…you shall do no  laborious work…When you reap in the harvest of your land, you shall not  remove completely the corners of your field as you reap, and you shall  not gather the gleanings of your harvest. For the poor and the ger shall  you leave them. I am Hashem your G-d[5].
 
 Why do some of the laws of the mandatory gifts to the poor appear  just at this point, as if forgotten somewhere else, and dropped in to a  long section that deals with the holidays alone?
 
 In getting us to Shavuos, the Torah has twice brought home an  essential idea about the entitlement of individuals to sustenance and  happiness. Through the avodah of the omer on Pesach and that of the  shtei ha-lechem on Shavuos, the Torah reinforces the idea that the  source of each individual’s contentment and prosperity is the Torah and  its relationship to the Nation of Israel. The Jewish People carry the  message of the Torah into the larger world; each of its members derives  his portion from his connection to the Torah.
 
 This might seem so obvious that it scarcely is worthy of mention.  Practically, however, this assertion is a sea-change from the realities  of both the ancient and modern worlds.
 
 The gap between the haves and the have-nots is not just  quantitative. The very difference between life and death of have-nots  often lodges in the whims of the haves. Those who have provide, at their  pleasure, enough for the have-nots to sustain themselves. They offer  this as a form of noblesse oblige, and don’t take kindly to suggestions  that this can be demanded of them. What they offer is charity, not  fulfillment of a human duty.
 
 In the ancient world (as well as across major swaths of the modern  globe), the distinction between the two kinds of people concerned land.  Those who had land were the haves. Those who lacked it lived at the  mercy of the landowner. What they received was accompanied by feelings  of insufficiency, inadequacy and humiliation.
 
 The omer and shtei ha-lechem offerings told a different story. It  was not land (or what modern society would call access to the means of  production) that provided sustenance, but connection to the Torah. Those  who received more had to see themselves as custodians of plenty on  behalf of those who had less. The harvest did not belong to the rich and  the landed, but to everyone. The landed citizens were simply conduits  to direct G-d’s blessing to a wider group of end-users.
 
 Precisely after the section of the shtei ha-lechem the Torah details  some of the matnos aniyim. Our pasuk stands in stark relief to the  reality that the poor of other cultures are fed though the good will of  the rich. Here, the Torah sends the poor into the fields at harvest, to  help themselves to what Hashem has ordered the earth to yield up. The  harvest is for them as much as for the landowner. It follows neatly from  the message of the shtei ha-lechem, and is the perfect postscript to  it.
 
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 1.  Based on the Hirsch Chumash, Vayikra 21:52.  Vayikra 21:5-6
 3.  In the case of two of them, Makos 20A-21A
 derives certain details in which the prohibition
 to kohanim varies slightly. The basic
 prohibitions, however, apply to all
 4.  Based on the Hirsch Chumash, Vayikra 23:22
 5.  Vayikra, 23:15-16; 21-22
   
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