The Call to Action

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Torah Study > Chapter 1: The Call to Action > Text 3

Examine this Mishna piece by piece. What is Hillel saying?
In the first phrase, Hillel validates a strong sense of self-worth, teaching that it is a prerequisite to earn the support of others. The next phrase commmunicates the idea that someone who is exclusively self-focused is not exhibiting the defining trait of humanity (i.e., an outward sense of responsibbility). Hillel challenges us: If I am “only for myself,” “What am I?”

How does someone’s attitude about him/herself affect how others
feel about him/her?

What is the relationship between peoples’ commitment to others and
their sense of self-worth?

How does the last question that Hillel asks relate to the first two?

 

How does this statement negotiate the tension between the
particular (me) vs. universal (others)?

Do you agree with this teaching? All of it? Some of it?
This text brings into focus the universal/particular tension that most modern Jews wrestle with today. Hillel clearly embraces both poles of this tension, but prioritizes them. The participants’ responses to this text will serve as a window into their own attitudes.

Do you agree with the following statement?
“If I am not for my people, who will be? But if I am only for my people, what am I? And if not now, when?”

For whom might this saying be true?

Describe a situation when you would choose to be “for your people.”

Describe a situation when a person of another ethnicity might
choose to be “for his people.”

How do you feel about such behavior? Is such behavior selfish?
Righteous? American? Un-American?
The variation on Hillel’s statement and the questions which follow are presented as an experiment. If participants agree with Hillel on a personal level, will they agree on an ethnic, communal, peoplehood-level? This might raise fascinating issues on the place of “peoplehood” in the modern world. If so, mine the discussion and explore the foundation and source of values of such attitudes.

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Hillel

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