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Judaism

Parashah of the week: Re’eh

“Put the inhabitants of that town to the sword and its cattle to the sword. Doom it all and all that is in it to destruction: ...and burn the town” Deuteronomy 13:16-17

August 30, 2024 06:53
Rotherham riot Getty 2164805163
An anti-migration protester in Rotherham, one of the places where riots erupted earlier this month (photo: Getty Images)
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The challenge of writing a piece several weeks before publication is that events, particularly as recorded by social media, gather pace more quickly than the written word.

As I prepared this article, the United Kingdom experienced its worst incidents of public disorder for more than a decade. The murder of three children at a dance class in Southport was used offensively (in both senses of the word) to engage in acts of criminal thuggery, including assaulting police officers, looting and threatening to burn religious and other public buildings — often by individuals from outside the local area.

Parashat Re’eh envisages a town where it appears that decency has broken down and the threat to good order (in this case idolatry) is so stark that the Torah proposes an extraordinary measure. The Torah calls for the killing of all the inhabitants and cattle of the town and that the very town be burnt to the ground.

In common with a number of other cases including the rebellious child who requires stoning (Deuteronomy 21:18-21), later rabbinic tradition suggested that the Torah was describing a hypothetical case as a tool for learning.

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Sidrah