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Ben Judah

By

Ben Judah,

Ben Judah

Opinion

The attacks and smears betray the spirit of Maimonides

Those wanting to silence Rabbi Dweck want the Jews of the Spanish and Portuguese Congregation to be silent too.

June 29, 2017 13:08
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2 min read

Every morning, the rabbi would leave Fustat for Cairo. Every morning, the rabbi was under orders to the Sultan’s Palace. He was a physician. And, in the galleries and chambers, in the gilded harem, he would heal the sick princes, viziers, concubines — the rabbi would attend to them all.

Every afternoon, almost dying with hunger, he would return to Fustat, to find the common people — friends, foes, artisans, beggars, slaves — begging him, imploring him, in the courtyard for help. “When night falls I am so exhausted I can barely speak,” wrote the great Maimonides. And this is how he worked until Shabbat.

Only when he could catch a few hours, would the rabbi write — letters to Iraq, Spain, Syria, France, Yemen — his work adding up to the Mishneh Torah — his codifying of Jewish religious law.

Reading these letters now is inspiring, because you hear a voice who wanted to unify, to raise up and expand the Torah world, and not the rulings of one wanting to exclude and root out. But reading them is to feel sad about our Judaism, too.