Quotations
".....and if you ask what wrong he has done in his life, you could say that he has done practically none, except that he has not
done anything! He has sinned by not sinning. He has not lived. If you
live you are forced to sin: if you eat, then others cannot have that
food. We shut our eyes to the fact that thousands of animals are
butchered so that we may live. To live is to commit murder, and the
more intensely I live the more I do wrong.
"Life is connected with guilt, and he, by not living, has not
accumulated much active guilt, but he has accumulated a tremendous
amount of passive guilt. Think of all the girls he has just walked
out on. True, he has not shouted at them or given them illegitimate
babies. He has not done all those things that a more virile man might
perhaps have done, but he just let women down by disappearing, which
is as cruel and immoral as to do something which is called wrong. He
has committed the sin of not living. He is typical of the kind of man
who, on account of his mother complex, has a too aesthetic and high-
up attitude toward life, who thinks that by staying above it all he
can keep up an illusion of purity and innocence."
Marie Louise Von Franz, 'The Problem of the Puer Aeternus'
"The Jewish experience in the second world war was not ‘historical’. We came into contact with archaic mythical forces, a kind of dark subconscious, the meaning of which we did not know, nor do we know it to this day."
Aharon Appelfeld to Philip Roth in an interview."The stranger that liveth with thee in the land, shall rise up over thee, and shall be higher: and thou shalt go down, and be lower. He shall lend to thee, and thou shalt not lend to him. He shall be as the head, and thou shalt be the tail. And all these curses shall come upon thee, and shall pursue and overtake thee, till thou perish: because thou heardst not the voice of the Lord thy God, and didst not keep his commandments and ceremonies which he commanded thee."
Deuteronomy 28: 43-45
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ReplyDeleteJudaism and Abortion
Does Jewish law state that life begins at conception?
No, life does not begin at conception under Jewish law.
Does Jewish law assert that it is possible to murder a fetus?
No, Jewish law does not consider a fetus to be alive.
According to Jewish law, is abortion health care?
Yes.
What does Jewish law say about the rights of the person who is pregnant and the
rights of the fetus?
A fetus is not considered a person under Jewish law and therefore
does not have the same rights as one who is already alive.
Resource originally created by National Council of Jewish Women St. Louis.
https://www.ncjw.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/Judaism-and-Abortion-FINAL.pdf
One is reminded of the German princeling who on his deathbed said to the priest that he couldn't remember committing any sins at all. "Come," said the priest, "you must have done something bad in your long life". After the deep thought the Prince murmured "Ich habe Hasen geschossen", and expired.
ReplyDelete(H/T Paddy Leigh Fermour)