An Avot Baraita for Shabbat (Parashat Re’eh)
This week’s pre-Shabbat post takes us back to Perek 6.
The Baraita at Avot 6:4 makes uncomfortable reading for
those of us who appreciate a good night’s sleep tucked up in a warm and comfortable
bed:
כַּךְ הִיא דַּרְכָּהּ שֶׁל תּוֹרָה: פַּת בְּמֶֽלַח
תֹּאכֵל, וּמַֽיִם בִּמְשׂוּרָה תִּשְׁתֶּה, וְעַל הָאָֽרֶץ תִּישָׁן, וְחַיֵּי צַֽעַר
תִּחְיֶה, וּבַתּוֹרָה אַתָּה עָמֵל, אִם אַתָּה עֽוֹשֶׂה כֵּן, אַשְׁרֶֽיךָ וְטוֹב
לָךְ, אַשְׁרֶֽיךָ בָּעוֹלָם הַזֶּה, וְטוֹב לָךְ לָעוֹלָם הַבָּא
This is the way of Torah: bread
with salt you shall eat; water in small measure you shall drink, and on the
ground you shall sleep. Live a life of hardship and in Torah shall you toil. If
you do so, "you are fortunate, and it is good for you" (Tehillim
128:2): you are fortunate—in this world, and it is good for you—in the World to
Come.
Why should sleeping on the ground make any difference
whatsoever in terms of one’s pursuit of a Torah-based way of life? And do we
humans not learn better when we have had a good night’s sleep in a comfortable
bed than if we spend the night writhing around on the ground in the forlorn
hope of finding a position conducive to at least some sort of sleep?
Even among the Tannaim there were reservations about the wisdom of this advice. Indeed, Ben Azzai (Berachot 62b) advised that one should sleep anywhere but on the ground, though admittedly his prime concern was to avoid danger from snakes.
My preferred take on this teaching is that it focuses on a
worst-case scenario. What it means is that EVEN if we live on a subsistence
diet and EVEN if we have to sleep on the ground and struggle to make ends meet,
so long as we can keep learning Torah and feel its buzz we will find it a
rewarding and enjoyable experience. We might make a comparison with the sort of
discomfort we are prepared to tolerate when undertaking a potentially lucrative
business trip: fatigue, jet-lag, problems accessing kosher food—all of which we
willingly accept as part and parcel of our acquisition of earthly material
wealth. How much more so should we be prepared to put up with discomfort and
inconvenience when passing through this temporary, ephemeral world on the way
to our spiritual World to Come [based on R’ Simcha Bunim of Pesischa, in MiMa’ayanot
HaNetzach].
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