Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Diana Brewster's avatar

Very interesting essay and analysis. It seems to me that the human eye is commonly called “the gateway to the soul,” an exposure of our true nature. Contrarily, the eye is also the means by which we objectify the world, placing ourselves beyond it as “the see-er” rather than “that which is seen.” The threat of the Evil Eye is connected in these parables with the counting of souls, i.e., with objectification, which is to say, domination. The way in which one looks upon another may be with an evil eye, and if one is vulnerable to that gaze, one becomes a reduced person. It’s essential to Judaism to sustain one’s personhood— one’s responsibility as a moral being. To treat others as less than human, or to allow oneself to be regarded as an instrument of any will other than The Lord’s, is to renege on God’s compact with the Jews. The fear of the evil eye is to fear falling into a state of dread— a Kierkegaardian dread that God will abandon you because you are an inadequate vessel, as you are either prone to being dominated (negatively influenced), or prone to dominating (objectifying others, which generates a terrible price.) This is something I think about!

Expand full comment
Happy's avatar

The beginning of Shadal's explanation sound like the Ralbag's and Abarbanel's explanation of King David's sin in counting the Jewish people-שהיה החטא בשדוד משיח אלקי יעקב ונעים זמירות ישראל שם בשר זרועו בבטחו על רוב עמו, ולא היה ראוי שישים בטחונו ברוב עם הדרת מלך כי אם ביי' לבדו שאין מעצור בידו להושיע ברב או במעט.

. Which assuming that you believe in Divine intervention, is quite rational. So I wonder why he has to throw in the part about the evil eye, and the Torah catering to that belief, since the previous explanation for ולא יהיה נגף בפקוד אותם holds up on its own.

Expand full comment
13 more comments...

No posts