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Ask now of the days that are past: Horse sense

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Horse sense
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table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright
  4. Table of Contents
  5. Introduction
  6. Scribes and Scholarship
    1. People of the book
    2. How to start a Jewish Newspaper
    3. The European Genizah
    4. The Crown of Aleppo
  7. Holiness And Heresy
    1. Where seldom is heard a mystical word
    2. A dubious blessing
    3. Hiwi the heretic
  8. Encounters And Enlightenings
    1. Rabbi in the abbey
    2. Thou shall not kill
    3. On the other hand
  9. Babies, Brides, And Burials
    1. Birth rites
    2. May the best man win
    3. Beauty versus virtue: An age-old argument
    4. Who was Rembrandt’s Jewish bride?
    5. Beneath the stars
    6. All cows go to Heaven
  10. Congregation And Community
    1. Trimming the guest list
    2. Service interruption
    3. Buddy can you spare a dime?
  11. Policy And Piety
    1. Taking leave of our census
    2. The wagers of sin
    3. Affairs of state
    4. Prophets, protests, and pepper spray
    5. The Vice-President of Grenada
    6. Majority rules
    7. Baldness, bears, and bottled water
  12. Economics And Ethics
    1. Minimizing your assets
    2. Not all that glisters
    3. You can bank on it
    4. Ransom note
    5. The price is right
  13. Buildings And Blessings
    1. Rabbi, watch out for that beam
    2. Beam me up
    3. The walls have ears
    4. Preparing for a prophet
  14. Life And Leisure
    1. Healthy advice from the top authorities
    2. Tennis, anyone?
    3. Keeping the ball in play
    4. Pushing Torah
  15. Creatures And Curiosities
    1. The siren’s song
    2. The power of the human voice
    3. The love apple
    4. Horse sense
    5. The right vampire
    6. Going to the ants
  16. Glossary
  17. Index

43 Horse Sense*

Have you ever seen photographs of the early Zionist pioneers mounted proudly on horses, garbed like Bedouins and radiating a sublime confidence? An important ingredient in their mood is the fact that they were bucking a long and entrenched tradition.

Jews were simply not supposed to ride horses.

As one who resides in the home of the world’s largest rodeo, it is only with great difficulty that I can divulge this dark secret about the age-old animosity between Jews and horses.

The problem goes back many millennia.

In the Bible, horses are likely as not to be mentioned in connection with an enemy cavalry. Even the beloved in the Song of Songs (1:9) is portrayed as a mare sent in to wreak distracting havoc among the stallions of the Egyptian army. The Torah (Deuteronomy 17:16) sets strict limits to the number of horses that can be owned by a Hebrew monarch, and the Bible condemns Solomon for violating those limits (1 Kings 10:26ff.).

This hostility to our equine friends is quite surprising when we bear in mind that the ancients regarded horses as an emblem of nobility.

Thus, when Ecclesiastes attempted to describe a state in which all conventions have gone topsy-turvy, he declared, “I have seen servants upon horses, and princes walking as servants upon the earth” (10:7). This indeed expresses aptly the reversal of the normal social hierarchy.

The costs of equine upkeep were sufficiently prohibitive that in ancient times the ownership of horses was usually a prerogative of the aristocratic classes. From their elevated perches, the bluebloods could conveniently command battalions of foot soldiers in war, and lord it over the peasants in peacetime.

As a saying in the Talmud put it (Shabbat 152a): “The person on the horse is the king, the person on the donkey is a free man, the person wearing shoes is a human being, and the person who has none of these is worse than someone who is dead and buried.”

From the rabbis’ perspective, the greatest Jewish leaders of the past should have ridden on horses. For this reason, a Talmudic tradition related that the authors of the Greek translation of the Torah had altered the sacred text, so that Moses would be described as riding a horse, in keeping with his position of leadership, rather than on a lowly donkey, which would have disgraced our greatest prophet in the eyes of foreign readers (Megillah 9a).

According to the Talmud (Sanhedrin 105b, Avodah Zarah 4b), Balaam was ridiculed by his aristocratic colleagues because he rode a humble donkey, instead of the horse that should have conveyed a royal emissary of his stature. The pagan prophet tried to defend his dignity by declaring disingenuously that his horse happened to be in the shop (or pasture) that week. Just his luck that his donkey could talk and divulge the truth.

Jewish traditions from the Second Temple era equated the riding of horses with collaboration with the Greek or Roman enemies. Thus, at the time of the Maccabean uprising, the Hellenistic High Priest Alcimus taunted the martyred sage Yosé ben Yoezer: “Look at my horse, which my Roman master has allowed me to ride! (Genesis Rabbah 65:22)”

A certain individual who rode a horse on the Sabbath during the days of the Greeks was executed “not because he really deserved it, but because the hour demanded such action.” The violation of the Sabbath restrictions was considered to be of a lesser severity; however, the riding of a horse was seen as a dangerous betrayal of religious principles (Sanhedrin 46a).

So obvious was it that loyal Jews would not ride horses that, according to one tradition, a group of Pharisaic rabbis, in the days of the Sadducee king Yannai, fled to Lebanon in a time of sectarian persecution and were able to conceal their presence from hostile pagans by tying a horse to the front gate of their hiding place. Potential assailants simply ruled out any possibility that pious Jews could have a horse parked in front of their house.

It is probably no mere coincidence that the most notorious heretic of the Talmudic era was also one of its few Jewish horsemen. Elisha ben Abuya, who abandoned his heritage and collaborated with the Romans, rode his horse beyond the distance permitted on the Sabbath. And just so that there should no misunderstanding of his intentions, he also made a point of trotting along on the Temple Mount on a Yom Kippur that fell on the Sabbath (Hagigah 15a).

The upshot of all these stories is that horses were associated with the qualities that were most antagonistic to Jewish values: oppression, arrogance, and atheism. The beast was accused of every kind of obnoxious trait; including that it “enjoys promiscuity and loves war, is overbearing, hates sleep, eats much and excretes little; and some say that it tries to kill its owner in battle”(Pesahim 113b).

Another old adage insisted that “one who purchases a horse in the marketplace in order to ride it and flaunt himself before his fellows – is destroying his reward in this world, and abolishing the fruits of the world to come.”

Is it any wonder that the great rabbis of the Talmud and Midrash, like the prophets of biblical days, took care to travel on more modest steeds, such as mules and donkeys?

I think that the Jews of the Canadian prairies are ideally positioned to effect a reconciliation of this tragic historic enmity. It is finally time for us to rein in all that ingrained hostility and ride off together into the sunset.

Suggestions for Further Reading

Beer, Moshe. “The Attitude of the Sages Towards Riding Horses.” Cathedra 60 (1991): 17–35 [Hebrew].

Feliks, Jehuda. Ha-ai Ba-Mishnah. Jerusalem: Institute for Mishna Research, 1972.

Lewysohn, L. Die Zoologie Des Talmuds. Frankfurt am Main: by author, 1858.

Pope, Marvin H. Song of Songs. The Anchor Bible, ed. W. F. Albright and D. N. Freedman. Garden City: Doubleday, 1977.

__________

* Originally published in The Jewish Free Press, Calgary, June 29, 2000.

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