Shoftim: Free of Criminal Liability
The Torah portion of Shoftim deals with the authorities empowered to enforce the law, and concludes with a mitzvah that devolves upon these authorities in a striking case. In this case of the discovery of a slain person left out in a field, the authorities are called into
First, the distance between the discovered corpse and the adjacent cities are measured to determine which municipality is most likely the one to be held accountable. Then, the elders of that city take a young calf to a valley, and the calf is killed by a blow to its neck. In the presence of Kohanim, the elders of the city wash their hands and recite the following words of exoneration: “Our hands have not spilled this blood, and our eyes have not seen him. Grant atonement to Your people Israel, whom You redeemed, O
The Sages dispute whether the “him” that the elders declare not to have seen is the murdered one or the murderer. According to the first opinion, the elders are disclaiming responsibility for not seeing to it that he was sent from the city with an escort, as if to say, “We did not see him and let him leave without an escort and food.” According to the second opinion, the elders disclaim responsibility for allowing a murderer to go free, as if to say, “We did not see him and close an eye to his guilt!”
In the first opinion, the elders are saying that they did not allow the man to leave in such dire need that he resorts to highway robbery, thus causing himself to be killed by a slayer in self-defense. Their momentous declaration is: “In our society, no one is left in such dire need that he is compelled by poverty to commit a crime.”
The elders curiously seek atonement not just for themselves, or even for the people living in their times, but for
This would represent a monumental triumph for
The final killing of the calf gives expression to the utmost seriousness with which the Jewish community and its representatives regard the murderer, quelling any sense of negligence in not bringing the killer to justice. The act expresses the fact that one who murders loses his right to life, and that Divine providence will execute upon him justice that man could not.
- Sources: Commentary, Devarim 21:1-8