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Seven Colors of the RainbowChapter IVBorn
in 1879 in Lyons, France, Aimé Pallière grew up from early childhood seeking
truth through religious expression, and his surroundings led him to feel a call
to join the Roman Catholic priesthood. A man with an inquiring mind, he tried to
find the deeper meaning of everything that he encountered. His examination of
the basic Christian texts led him to believe that something was amiss. A word
like “virgin” bore a different meaning in Christian translation than it had
in the Hebrew from which it derived. He looked further, and he found no
solution. He
was a religious man, who had been brought up in a Catholic atmosphere, and now
fundamental Catholic dogmas were presenting him with problems. What was he to
do? His first response was to join the Protestant fold. The Salvation Army,
based in England, was beginning to establish small missions in the industrial
cities of France. Like many people at that time, Pallière saw the evils of
working-class slum existence as the most pressing problem of all, and the
Salvation Army was trying to do something. He began mission work in Lyons, but
again he was disappointed. The Salvation Army meant well, but he felt there was
something about their basic doctrine that left them at a loss when dealing with
ordinary people. What
was that “something?” All his observations led him to conclude that it was
the “Trinity,” the item of belief by which Christianity separates itself
from all others. At this time, he became acquainted with Jews from the small
Lyons community, and he realized that theirs was a religion with no such concept
to distract the mind. There was one God alone, and the only service was that
related directly to Him. He studied Torah and, gratified by what he learned, he
made up his mind to become a Jew himself. After all, this was the faith in which
all the others originated, and it was the meanings in the Hebrew text that had
led him to question what he had first been told. When
he found out more of the details of the conversion process, he became
discouraged once more. The convert to Judaism had to abandon his previous
non-Jewish identity altogether, acquiring an entirely new personal nature like
that of all other Jews in order to approach the fulfillment of the whole Torah. Pallière
did not question the need for this, but he was not at all sure what the effect
would be on himself. He was deeply attached to his mother, and he had many other
relatives and friends to whom he was closely linked. How could he separate
himself from all of this? Was it worth nothing in the scale of truth? And his
mind was forming an even more important question, one that placed him on an
original level in his own time: Why, indeed, if only the Jewish faith was the
true one, had God created him as a non-Jew in the first place? His
Jewish friends saw his dilemma, and they realized the honesty with which he was
seeking his true path. They made inquiries on his behalf, and they came up with
a name and an address which gave hope of solving the problem. Over the southern
border of France, at Leghorn in Italy, there was an ancient community of
Sephardi Jews whose ancestors had fled there from the Spanish Inquisition. The
rabbi of that community, Elijah Benamozeg, was a senior scholar and writer with
a wide education and a liberal mind. Pallière
wrote to him, asking for a meeting. On arriving in Leghorn, Pallière received a
note saying that the rabbi was coming to greet him at the small hotel where he
was staying. This personal approach, far removed from hierarchy or protocol,
made a great impression on Pallière, who knew he was much younger than the
rabbi. This was confirmed when a knock on the door of his room announced a most
ordinary-looking old man, bearded and stooping, with conventional clothes and a
ready smile. In
The Unknown Sanctuary, written many years later, Pallière described what
followed. The rabbi listened to him explain his doubts about becoming a Jew, and
the rabbi acknowledged them all. He told Pallière that there was no duty on
anyone's part to become a Jew, and that the anguish his mother might feel on
being parted from her son was certainly not misplaced. He went on: We
Jews have in our keeping the religion destined for the entire human race, the
religion to which the Gentiles are subject and by which they are to be saved, as
were our Patriarchs before the giving of the Law. Could you suppose that the
true religion which God destines for all humanity is only the property of a
special people? Not at all. His plan is much greater than that. The religion of
humanity is no other than “Noachism,” not because it was founded by Noah,
but because it was through the person of that righteous man that God's covenant
with humanity was made. This is the path that lies before your efforts, and
indeed before mine, as it is my duty to spread the knowledge of it also. Rabbi
Benamozeg explained that the present non-Jewish religions acknowledged their
origins in Judaism but were not prepared to admit that Judaism was still what it
had always been, preferring to insist that the Jews should convert out of their
ancestors' faith. "They
are founded on the principle of the abolition of the Torah even for the Jews,”
he told the Frenchman, “and they ignore in the Jewish prophets all that you
yourself have known so well how to find in them.” Pallière
was transfigured by what he had heard. The elderly rabbi had told him that a
great and far-reaching concept existed where he had thought there was nothing at
all. There was a place for the non-Jew who realized Jewish truth but could not
become a Jew. He had never heard of a religion which offered something to those
who were not entirely a part of it, and he realized immediately that only the
Jewish faith possessed the expanded views, and the humility, to make such an
offer. Rabbi Benamozeg saw the effect of his words, and he added: The
future of the human race lies in this formula. If you come to be convinced of
it, you will be much more precious to Israel than if you submit to the Torah of
Israel. You will be the instrument of the Divine Providence to all mankind. If
you were a skeptic like so many others, you might as well preach one doctrine as
another, but you have earned the right that I should speak to you as a believer. He
smiled, and continued: “I am surprised that I have expressed myself so freely,
but it is proof of my sincerity, and of the deep interest that you have inspired
in me.” Such
words change the whole course of the life of a man. Pallière took his leave,
and the two never met again, but until the rabbi's death three years later, the
two men exchanged letters carrying forward the suggestion that had been made and
accepted. Pallière
had to face the task of adapting his life to a set of beliefs that he alone knew
and understood, and it was not surprising that his confidence did not
immediately jump to the level that was needed. He wrote, “Not to be a
Christian, not to be a Jew and yet after a fashion to adopt Judaism, was an
equivocal position which in that state of faith had little attraction for me.” He
expressed his indecision in letters to the rabbi, who replied at length with the
aim of helping his pupil to face the challenges of the new position:1
If
I understand you correctly, “Noachism” seems to you a far distant and
superannuated thing, and you ask how after the passing of so many centuries of
progress I can dream of taking you back to the foundations of worship that
existed after the Flood. Is this possible? Yes it is, and I trust you will soon
see that its future prospects likewise would not be possible if they had not
also been present so far in the past. The
“Noachic” religion is not a contrivance nor an invention. It is an
established fact, discussed on every page of our Talmud, and our wise men
generally admit that it is little known and much misunderstood. According
to the teachings of Judaism the Jews as the “priests” of humanity are
subject to the Law of Moses, while the “laymen” are linked to the early
universal religion alone. Christianity on the other hand introduced confusion
into this, by either imposing the Law on the Gentiles through James, or
abolishing it for the Jews through Paul. Rabbi
Benamozeg answered Pallière's heartfelt query about the importance of the
non-Jewish identity: Can
it be imagined for a single moment that after having
concerned Himself for so long with the descendants of Noah, God would give a
special Law to the Jews as His “kingdom of priests” and then not trouble
Himself further about the rest of the human race? Would He thus leave them
totally abandoned, without revelation and without law, abolishing His ancient
Noachide bond with them, so that they must rely for long centuries on their own
poor reason? Not even a mortal man would behave in such a way. He
went further, explaining the manner in which the Talmudic masters expounded the
detailed provisions of the Seven Laws. You will find there in abundance the complete elements of the code that you are seeking, and Pallière
was convinced. He continued on his path and eventually came into positions of
responsibility in both the Jewish and non-Jewish worlds that no one else had
ever held at the same time. He earned the love and respect of all who came into
contact with him. For the rest of his life, the memory of his dialogue with
Rabbi Benamozeg inspired him. He described the meaning that it held for him in
the personal sense. One
cannot sufficiently admire the way in which the master used language that a
young Catholic would understand. But what was even more remarkable was that he
was not merely assuming a position for the occasion, because of the nature of
the argument; he was giving his beliefs an exact expression. And I say simply
that no human being ever spoke to me as he did. The
Rabbi had given him the comfort he needed when he wrote, Why
do you speak of feelings of isolation? I see all around you a great multitude of
believers. I grant you that the outward signs may not be visible, but
nevertheless you will truly be of the community of your brethren, the community
of the future. For this, according to the Jews, is the true religion of the
Messianic times. Now
Pallière knew who and what he truly was, and many people came to know of how
Torah applied to non-Jews through his example. But the world around him was
afflicted with evils, turning toward the turmoil of the First World War, the
Russian Revolution, and the rise of Nazi power. The Jews were facing the
terrible challenge of modern machine persecution, and he alone could not lead
the non-Jewish peoples out of their situation. During the Nazi occupation of
France, he was compelled to stop his work for fear of the Gestapo, but they did
not come to harm him of their own accord. Hitler had no idea what he represented
and therefore was not afraid of him. He died in 1949, beloved by everyone who
had known him, leaving his writings and his example to those who would come
after. We who do so may now see clearly what was the faith that had earned his
devotion. From Seven Colors of the Rainbow: Torah Ethics for Non-Jews by Yirmeyahu Bindman © 1995 Resource Publications, Inc. Published on this website by special arrangement with Resource Publications, Inc. Material may be downloaded for individual use but not otherwise published or distributed without the written permission of Resource Publications, Inc., 160 E. Virginia St. #290, San Jose, CA 95112.
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