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Parashat
Shemini
Why Does
Eating Kosher Food Mindfully Help Us Merit Living in
The Holy Land?

Why Were Many
Newcomers to Torah Vegetarian Before Embracing the Torah Path?
My husband and I
were both vegetarians for a period before joining a yeshiva and returning to
the Torah path. We soon discovered that many other ba’alei teshuvah
shared a similar experience – instinctively cutting out meat a while before embracing
the Torah path. Looking back, it’s clear this wasn’t a coincidence. For many of
us, abstaining from meat was an unconscious preparation for spiritual
sensitivity – a distancing from the unrefined in pursuit of the pure. Returning
to meat wasn’t easy. It was even more challenging for us environmentalists who
cared deeply about animal life and found the concept of animal sacrifice especially
difficult to accept. It took heartfelt guidance from our beloved teacher, Rabbi
Goldstein zt”l, who explained that sacrifices are not merely ritual slaughter
but acts of elevation. The animals, he said, willingly stretched their necks –
not as victims, but as offerings ascending to a higher spiritual state. “When a
Jew eats meat mindfully,” he taught us, “the animal becomes part of something
far greater – not just a human being, but a holy Jew.” This is especially true
at a Shabbat table where the food’s energy is directed toward singing holy
tunes, sharing words of Torah, and mitzvot. Rabbi Goldstein encouraged us to
print menu cards for our Shabbat meals that proclaimed: “Our table is a mizbeach
(altar), and our food is a korban (sacrifice).” We would joyfully recite
this sentence each time we broke bread, transforming our meals into a form of avodah
(spiritual service). I believe our temporary abstinence from meat helped
purify our hearts and made us more receptive to the truth of Torah. Our
yearning for holiness led us to intuitively reject impure, non-kosher meat,
which is a spiritually numbing food that dulls the soul and clouds inner
perception. After learning the laws of kashrut, most of us gradually returned
to eating meat, this time with reverence and discernment, understanding that
kosher meat – consumed with mindful intention – is not a descent into the
physical but a pathway for spiritual elevation.
How is the
Responsibility of Holiness Distinguished in the Land of Israel?
Parashat
Shemini centers on the sanctity of the Mishkan and
the strict requirements for Divine service. For many of us who returned to
Torah observance, the process of spiritual growth began with refining what we
ate and how we lived here in the Holy Land. It is no coincidence that the Torah
places great emphasis on holiness in physical acts, especially in eating. The
sanctity of the Mishkan – the dwelling place of the Shechinah – required
preparation, purity, and boundaries. Likewise, the sanctity of the Land of
Israel depends on how we live within it and sanctify the physical, Eretz
Yisrael, even the physical becomes spiritual. Being careful to eat only kosher
food – from which the blood of the animal has been removed – is one way to
merit living in the holy land.
ספר ויקרא פרק יא
פסוק מג אַל תְּשַׁקְּצוּ אֶת נַפְשֹׁתֵיכֶם
בְּכָל הַשֶּׁרֶץ הַשֹּׁרֵץ וְלֹא תִטַּמְּאוּ בָּהֶם וְנִטְמֵתֶם בָּם:
“You shall not
make yourselves abominable with any creeping creature that creeps, and you
shall not defile yourselves with them, that you should become impure through
them” (Vayikra 11:43).
The Ramban
explains that the holiness of the land is bound to our actions. The mitzvot
were primarily given to be fulfilled in the Land of Israel, and it is only here
that the Shechinah can truly dwell. Since the Land of Israel, the center of the
inhabited world, is the inheritance of Hashem, and specially designated for His
Name, when dwelling in His Land we must be sanctified in our conduct, to be
worthy of His presence. This is especially so in matters of forbidden
relationships and other mitzvot tied to the purity of body and soul. That is why the Torah warns: “Keep all My
statutes and ordinances… so that the Land does not vomit you out” (Vayikra
20:22). Eretz Yisrael does not tolerate impurity. Outside the Land – even
though all belongs to Hashem – purity is never complete due to the ruling
spiritual forces, and nations assigned their own celestial guardians. But in the
Land of Yisrael, Hashem alone is our G-d, and we are uniquely bound to Him. The
fullness of Divine service is meant to take place specifically in the Land of
Israel (Ramban, Vayikra 18:25).
What is the
Connection Between the Holiness of the Mishkan and the Land of Israel?
Eretz Yisrael is
not just a backdrop for holiness – it is a living participant in the spiritual
destiny of the Jewish people. The Torah teaches that the land will “vomit out”
those who defile it (Vayikra 18:28), emphasizing that Eretz Yisrael
cannot tolerate sin. The Sifra elaborates that the land itself becomes
defiled through immoral behavior and, as a consequence, expels its inhabitants
(Sifra Acharei Mot 13). This spiritual sensitivity distinguishes the
Holy Land from all other lands. Entering Egypt was optional, but entering the
Land of Israel is a Divine obligation. In Egypt, whether or not Bnei Yisrael
followed Hashem’s will, they were allowed to remain. But Eretz Yisrael is different.
If you fulfill the will of the Creator, then the land of Canaan is given to
you. But if not, you are exiled from it. As it states: “Let not the land vomit
you out for defiling it” (Vayikra 18:28); (Sifre Parashat Ekev Piska 2).
This makes living in the Land of Israel not just a privilege, but a
responsibility. Holiness is not an automatic consequence of being in a holy
place – it must be cultivated through Torah, mitzvot, and inner refinement. The
connection between the Mishkan and the Land is rooted in this shared sanctity.
Just as the Shechinah only rested in the Mishkan when Israel was purified, so
too does it rest in the Land only when its inhabitants live with spiritual
integrity. As Rav Moshe Cordovero teaches, the desert generation experienced
the spiritual reality of Eretz Yisrael even before entering its borders – for
the air, atmosphere, and angels of the Land accompanied the Shechinah wherever
it rested. “…the air of the Land of Israel went with the generation of the
desert… with the Shechinah, which traveled with them… until the entry into the
Land of Israel, to its appropriate place. There is the resting place of
sanctity, for there is the gateway to heaven” (Pardes Rimonim 25:2). Thus,
the Land of Israel is not just the destination of our national journey – it is
the vessel for Divine presence. Its holiness responds to our behavior. When we
live with purity and intention, the Shechinah dwells among us. But when we
defile the Land, it recoils. Just as the Shechinah departed the Mishkan when
sanctity was breached, so too does the Land expel those who abandon the path of
holiness.
Why is Eating in Holiness the Kosher
Pathway to Divine Awareness?
Parashat
Shemini includes the foundational laws of kashrut,
distinguishing between pure and impure animals. “For I am Hashem who brought
you up from the land of Egypt to be your G-d – you shall therefore be holy, for
I am holy” (Vayikra 11:45). Rashi notes that this verse implies the very
act of keeping kosher elevates us to holiness (Rashi, Vayikra 11:45). Eating
is one of the most physical and earthly acts – yet the Torah teaches that it
can become an act of holiness. The food we ingest becomes part of our bodies –
and thus, part of the vessels through which we serve Hashem. The Zohar notes
that וְנִטְמֵתֶם בָּם“You shall become impure
through them” (Vayikra 11:43) is written defectively, without an alef,
to imply a state of sealed impurity from which there is no easy purification. Whoever
defiles himself with unkosher foods is considered as if he worships idols. One
who serves idolatry departs from the realm of holiness and enters the realm of
impurity. So too, one who eats forbidden foods is drawn into spiritual
defilement – in this world and the next. Therefore, it is written: “Do not make
yourselves abominable through the animal and the bird and all that creeps on
the ground, which I have set apart from you to regard as impure” (Vayikra
20:25); (Zohar III,
42a). Non-kosher food cannot be elevated; it dulls the
soul and causes spiritual insensitivity that prevents us from fully
experiencing closeness with Hashem. On the other hand, eating kosher food in
sanctity with the right intention can be spiritually transformative. It allows
us to elevate the physical world and turn it into a vehicle for Divine service.
When we bless with kavanah, eat mindfully, and use that energy to serve Hashem,
we elevate the physical and transform it into an experience of spiritual
connection (Tanya, Likutei
Amarim, Chapter 7). This has particular resonance in the Land of Israel. Only
kosher food – ideally grown or prepared with mitzvah-consciousness – resonates
with the spiritual frequency of the Land. Eating in holiness becomes a pathway
for aligning with Eretz Yisrael’s inherent sanctity.
Which Efforts
Can Help Us Live in True Shalom in the Holy Land?
Parashat
Shemini reminds us that holiness is not about
otherworldliness – it is about elevating the world we live in. Whether it is
fire brought to the altar or food brought to our lips, the way we live and what
we consume matter deeply. The Land of Israel magnifies this truth. It is a land
that responds to the spiritual level of its inhabitants – and demands their
moral and spiritual refinement. In the place where the Shechinah resides, we
are invited to uplift the physical through mindful mitzvah performance. Here,
eating kosher food in holiness is not only a mitzvah but a key that unlocks
deeper alignment with the land’s essence. The mitzvot hateluyot ba’aretz
– agricultural commandments unique to the Land – illustrate this unity between
body and soul, sustenance and sanctity. Tithes, Terumot, Ma’aserot,
and the Shemitah year remind us that even our eating must be done in
covenant with Hashem. May we merit to eat in holiness, dwell in holiness, and
uplift every corner of our physical lives, especially in the holy atmosphere of
Eretz Yisrael. May our endeavors to live holy lives in the holy land bring
about lasting shalom to the Land of Israel and the world! May our efforts to
sanctify the mundane empower our holy soldiers to liberate the Land in its
entirety. May our sincere service return the Shechinah in her full glory to her
sacred resting place.