This is the post I prom­ised ages ago about charity.

It relates to read­ing To Heal a Frac­tured World by Rabbi Jonathan Sacks. It’s promp­ted tonight in part by watch­ing Amer­ican Gang­ster and being reminded yet again about Jewish ethics. Through­out the film, the crims and other cops find it impossible to believe that Richie (Rus­sell Crowe) could pos­sibly have found almost $1 mil­lion in unmarked bills in 1970 or so and turned it in. The idea of hon­esty and ethics is just so for­eign to them.

Tikkun olam, or heal­ing the world, is a Jewish mitzvah, or good deed, one of the 613 we are sup­posed to do in our life­time, listed in vari­ous parts of the Old Test­a­ment. Char­ity is another. Char­ity is a part of tikkun olam, accord­ing to Sacks.

I’ve now been work­ing for an organ­isa­tion that does fun­drais­ing for char­ity for six weeks. It brings up a number of ques­tions for me.

Sacks out­lines eight forms of char­ity, one higher than the other.

1. The height of Jewish char­ity is giving someone a gift or loan or accept­ing them into a busi­ness part­ner­ship so that they can make a living for them­selves and so no longer need to rely on char­ity. I think that’s why I like Kiva so much, even though I still haven’t done it myself.

2. Giving anonym­ously so that neither the giver nor the receiver know each oth­er’s iden­tit­ies. This used to take place in temples with a spe­cial room. I like it with the Smith Family too. 

3. The giver knows who the recip­i­ent is but the recip­i­ent does­n’t know who the giver is. I think this still hap­pens with anonym­ous bequests.

4. The poor person knows from whom they are taking but the giver does­n’t know to whom they are giving. This appar­ently used to happen with rabbis throw­ing coins over their shoulders so that the poor didn’t need to be embar­rassed by people know­ing their iden­tit­ies. I think these days it’s called theft. Ser­i­ously, though, I can’t think of a modern example of this. Oh, wait, yes I can: a recip­i­ent of funds from some­thing like the Bill Gates Found­a­tion. Bill would­n’t know the iden­tit­ies of all the people who bene­fit, but they all know the name of their benefactor.

5. Next, someone gives a person some­thing before they ask. We do this all the time but on small scales with people we know.

6. Lower, they give only after they are asked. I think this is where most of our cur­rent char­ity oper­ates. I think it’s one of the reas­ons we find ourselves in this resent­ful pos­i­tion towards “char­ity mug­gers”. We only give after being asked, con­vinced, cajoled.

7. Worse, they give less than needed, but in a friendly manner and with good inten­tions. I did this today, taking only a few coins from my purse to put into a tin instead of the $5 I could have afforded. But I smiled…

8. Worst, they give begrudgingly.

So, of the organ­isa­tions I’m work­ing with, Child­Fund, my favour­ite, is at the top level. It gives train­ing and income-gen­er­a­tion to com­munit­ies in devel­op­ing coun­tries, yet people are very res­ist­ant and begrudging; Green­peace isn’t about the poor and most people only give after they are asked but people seem more will­ing to donate; WSPA is about saving anim­als and people walk up to offer to sign up, so it’s level five – why are they hap­pier to do that for anim­als than for humans? I don’t get it.

Anyway, this is mostly just think­ing out loud, but I was intrigued and I’m inter­ested in your opin­ions. What is the role of char­ity in the modern world?