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Glossary›Tzedakah

Glossary

Tzedakah

Hebrew concept often translated as charity but more accurately meaning righteousness or justice, emphasizing the moral obligation to give to those in need.

What is Tzedakah?

Tzedakah is a foundational ethical principle in Judaism requiring the giving of money, resources, or assistance to those in need. Unlike the English word “charity,” which derives from caritas (love or compassion), tzedakah stems from the Hebrew root for justice and righteousness. This linguistic distinction reflects a core theological difference: tzedakah is not viewed as voluntary generosity but as a binding moral and religious obligation. Jewish law mandates that individuals give a portion of their income to support the poor, fund communal institutions, and promote social equity. The practice encompasses both material giving and acts that restore dignity, create opportunity, and address systemic inequality.

Origins & Lineage

Tzedakah’s roots extend to the Hebrew Bible, where provisions for the poor appear throughout the Torah. Leviticus 19:9-10 commands landowners to leave the corners of their fields unharvested for the poor and the stranger. Deuteronomy 15:7-8 explicitly forbids hardening one’s heart against the needy and requires opening one’s hand to lend sufficiently for their need. These biblical commandments were systematized during the Rabbinic period (circa 70-500 CE), when the Talmud established detailed legal frameworks governing tzedakah obligations.

Maimonides (Moses ben Maimon, 1138-1204), the preeminent medieval Jewish philosopher and legal codifier, articulated the most influential analysis of tzedakah in his Mishneh Torah. His “Eight Levels of Giving” created a hierarchy ranging from reluctant giving to enabling self-sufficiency through employment or interest-free loans. The highest level, according to Maimonides, involves helping someone become economically independent, while the lowest is giving inadequately or begrudgingly. This framework has shaped Jewish philanthropic thought for over eight centuries.

How It’s Practiced

Traditional tzedakah practice involves setting aside a percentage of income—typically 10 percent (ma’aser) as a baseline, with 20 percent considered exemplary—for distribution to individuals and institutions. Many Jewish households maintain a tzedakah box (pushke) where family members deposit coins regularly, often before Shabbat candle-lighting or holidays. The act of physically placing money in the box serves as a tangible reminder of the obligation, particularly for children learning the practice.

Giving takes multiple forms: direct assistance to individuals, donations to synagogues and schools, support for healthcare and social services, and funding for Israel-related causes. Jewish communal organizations historically established gemachs (free loan societies), hachnasat kallah funds (for wedding expenses), and bikur cholim societies (visiting the sick). Anonymous giving is particularly valued, as it preserves the recipient’s dignity—medieval Jewish communities sometimes featured stones with hollows where donors could leave money and recipients could take it without anyone knowing either party’s identity.

Timing matters in tzedakah practice. Giving increases during the High Holy Days (Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur), when repentance, prayer, and tzedakah are said to avert harsh decrees. Purim includes a specific commandment to give gifts to at least two poor people. Life cycle events—bar and bat mitzvahs, weddings, yahrzeits (death anniversaries)—traditionally prompt charitable donations.

Tzedakah Today

Contemporary seekers encounter tzedakah through multiple channels. Jewish Federations in North America coordinate communal fundraising and allocate resources to local, national, and international causes. Organizations like American Jewish World Service apply tzedakah principles to global human rights and development work. The Giving Pledge, co-founded by Jewish philanthropists, reflects tzedakah ethics in secular contexts.

Interfaith and social justice communities have adopted tzedakah language and frameworks. Progressive congregations integrate tzedakah with environmental sustainability, racial justice, and economic equity initiatives. Jewish meditation and mindfulness teachers frame tzedakah as a practice of examining attachment to wealth and cultivating generosity. Online platforms now facilitate micro-donations, direct transfers, and matching campaigns, adapting ancient practice to digital infrastructure.

Renewal and Reconstructionist movements emphasize tzedakah’s justice dimension over purely charitable interpretations, linking it to systemic change and advocacy. Orthodox communities maintain traditional percentage-based giving while debating whether tuition to Jewish day schools counts toward tzedakah obligations.

Common Misconceptions

Tzedakah is not equivalent to Western charity. While charity emphasizes the donor’s virtue and compassion, tzedakah emphasizes the recipient’s right and the donor’s duty. The poor are not supplicants receiving largesse but holders of a claim that justice demands be honored.

Tzedakah is not limited to monetary giving. While financial contributions are central, the concept extends to acts of justice: fair wages, honest business practices, welcoming strangers, and advocating for equitable policies. Maimonides explicitly includes job creation and interest-free loans as superior forms.

Tzedakah does not exempt the poor from giving. Jewish law requires even recipients of communal support to give something, preserving their dignity as moral agents who fulfill obligations rather than passive recipients.

Finally, tzedakah is not primarily about the donor’s spiritual benefit. While giving may cultivate generosity and detachment, the practice centers on meeting others’ needs and fulfilling divine commandments, not on personal transformation.

How to Begin

Start by designating a fixed percentage of income for tzedakah—begin with 3-5 percent if 10 percent feels prohibitive. Establish a simple system: a physical box at home, an automatic monthly transfer, or a designated envelope. Make giving regular rather than sporadic.

Read Maimonides’ “Eight Levels of Giving” in the Mishneh Torah, Laws of Gifts to the Poor (Hilchot Matanot Aniyim), chapters 7-10, available in English translation. This text provides the intellectual foundation for understanding tzedakah’s nuances.

Identify causes that address genuine need: local food banks, refugee resettlement, medical bill assistance, or education funds. Consider organizations that enable self-sufficiency over those providing only immediate relief. Research gemachs or free loan societies in Jewish communities that offer interest-free loans.

If approaching tzedakah as a spiritual practice, work with teachers who integrate Jewish ethics with contemplative practice—the Institute for Jewish Spirituality and programs led by rabbis Sheila Peltz Weinberg, Jeff Roth, or Tirzah Firestone address tzedakah within meditation frameworks. Observe how giving shifts relationship to money, security, and interconnection without making that shift the primary goal.

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