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Population Explosion



It may be a truism that no person has ever declared on their deathbed, "I wish I'd spent more time at the office," but I guarantee neither has anyone ever said, "I wish I'd had fewer children."

In the late sixties and early seventies, a cabal of quasi-scientists spouting pessimistic forecasts of approaching doom managed to sow mindless panic with their scare-tactics about population explosions and mass starvation. The theory then went something along the lines of: Mass-overpopulation is impending, whereupon the ability of the planet to sustain us all will become overstretched and if we are lucky we'll all perish and if not we'll really suffer and until then can you just stop having kids and send lots of grant money to my research foundation so I can live in luxury while researching this imminent disaster while appearing regularly on all the best talk shows to promote my latest book about the problem...

No person has ever declared on his or her deathbed, "I wish I'd had fewer children." They sucked us in. Empirically, every honest study shows that, year-by-year, food is becoming more available, healthier and cheaper to produce. Poverty is being alleviated, with standards of living zooming up worldwide. If anything, the single biggest problem looming on the economic horizon in the West is our graying population with not enough young people coming on line to replace the baby boomer generation who believed all that pseudo-babble about population bombs and didn't have enough children to guarantee their retirement pensions.

I can see you shaking your heads and arguing that the reason the environment is improving and resources have increased is because we heeded those clarion calls in time. Reminds me of the guy walking down the street holding the huge magnet to scare away the pink elephants. When informed that there are no pink elephants he smugly observes, "See, works doesn't it?"

The reason it works is because that's how G-d wanted it. We read how the first commandment given to (the then childless) Adam was, "Be fruitful and multiply, fill the world and take control of it" (Genesis 1:28). Then Noah, after having survived the flood and already the proud father of three grown sons, is given the same instructions. Commentators on the Bible understand from the above that even one blessed with children in one's youth should continue to procreate. Large families are the greatest of blessings, with each additional child bringing his or her individual blessings to the family.

Each additional child bringing his or her individual blessings to the family Nature and the environment were created to serve humankind, not the converse. G-d forbid to gratuitously cause harm to our ecosystem, and truly we bear responsibility to protect this world for future generations, but our first responsibility is to humankind.

It is time to reject the insidious perversions of contemporary culture, to proudly acknowledge our intention to have as large a family as we can. We are positive that G-d, the creator of all, can provide for and sustain all His creations. The blessings and pleasure that each child brings far outweigh any economic apprehensions. Every extra spark of humanity bought to this world, every additional soul enhancing the Jewish nation, brings the world one step closer to its ultimate perfection and justifies G-d's plan for His universe.


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By Elisha Greenbaum   More articles...  |   RSS Listing of Newest Articles by this Author

Rabbi Elisha Greenbaum is spiritual leader of Moorabbin Hebrew Congregation and co-director of L'Chaim Chabad in Moorabbin, Victoria, Australia

About the artist: Sarah Kranz has been illustrating magazines, webzines and books (including five children's books) since graduating from the Istituto Europeo di Design, Milan, in 1996. Her clients have included The New York Times and Money Marketing Magazine of London


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Reader Comments
Latest Comments:
Posted: Jan 13, 2008
overpopulation
I think people go to extremes on this as they do on all other subjects.

It is beneficial to some to have large families, to others to have smal ones, to some to marry and not have children, whilst to the last group it may be they were meant to live single fulfilled lives.

Hashem has different plans for different people and to enforce large families by making people feel guilty if they use contraception, or enforce smaller families is wrong.

There is room within this world and within Judaism in particular to accomodate individuality. Praise Hashem for that!
Posted By Nicole, London
via chabadwimbledon.com

Posted: Nov 17, 2007
Let us reason
Attacking "overpopulation" as the big problem facing our environment or even as the cause of starvation elsewhere in the world is to ignore the myriad other factors that impact such problems - not least of which is the USA's gluttony when it comes to resource-usage, fueled by our own lifestyle (itself often fueled by greed and over-concern with our own creature comforts). Furthermore, hunger elsewhere in the world is not typically due to lack of food, as it is to unstable political situations. Let's be fair, and not knock large families until we're prepared to downsize our houses and cars and overall lifestyle. Reducing family size is not the answer and oversimplifies the matter. Responsible living is the answer.
Posted By Anonymous

Posted: Nov 8, 2007
Population
I have mixed feelings on this one. I don't think big families are for everyone. If you and your spouce are into that sort of thing, and can pull it off (financially, emotionally, etc.), then more power to you, but some people should not have lots of kids, and some people, frankly, shouldn't have kids at all. Not everyone is equally well-off, mature, stable, etc. Meanwhile, are there not orphans out there who could benefit from being adopted? And whether you are pro-choice or pro-life, the number of abortions happening in USA alone is alarming; I heard that a third of pregnancies end in abortion. On a tribal level, I'll say this: it could be argued that Jewish couples with lots of kids are trying to replenish our tribe's numbers after the devastating losses in the Holocaust.
Posted By Rob W., Pittsburgh, PA / USA



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