Nations do not suddenly cease to exist. They get destroyed from within through corruption and violence. Long before the barbarians conquered Rome it was destroyed by these things.
This week’s Haftorah really underlines what we’ve been seeing in the parsha, especially the Tochacha — the rebuke in Book of Leviticus. The Torah warns us what happens if society abandons the values of justice, honesty, and responsibility.
And — spoiler alert — it does not end well.
The Haftorah from Book of Jeremiah points to the same thing. Jeremiah describes all the societal problems tearing the nation apart from within. One of the great lessons here is that countries are usually not destroyed from the outside first. They collapse internally long before the enemy arrives at the gates.
The classic example is the Fall of the Western Roman Empire. Rome was already decaying before the barbarians invaded. There were crushing taxes, corruption, violence, political instability, and loss of social trust. The outside invasion was really the final stage of a much deeper internal breakdown.
The same could be said of the Dissolution of the Soviet Union. People inside the Soviet Union already knew the system was corrupt and failing. There’s the famous joke about Leonid Brezhnev showing his mother all his luxuries — the palace, the cars, the dacha — and she asks nervously, “Leon, what happens if the Communists come back?”
Everybody understood the hypocrisy.
In fact, as early as 1969, Andrei Amalrik predicted the Soviet collapse. He explained that corruption, economic mismanagement, and internal decay would eventually destroy the system from within. The authorities hated what he wrote, but history proved him right.
And that is exactly what the Torah is saying in the Tochacha. The collapse never happens overnight. The Torah repeatedly says: “And if you do not listen…” — warning after warning after warning. Problems ignored become crises. Crises ignored become destruction.
There’s also the famous story about Maimonides. A community wrote to him complaining that everything was going wrong — the children were rebellious, the community was struggling, nothing was functioning properly. Maimonides answered with just one line: “Check the butcher.”
They investigated and discovered the butcher’s knife was not kosher. Maimonides understood something profound: when a society begins cutting corners morally and spiritually, the breakdown spreads everywhere else as well.
That’s the message of both the parsha and the Haftorah. A society survives not merely because it is strong militarily or wealthy economically, but because it is honest, just, and trustworthy. Once corruption, dishonesty, and mistrust take over, the destruction has already begun from within.
So it’s definitely something to think about.
