Matot Masei 5770 – Gilayon #658
(link to original page)
Click here to
receive the weekly parsha by email each week.
Parshat Matot-Mas'ey
Moses sent them the thousand from each tribe to the
army,
them along with Phinehas the son of Eleazar the priest
to the army,
with the sacred utensils and the trumpets for sounding
in his possession.
(Bamidbar
31:6)
If you go to war in your land against an adversary
that oppresses you,
you shall blow a teruah with the trumpets
and be remembered before the Lord your God,
and thus be saved from your enemies.
(Bamidbar
10:9)
Regarding the verse you shall blow a teruah with the trumpets
and be remembered, it is not to be
understood literally, as if – God forbid – there could be forgetfulness at the
Throne Of Glory and the teruah would recall that which was forgotten. Rather,
it is like all expressions applied to the blessed Lord that speak of affect,
such as ire and anger, annoyance, mercy, and forgiveness. These states come
upon Him in a metaphorical sense and in reaction to human behavior and disposition.
If they [humans] act wickedly and receive a punishment or He abandons them to
chance and nature, people will say He was angry and dismayed with them and then
forgot them, for that is how they speak of it if one human treated another in
that way. And if they improve their deeds and return to Him and He again looks
after them and saves them, they would say that He remembered them and had mercy
on them and forgave them. All of this is said regarding actions which He
performed upon the receivers, and not because He was affected and forgot and
became angry and changed His mind and had mercy and remembered and forgave. That
is what they meant by saying "Could trumpets remind [Him]? But He does not
forget!" Rather, if they were capable of trumpeting and did not, and
because of that they were not saved, it seems to us as if they had not been
brought to the Omnipresent's attention, and by trumpeting and repenting, it seems
to us that He was reminded of them. However, in truth He did not forget and He
had no forgetfulness; and since He did not forget, neither did He remember, for
there can only be remembering after forgetting. When we talk about His
remembering, it refers to His saving them again, since it seems to us as if He
forgot and again remembered. That is why they said, "They are only
remembered for salvations" – for it is because of acts of salvation that
we feel He has again remembered them.
(Malbim Bamidbar 10:9)
This
issue is dedicated to the memory of our mother, Debby Porten, upon the first
anniversary of her death. She thoroughly embodied all the values promoted by
the Midrash through her love of humanity, her personal decision to settle in
the Land, and her deep involvement with the Jewish People.
The Debate Between
Moses and the Tribes of Reuben and Gad
Ronit and Avi Porten
The story of how the tribes Reuben, Gad, and
half of Manasseh settled in Transjordan, across from Jericho, lends the reader
insights about the kind of behavior expected from the Israelites and how such
behavior can affect the nation's unity and future.
Parashat Matot presents us with a dialogue
between the tribes of Reuben and Gad on the one hand, and Moses on the other,
just on the eve of the Israelites' entry into the Promised Land. The tribal
representatives speak four times and Moses responds three times. The discussion
results in an agreement forged between the two sides concerning settlement in
Transjordan.
Chapter 32 opens with a description of the
situation that serves as background to the tribes' request of Moses:
The descendants of
Reuben and Gad had an abundance of livestock very numerous and they saw the
land of Jazer and the land of Gilead, and behold, the place was a place for
livestock. (32:9)
Next comes an account of their first appeal
to Moses:
Ataroth, Dibon,
Jazer, and Nimrah, Heshbon, Elealeh, Sebam, Nebo, and Beon, the land that the Lord struck down before the congregation
of Israel is a land for livestock, and your servants have livestock.
They said,
"If it pleases you, let this land be given to your servants as a heritage;
do not take us across the Jordan."
At first glance, the request made by the two
tribes seems natural and sensible: Scripture points out that the land in
question is appropriate for grazing, and it is conquered territory (the tribes
list the cities captured by the Israelites from Sihon and Og) and, apparently,
ripe for settlement. The tribes' difficulties caring for their large herds
could be solved by taking hold of the area; that might also allow for a less
stressful division of lands among the other tribes, who would be left with more
territory on the other side of the Jordan.
It should be noted that the tribes couch
their request in hesitant language, they are feeling their way and testing the patience
of Moses, Elazar the priest, and the princes. This impression is produced by
the repetition of the word vayomru – they said in the middle of their
speech, before they received an answer. It is as if they uttered the first
sentence (up to is a land for livestock, and your
servants have livestock) and then stopped and wait for Moses himself to
draw the desired conclusion – "give us this land." But Moses
did not respond, and there is a feeling of a heavy silence in the air. Moses
forced them to explicitly formulate their request themselves, and then they
continued: do not take us across the Jordan (see Yehiel Tzvi Markowitz's
comments on this in Da'at Mikra).
Moses completely
rejects their request with these very harsh words:
Moses said to the
descendants of Gad and the descendants of Reuben, "Shall your brethren go
to war while you stay here?(verse 6)
Then Moses rehearsed the story of the Sin of
the Spies at length, comparing it to the tribes' request. Note that Moses made
use of expressions found in the original telling of the story of the Spies. In
the original passage we read: … you will [thus]
bear your iniquities for forty years; thus you will come to know My discouragement [tenuati]
In our parasha we read: Why do you discourage [taniun] the hearts of
the Israelites (verse
7); and they discouraged the hearts of the Israelites
(verse 9). The punishment for this
was, and He made them wander [vayni’em]
in the desert for forty years (32:13). The word heart appears
both in the story of the Spies (Devarim 1:28)
as well as in our parasha (verses 7 and 9).
Apparently, the tribes took council among themselves and then promised to arm ourselves quickly [and go] before the Israelites
in the war to conquer the Land (verses 16-19).
Why did Moses react so strongly to the
tribes' seemingly natural and logical request, going so far as to compare it to
the Sin of the Spies? A few answers may be forwarded and some of them are found
in Moses' own words:
1) Demoralization – Why do you discourage the hearts of the Israelites from
crossing over to the Land the Lord has given them. Moses was worried that
the tribes' suggestion would weaken the will of the rest of the people to enter
the Land of Israel. Perhaps they would embrace the idea forwarded by the two
tribes and prefer to remain in Transjordan. Even if they do not go that far, it
may still have caused them to wonder whether the tribes of Reuben, Gad, and
half of Manasseh were afraid of the coming war (see Rashi on the verse). Perhaps
it is simply that the nation's military power would be weakened when two and a
half of the tribes opt out of fighting.
2) An offense against mutual
responsibility, justice, and equality – Shall
your brethren go to war while you stay here? They damaged
mutual responsibility and national unity. It is not proper that one section of
the people sit around placidly while the others fight to conquer their
designated lands. This injustice is compounded by the fact that the entire
nation fought to conquer Transjordan – the territories wanted by Gad and Rueben
– while the latter would not help in the conquest of the Land of Israel which
was designated for the other tribes.
3) A warped moral stance – Many
commentators point out the problematic way that the tribes' made their case:
a) The tribes mentioned their cattle before
their children: We shall build sheepfolds for our livestock and cities for
our children. Yalku Shimoni writes: "They made the primary
thing secondary and the secondary thing primary, for they loved their property
more than [they loved] people."
b) The repeated use of the word mikneh
[livestock], based on the root KNH [which is related to acquisition] ratherthan terms such as tzon [flocks] implies that they were avaricious and
their property was more important to them than their families.
4) Warped religious faith – The tribes
"took God out of the picture." They would fight before the Israelites
and they would not return to their homes until each
of the children of Israel has taken possession of his inheritance (verses 17-18).
In his response (verses
20-24), Moses emphasized his unease with the tribes' approach. He mentioned
the children before the livestock: build yourselves cities for your children
and sheepfolds for your flocks and he repeated the phrase before the
Lord four times. The tribes thought that they were proposing an agreement
with the other Israelites tribes, but Moses referred to it as an agreement made
with God.
It is interesting to note that although the
purpose of the Exodus was to crystallize the Israelites into a nation and bring
them to the land that had been promised to their forefathers, Moses made no
mention of the tribes' unwillingness to take possession of the Promised Land
when scolding them.
Moses stipulated a condition for the tribes
(that famous double condition, about which it is written in tractate Gittin:
"From where do we learn about all conditions? From the condition
stipulated of Gad and the condition stipulated of Reuben."):
You shall go at the head of the ranks in the
war to conquer the Land of Israel, fighting until the conquest is complete. Only
then may you return to your families and only then will you receive the
territories you asked for as an inheritance.
The tribes of Gad and
Reuben accepted Moses' conditions, and we indeed read in the Book of Joshua (chapter 22) that they
fulfilled the condition and took an active role in the conquest. It would be
expected that having completed their part of the bargain the whole affair would
come to an end. The Sages, however, were uncomfortable with the tribes'
behavior, as we can see from the following midrash:
The descendants of
Reuben and Gad had an abundance of livestock… thus taught our Rabbis: the
Holy One, blessed be He, created three gifts in the world: wisdom, valor, and
wealth. If a man wins one of them, he takes all that is desirable in the world;
if he wins wisdom, he wins everything. If he wins valor, he wins all. If he
wins wealth, he wins all. When? When these are gifts from Heaven and derive
from the power of the Holy One, blessed be He, but human valor and wealth are
nothing… and so you find in the case of the Gadites and Reubenites. They were
very wealthy and had much livestock and loved their possessions and settled
outside the Land. Therefore they were exiled before all the other tribes, as it
is said, and he exiled the Reubenites and the Gadites and half the tribe of Manasseh
(I Chronicles
5:26). And what caused this? That they separated themselves from
their brothers for the sake of their livestock… (Tanhuma Matot)
Acquisitiveness and
avarice have their price: Transjordan was given to the tribes as a mere
land-holding [ahuza], that is to say, as a temporary tenure over the
land. It is not included in the promise of an eternal inheritance relating to
the Land of Israel. Reuben and Gad were treated with poetic justice: they were
chiefly concerned with property, and so they received territory that was easily
available without any guaranties regarding the future. As a punishment they
were the first to have their connection to their land broken (compare with R.
Yitzhak Hershkowitz's article, Re'uven, Gad, VeHatzi Shevet HaMenasheh – T'mikha
Ambivalentit UMivhan Manhigut on the website of Petach Tikva's yeshivat
hesder.)
Nothing comes without
a price. Despite their having completely fulfilled their side of the bargain,
the danger facing the two tribes had not abated. The danger of avarice, of
separating oneself from the community, and the danger of living outside the
Beloved Land, all of these led to Gad and Reuben being the first tribes to lose
their possessions and to be torn away from the Israelite community to taste the
bitter taste of exile.
Ronit and Avi
Porten live in Jerusalem. Ronit works in the human resources department of
Sharei Tzedek hospital and Avi is an attorney.
Midrashei Tzafon
From the pen of our member, Ronen Ahituv
Any vow or any binding oath of self
affliction, her husband can either uphold it or revoke it (30:14).
Could it be that she is under her husband's
control, for it says: that every man dominate in his household (Esther 1:22)?
It would be just, that since the woman sinned
against her husband's will, and she was told, he shall rule over you (Bereishit 3:16), that
she not be able to make a vow without her husband's permission!
We learn from the words self affliction
that he can only revoke vows of self affliction.
Did you allow all the females to live?
(31:15). Could it be that they killed
all the women? Rather, we learn from the words They
were the same ones that they only killed those who caused them to
sin at Baal Peor.
Every daughter who inherits property… (36:8)
Could this hold true throughout the generations?
We learn from the verse this is the word (36:6) – that this word will only be followed in this
generation.
For the Sages made men and women equal in most of the commandments of
the Torah.
There are three contexts of gender in the parasha and all of them seem
to promote anti-women messages: the cancellation of vows, the killing of the
Midianite women, and the obligation of Zelafhad's daughters to marry within
their families. Regarding two of the three cases, the midrash has already
intervened to limit the insult to women: in the cancellation of vows (see Mishnah Nedarim 11:1) and the marriages of
Zelafhad's daughters (see Bava Batra 120a).
I added a drasha in the same spirit regarding the Midianite women. R. Eliezer
son of R. Shimon is quoted in Yalkut Shimoni 785:
R. Eliezer son of R. Shimon says: This
teaches that they knew them all and they said to each other, "She sinned
with so-and-so."
While it's true that in Sifrei (Matot 5)
we find R. Yishmael saying that they also killed the women who were of an
appropriate age for intercourse – even those who did not engage in it – still,
I preferred R. Eliezer's drasha since it was in line with the other drashot of
the Sages on the parasha.
Ronen Ahituv
The Vengeance of the Israelites – God's Vengeance?
We have already on Bereishit 4:15 pointed out the relationship of nakom
[avenge] to kum [rise up] (compare hom & naham, zol
& nazal, zor & nazor, sug &
nasog, potz & nafatz, utz & na'atz, doh
& da'ah, etc.). It is the re-erection of rights which have been
trodden under foot, or a person who has been thrown to the ground. The avenger
identifies himself with the object to be raised up. That probably explains the
reflexive form nakam, and also the mode of construing with the letter mem:
carry out the avenging of the Israelites from [me'eit] the Midianites (Bamidbar 31:2). The
purpose is not revenge, throwing down an enemy – that would be construed with
the letter bet [ ba'Midyanim]. The purpose is the re-erection of
Israel from the Midianites, its spiritual and moral freeing out of the
power of their arts.
(Rabbi S.R. Hirsch on Bamidbar 31:2, Isaac Levy translation)
[In the days of ] the Second Temple they were busy
with Torah and commandments and deeds of kindness – why was it destroyed?
Because they bore undeserved hatred. (Yoma
9b)
And
if we were destroyed, and the world destroyed together with us, because of
undeserved hatred, we will again be built up, and the entire world will be
rebuilt, through undeserved love.
(Rabbi A.I Kook, ztz"l, Orot Ha-Kodesh
324)
Following
the practice initiated by our dear late member, Prof. Gerald Cromer, z"l
We
shall once again visit the grave of Yitzhak Rabin of blessed memory
on
the night of Tisha Be-Av, Monday 19.7.10 at 20:15.
Entry
has been organized under permission of the military cemetery. Vehicles may be
driven to the parking lot near the grave, and the path will be illuminated for
pedestrians.
We
will hold a Ma'ariv service,
Eikhah
and Kinot will be read near the grave.
Please
bring Kinot, Eikhah, and candles.
Good News for Our
Readers
The book Drishat
Shalom is now available for purchase in bookstores!
The book is published
in memory of our member, Gerald Cromer z"l, and edited by Tzvi Mazeh and
Pinchas Leiser. It contains articles based on divrei Torah which first
appeared in the pages of Shabbat Shalom, and it deals with the encounter
between the values of peace and justice drawn from Jewish sources and the
complicated reality of a sovereign Jewish state in the Land of Israel. Publication
of Drishat Shalom was supported by the Gerald Cromer Memorial Fund, the
12th of Heshvan Forum, Oz VeShalom, a Dutch peace fund, and many friends.
We need your support in order that the voice of a religious Zionism
committed to peace and justice will continue to be heard through the
uninterrupted distribution of Shabbat Shalom
in hundreds of synagogues, on the Internet and via email in both
Hebrew and English.
In Israel, checks payable to Oz VeShalom may be sent to Oz
VeShalom-P.O.B. 4433, Jerusalem 91043.
US and British tax-exempt contributions to Oz VeShalom may be made
through:
New Israel Fund, POB 91588, Washington, DC 20090-1588, USA
New Israel Fund of Great Britain, 26 Enford Street, London W1H 2DD,
Great Britain
Please note that the NIF is no longer accepting donations under $100
PEF will also channel donations and provide a tax-exemption. Donations
should be sent to P.E.F. Israel Endowment Funds, Inc., 317 Madison Ave., Suite
607, New York, New York 10017 USA
All contributions to either the NIF or PEF should be marked as
donor-advised to Oz ve'Shalom, the Shabbat Shalom project. For Donations
to NIF, please mention that Oz veShalom is registered as no. 5708.
If you wish to subscribe to the email English editions of Shabbat
Shalom, to print copies of it for distribution in your synagogue, to inquire
regarding the dedication of an edition in someone’s honor or memory, to find
out how to make tax-exempt donations, or to suggest additional helpful ideas,
please call +972-52-3920206 or at ozshalom@netvision.net.il
If you enjoy Shabbat Shalom, please consider contributing towards
its publication and distribution.
- Hebrew edition distributed in Israel
$700
- English edition distributed via email $
100
Issues may be dedicated in honor of an event, person, simcha, etc.
Requests must be made 3-4 weeks in advance to appear in the Hebrew, 10 days in
advance to appear in the English email.
About us
Oz Veshalom-Netivot Shalom is a movement dedicated to the advancement of
a civil society in Israel. It is committed to promoting the ideals of
tolerance, pluralism, and justice, concepts that have always been central to
Jewish tradition and law.
Oz Veshalom-Netivot Shalom shares a deep attachment to the land of
Israel and it no less views peace as a central religious value. It believes
that Jews have both the religious and the national obligation to support the
pursuit of peace. It maintains that Jewish law clearly requires us to create a
fair and just society, and that co-existence between Jews and Arabs is not an
option but an imperative.
4,500 copies
of a 4-page peace oriented commentary on the weekly Torah reading are written
and published by Oz VeShalom/Netivot Shalom and they are distributed to over
350 synagogues in Israel and are sent overseas via email. Our web site is
www.netivot-shalom.org.il.
Shabbat Shalom is available on our website: www.netivot-shalom.org.il