Terumah 5773 – Gilayon #787
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Parshat Truma
And this is the donation that you shall take from
them:
Gold and silver and bronze, and indigo and purple and
crimson,
And linen and goat hair, and reddened ram skins
And ocher-dyed skins and acacia wood.
(Shemot 25:3-4)
And acacia trees – Some of our ancients claimed that our father
Jacob planted them and the
took them from
on Moshe's command, and the proof is 'acacia wood, such as the indigo and the
purple'. One wonders, why does it say 'and with whomever was found' [meaning] for
his [personal] need […] why did they take along acacia trees, what need had
they for them? To add to the question, the Egyptians thought that they were
going to worship and that they would return afterwards, and therefore they lent
them. How then could the Israelites take out so many boards, 10 cubits each, and
also latches and they passed through the royal site of
when asked why they are taking acacia trees when going away three days to
worship?
We know not whether these ancients had a
tradition that
the acacia trees out of
– in which case we accept their authority. But if it was conjecture, a
different solution must be found. We suggest that near
was a forest of acacia trees. When they arrived there, he told them that they
would be staying for a long time and, as I explained, they would have no cloud
above them. So everyone made booths, and the princes built kinds of enclosures,
each according to his station, and, because they were so many, they felled the
entire forest and made booths, and Moshe spoke to them regarding the Sanctuary
only after the Day of Atonement, and this explains 'and with whomever was found'.
(Ibn Ezra (The long version) on Shemot 25:5)
And this is the donation – It would seem that all [materials mentioned] before
the end of the list of donations is superfluous, because we see all the materials
mentioned here [appear later] in the chapter on the Sanctuary. And we know what
was needed for each task. But [mention of the materials here] comes to teach us
the manner of estimation and requisition the Lord demanded, that it not be
according to the financial wealth of each one, which would result in 'and money
answers everything' […] But the estimates were to take into
consideration what each person had on hand of each of these materials, and the
person who had none of these materials, even if he was a wealthy person, was
exempted.
(Haamek Davar, Shemot 25:3)
The parochet, its cherubim and its weavings
Dalia Marx
The Mishkan's accouterments that the Israelites were ordered to fashion
included the parochet – the curtain – described as follows:
And you shall
make a parochet of blue, and purple, and scarlet, and fine twined linen;
with cherubim the work of the skilful artisan shall it be made. And you shall
hang it upon four pillars of acacia overlaid with gold, their hooks being of
gold, upon four sockets of silver. And you shall hang up the parochet
under the clasps, and shall bring in thither within the parochet the ark
of the testimony; and the parochet shall divide unto you between the
Holy and the Holy of Holies. (Exod 26:31-33, and
slightlydifferently Exod 36:8).
During the
was one of the most impressive accoutrements of the Sanctuary. Josephus
Flavius, the historian of priestly descent who had seen the
describes the artistry of the parochet's weaving: "The composition
of materials was not chosen without pre-planning, it was made in the image of
the universe. It seems that the crimson alludes to fire, the linen to earth,
the indigo to air, the purple to the sea… the fabric's embroidery describes
heaven and all its hosts, except for the animals (Wars
IV, 5). According to this description, the curtain represented the
entire universe with all its elements – fire, earth, air and water, with the
embroidery depicting the heavens and their hosts. In this matter (at least) Flavius's
description is at odds with the Torah which has cherubim alone on the curtain ("with
cherubim the work of the skilful artisan shall it be made")
The curtain, whose purpose was to separate between "the Holy and
Holy of Holies" was not made of long-lasting, enduring textiles, but from
degradable materials. Indeed, the Mishna relates that the wear and tear
necessitated production of two parochot every year (Shekalim 8, 5). The Torah details not only the
precious materials used in the weaving of the curtain, but also the way they
should be woven – "the work of the skilful artisan shall it be made",
and even the image depicted upon it, the "cherubim". The cherubim are
heavenly winged beings, described in the Bible in various contexts and different
portrayals.
The parochet screening the Holy of Holies, the ark and the two
cherubim above the cover, also depicted, according to the Torah's description,
images of cherubim. It presented a two-dimensional version of what lay inside
the Holy of Holies. But in the
its cherubim were hidden, what did the parochet with its cherubim
screen? The curtain and its cherubim concealed the absence of the ark and the
cherubim from the Holy of Holies. The picture on the cloth represented that
which it was intended to conceal, but actually it hid the void behind it. And
the parochet itself was hidden from the eyes of the people.
"Work
of a skilled artisan"
The Talmud records a controversy regarding the quality of work required
for the crafting of the curtain and its cherubim:
One text says: "embroiderer's
work" (Shemot 26:36), but a
different text says: "work of a skilled artisan" (ibid.
31) – a single face. "Work of a skilled artisan" – two faces.
[A controversy between] R.Yudah and R. Nehemia, one says: "Embroiderer'swork" a lion on this side and a lion on the other side. "Work of a
skilled artisan", a lion on one side, the other side empty. The other
says: "Embroiderer's work", a lion on one side, the other side empty".
"Work of a skilled artisan", a lion on one side and a vulture on the
other. (Yerushalmi Shekalim I 2, 51b)
It is conceivable that the two texts are referring to different
curtains1. It is still possible, however, to learn how our Sages
understood the change in terminology. The anonymous view in the Yerushalmi
identifies "embroiderer's work" with "a single face",
meaning a single figure, whereas "work of a skilled artisan" is "two
faces", i.e. the embroidered images on each side of the fabric are different.
According to R. Nehemiah, whose view seems consonant with that of the anonymous
Yerushalmi sage, "work of a skilled artisan" is so sophisticated that
each side presents a different image ("a lion on this side, a vulture on
the other"). Even if the festival pilgrims were allowed to see the parochet
on the festivals, as described in Amoraic sources, they could see only the
external side. The interior side could be seen only by the High Priest and only
on Yom Hakippurim.
From the above we may deduce that the embroidery on the
was not just expert and complex work, but that it also contained a dimension of
mystery. The mystery was revealed only – in addition to the High Priest – to
those involved in the production of the curtain.
The Weaving
(Thinking?) Maidens
Who wove the curtain? In
textile-related work, including spinning, weaving and embroidery was considered
female work. A number of verses in "Eshet Hayyil" – "Woman
of Valor" (Proverbs 31) portray the
ideal woman as one who works with wool and linen, spinning and weaving.
Tractate Negaim, when describing the body positions in which people are to
stand before the priest who examines their blemishes, says that they must stand
as they do in their day-to-day activity, the man "as one who hoes and
picks olives" and the woman as – among other depictions – "as one
working dough, as one nursing and as a weaver" (Negaim 2, 4)
The Torah informs us that the women were responsible for production of
fabrics for sacred ritual use: "And every woman wise-hearted with her
hands spun […] And all the women whose hearts moved them with wisdom spun the
goat hair" (Shemot 35:25-26). Talmudic
literature also relates that women were employed in the
Tosephta lists among the artisans who were on the
(Shekalim 2, 6). From the following
source in the Talmud Yerushalmi, we see that there was no doubt that the women
were the curtain-weavers; the only remaining question was from which article of
the
budget the women were to be recompensed:
Shmu'el said:
Women who weave the
their wages from the contribution of the chamber. Rav Huna [said]: From the
contribution to
upkeep. What are they disputing? Shmu'el understood [the women's function as
equivalent] to a sacrifice, and Huna understood [it as equivalent] to a
structure (ySheq 4:3, 48a).
These
sources show that women played an active part in the
was their work. Other sources indicate that the curtain-weavers were in
particular young maidens. In the Apocryphal composition II Baruch (or – Syriac
Apocalypse of Baruch), the author2 bewails the approaching
destruction of
He orders the priest to fling the keys of the
heavenward, for they could no longer protect the
house, for we have failed to watch over it". Immediately following, in a
female parallel to the priests, he turns to the weaving maidens and orders:
And you, virgins who spin fine
linen,
And silk with gold of Ophir,
Make haste and take all things,
And cast them into the fire,
So that it may carry them to Him who
made them.
And the flame sends them to Him who
created them,
So that the enemies do not take
possession of them. (II Baruch 10:19)3
A commentary on Tractate Tamid,
positioned on the printed page where Rashi's commentary is ordinarily found (and
is therefore referred to by some as 'pseudo-Rashi') claims that the weavers
were young virgins: "Maidens who had not yet menstruated worked on it [the
parochet] because they wanted that it be made in purity" (Bavli Tamid 29b).
Boundaries and
Intimacy
The
parochet represents worlds of opposites: Its weaving required the slow
and delicate work of the maidens, but the curtain itself was very heavy;
according to the Mishna, three hundred priests were needed in order to immerse
it (Shekalim 8, 8). It symbolizes purity
but is easily defiled. It symbolizes the entire cosmos – so implies Josephus – but
it is constricted to the Jewish nation's most intimate and set apart place.
In
other cultures, too, virgins wove the ritual fabrics. Prof. Shaul Lieberman
compares the weavers of the parochet to the girls who wove the ritual
dress of Athena (peplos) in ancient
seven and eleven. What can explain the choice of young pre-puberty girls to
weave for the holy service in different cultures? The simple answer is that
their thin fingers were suitable to the delicate work. Classic commentators
mentioned that employment of the young girls averted the danger of defilement
with menstrual impurity (tum'at niddah), but there may be deeper
reasons.
Perhaps
we can identify a symbolic connection between the parochet and the state
of virginity – both embody clear separation, a boundary forbidden to all,
permitted only to those duly appointed and at the correct time. Perhaps for
this reason, the
desecration by Titus, its destructor, is described in terms of a brutal rape.
His breaking into the
is thus described: "And he took a sword and slashed the curtain" (Bavli, Gittin 56b). The Bavli continues and
relates: "Miraculously, blood spurted out". The conqueror thought
that he had killed himself, and perhaps this is the Talmud's euphemistic way of
saying that he thought that he had killed Him whose
of the
whose fate was sealed.
Parochet and
Minor Sanctuary
The
parochet did not disappear with the destruction of the
representation is found in tens of thousands of synagogues throughout the ages.
It is one of the ritual objects of the synagogue whose purpose is to remember
and commemorate the
If in ancient
it could be seen only on special occasions by festival pilgrims, today it is
present and seen by all who enter the house of prayer.
The
synagogue parochet is usually made of expensive and fine materials and
is donated to the synagogue to commemorate a special individual or communal
events. Embroidered upon it are Biblical and liturgical verses, decorations,
symbols, and personal dedications. Styles differ and each parochet tells
a personal and individual story, but all teach us that the holy can be created
only through slow, restrained and loving work.
The parochet
is a constant reminder that the synagogue is a minor temple, a mikdash me'at
(a lesser temple) in the absence of the
of the synagogue and its vitality constitute an irrefutable response to the
attempts of Titus and all his successors to destroy Judaism.
1.
Shmot 26:36 speaks of a "masach" – a screen – for the Tent of
Assembly, whereas verse 31 (quoted above) speaks of a parochet which
separates between the Holy and the Holy of Holies.
2.
II Baruch or "The Apocalypse of Baruch" is attributed to Baruch son
of Neria, the prophet Jeremiah's scribe, but it was probably composed after the
destruction of the
3.
It is interesting to note that in parallel versions of the priests flinging the
Temple keys heavenward which appear in Talmudic literature (Bavli Taanit 29a;
Yerushalmi Shekalim 1 3, 50a) there is no mention of the parochet weavers.
Dr. Dalia Marx teaches liturgy and midrash at
the
the Talmud (in English) will soon appear.
And they shall
make me a sanctuary and I will dwell among them…
"Certainly at the heart of the matter of
holiness and the sanctuary and His resting His presence stands
does R. Chayim of Volozhin begin his exposition on God's command to construct a
sanctuary… R.Chayim (1749-1821) wrote
in a rabbinical style not easily translatable into English, and therefore I take
the liberty of summarizing rather than translating. If man sanctifies himself properly through the
observance of all the mitzvoth Then he himself is the actual sanctuary
and within himself is the Lord, blessed be His name, as is written (Jeremiah 7) 'The Temple of the Lord, the
Temple of the Lord, the Temple of the Lord are these [buildings]' but as they
taught 'And I shall dwell in them' – Scripture does not say 'in it [in
the Sanctuary]', but rather 'in them' – in the people. The tzadikkim, through
actions which are desired by Him, are themselves the true sanctuary of
God. The physical sanctuary is external, and it has important educational
value. The Torah wishes to tell us, do not think that the end goal of God's
intent is the creation of the external sanctuary, but "know you that the
goal of my will in forming the sanctuary and all its utensils is but to hint to
you that you study it and then make yourselves, through your proper behavior as
the form of the sanctuary and its utensils, suitable for Me to actually
rest My presence in you. The
sanctuary's existence is dependent upon our walking in His paths. When the
nation's internal sanctuary becomes corrupt, the
destroyed.
(R. Hayyim of Volozhin – Sefer Nefesh Hachayim – Gate
1 – Chap.4)
If you follow my laws (Vayikrah 26:3)… I will establish My abode in your midst (26: 11). If we meditate upon
these verses, two things will become clear to us as absolute certainties:
1. The meaning of that I
may dwell among them goes way beyond the mere indwelling of the Shekhinah
in the Tabernacle. In reality, it refers to God's immanent closeness among us
with the fulfillment of the covenant between Him and
protection and blessing influence the flowering of life for the individual and
collective.
2. That being said, God does
not allow His Shekhinah, His protection, or His blessing to rest upon us
by the building of the Tabernacle and its painstaking maintenance, but rather,
by the sanctification of every aspect of our private and public lives for the
sake of keeping His commandments. This was not demonstrated only by the
historical events of the destruction of the Sanctuary at Shilo, and of the two
Scripture itself speaks of it clearly and with explicit warnings… In any
case, Scripture proclaims that I may dwell among them will occur in the
wake of let them make Me a sanctuary. Therefore, the sanctuary is but an expression
of the more general role whose fulfillment is the condition for the indwelling
of the Shekhinah in
to be assured.
(R.
Samson Raphael Hirsch on Shemot 25: 3-8)
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