Behaalotecha 5763 – Gilayon #293
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Parashat Behaalotcha
NOW THE PEOPLE WERE LIKE THOSE WHO GRIEVE
OVER ILL-FORTUNE, IN THE EARS OF GOD.
WHEN GOD HEARD, HIS ANGER FLARED UP;
THERE BLAZED UP AGAINST THEM A FIRE OF
GOD
AND ATE UP THE EDGE OF THE CAMP.
THE PEOPLE CRIED OUT TO MOSHE, AND MOSHE
INTERCEDED TO GOD
AND THE FIRE ABATED.
(Bemidbar 11:1-3)
A
Place
's Character Is Determined By Its
Inhabitants
"For
there had blazed against them the fire of God"
– It was so called
after the event; this was not its original name. Similarly "And there
he called the place Massa and Meriva (Testing and Quarreling) – Could
that have been its name? Scripture comes to teach us: Because of the quarrel
amongst the Children of Israel, its name was determined by what happened
there. Similarly, "And
he called the name of the place the Graves of Gluttony" – Was that its
name before? Scripture comes to teach us that" Because there they
buried etc" – it was named after what had happened there, but such was
not its name before. But you do not know who it was who habituated Israel to
sin; behold, it says "and the riffraff which was in its midst"
– these are the converts who were gathered from all places. Rabbi Shim'on
ben Menasya says: These are the elders amongst them, as is written, "Gather
unto me"(The Hebrew for
'riffraff' and 'gather' share a common root.). And if the elders behaved in such a fashion, how much more
so the rest of the people! Similarly you read "And the sons of the gods
saw the daughters of man"– What were the sons of the judges (The
work "Elohim" – one of god's names, also has the connotation of
"judges".) doing?
They were seizing women from the marketplace and tormenting them; if the sons
of the judges behaved so, all the more so the other people.
(Yalkut Shim'oni, Behaalotcha, 247:732)
HOLINESS IS TO BE FOUND ONLY IN GOD
Shammai Leibowitz
Sometimes,
those who strive to ascend the peaks of holiness are plunged into the depths of
bloodshed and death. Take, for example, Nadav and Avihu, the two sons of Aharon
the priest, who were burned alive while offering "alien fire which He
did not command them" (Vayikra 10:1) The exalted occasion of the sanctification of the priests is
transformed into a tragic and horrifying event, as a result of a perverted
understanding of the concept of kedushah – of holiness.
At
the outset of our parasha, we find the chapter dealing with the sanctification
of Levites. From it we can learn about the true essence of kedushah:
"Take
the Levites from among the Children of Israel, and cleanse them" (8:6)
What
is the significance of this kedushah? The Torah explains in detail:
"And
you shall separate the Levites from among the Children of Israel, and the
Levites shall be mine. Afterwards the Levites may enter to serve in the Tent of
Appointment, when you have purified them and elevated them as an elevation
offering" (Bemidbar 8:14)
The
holiness of the Levites is not immanent. It is expressed by their being
separated from the rest of the Children of Israel, separation which is marked
by a set of obligations and limitations imposed only upon them. The Children of
Israel, too, are commanded to be holy, i.e., set aside from the rest of
the nations (Shemot
19:6; Vayikra 20:26, and elsewhere), but
the Levites, by virtue of their duties, are subject to additional restrictions.
This – and only this – makes them holy.
The process of the
consecration of the Levites proves that we are not dealing with a metaphysical
issue. The Levites must undergo a ritual composed of a series of ceremonial
acts, but these acts are, in themselves, day-to-day acts, performed by ordinary
people in different contexts as purely secular acts. These include: The
sprinkling of water, shaving, laundering, eating meat, embracing. (In the
wording of the Torah: sprinkling, passing over with a razor, laundering
clothes, the offering of a sacrifice, leaning with the hands).
This
is to say: These are ordinary acts, which every person is liable to perform on
certain occasions. In our case, as a result of God's commandments, these acts
take on religious significance; only after the performance of the act, the
Levites will become separate from the Children of Israel. Their holiness is not
ingrained; it derives from their having executed the list of acts. Whoever
fails to meet the conditions – is not holy.
Yet
more: The Torah emphasizes that the Levites' kedushah is contingent
upon their moral deportment. Prior to the selection of the Levites, the firstborn were
holy, but they lost their holiness to the Levites:
"For
every firstborn of the Children of Israel, both man and beast – on the day when
I smote every firstborn in the land Egypt, I consecrated them unto me. And I
took the Levites instead of the every firstborn of the Children
of Israel. (8:17-18)
The
principle element seems to be missing from the text. Why did the firstborn
lose their holiness?
The
parasha does not supply a clear-cut answer. But there is a more than broad hint
that it is tied to some sin which the firstborn – but not the Tribe of Levi –
transgressed. The Torah states "And I will appoint the Levites given to
Aharon and his sons… to atone for all of the Children of Israel."
(8:19). [Ed. Note: So does Rashi explain,
Bemidbar 8:17)
In the incident of the
sin of the Calf, the Levites were the only tribe of the Children of Israel who
did not consecrate objects and land, remaining faithful to the pure faith that
only God is holy, and nothing is holy other than Him. When the people followed
the "holy" calf, the Levites joined Moshe, who smashed the tablets,
works of God, because he wanted to demonstrate that there is no holiness in the
tablets themselves. How beautiful and penetrating the words of the
"Meshech Chochma" on this matter:
There is no holiness in anything created,
only in the Creator. Blessed be He… and do not imagine that the Mikdash and
the Mishkan are in themselves holy, God forfend! The Name, Blessed Be He,
dwells among His children, and if they violate His covenant, all holiness is
removed from the Mishkan and from the Mikdash, and they are like empty
vessels!"
We learn, then, that the parasha of the
Levites is but a continuation of this tendency, the purpose of which is to
fight a battle of total annihilation against the perverted perception of kedushah.
The Levites were chosen because they did not follow that idol worship, which
wished to consecrate objects and stones. How powerful this idolatry was can be
learned from the fact that it swept, like a gigantic tidal wave, over all the
nation (except the tribe of Levi). Just as Moshe, by breaking the tablets,
wanted to transmit to the people the principle that that there is no kedushah
in objects and stones – even when "the writing of God inscribed on the
tablets" (Shemot
32:16), so did The Holy one,
Blessed Be He, wish to demonstrate that we are proscribe from thinking that kedushah
exists in men. If, until now, the firstborn were consecrated, their
misbehavior resulted in their holiness being taken away, and assigned to the
Levites. Should the Levites sin, their holiness will be annulled and will
disappear from the world.
The
question may be asked: Why is the distorted view of kedushah so
dangerous as to warrant so a dramatic step as replacing all the firstborn with
the sons of the Tribe of Levi? It would seem that the answer to this may be
found in a Midrash dealing with the first murder in human history:
"And
Kayin said to his brother Hevel" – What were they talking about? Rabbi
Yehoshua of Sachnin said: Both took land, and both took movables, but this one
said – the
Bet Hamikdash will be built on my property, and other said – The Bet Hamikdash
will be built on my land, and as a result – ‘And Kayin rose up against Hevel
his brother and killed him." (Bereishit Rabba,
Parasha 22)
The
very first murder in the world, Kayin killing Hevel his brother, was the result
of a controversy over control over the Temple Mount. The perverted idea that
earth, stone, or objects can be holy, led to bloodshed.
What
caused the author of the Midrash to take such a puzzling path and place in the
mouths of Kayin and Hevel an argument which would become real only thousands of
years later? It appears
that the author of the Midrash understood human nature. He directed his words
to us, in order to send us a penetrating message, to warn us against that
mistaken view of kedushah, which leads to ruin and destruction.
The
Midrash tells us that whoever distorts the concept of the sanctity of the
Temple Mount, and believes that we have an obligation to exercise political
control over it, is liable to engender bloodshed. It is difficult not to see
how the admonition of the prophet was realized: "When you come to be
seen before Me, who asked you to trample my yards?… your hands are full of
blood!" (Isaiah
1:12) To our sorrow, we have
been caught up in a whirlpool of terrible and unnecessary bloodshed between the
two peoples living in this land.
Even
though the slogan "Do Not Give Up That Which Is Holy To Israel!" is
very catchy when voiced by politicians, we cannot ignore linking it to the
argument between Kayin and Hevel, controversy which ended with Kayin killing
Hevel his brother, and with the calf-worshippers proclaiming "These are
your gods, O Israel." They, too, thought that kedushah
is tangible, that it necessitates control and sovereignty. Chazal wanted to
teach us that there is no greater distortion than that misunderstanding of kedushah.
Precisely because of this perception, the firstborn, who worshipped the
calf, were distanced from the service of God, and replaced by the Levites.
The
purpose of the parasha of the replacement of firstborn with Levites is to
implant in us the understanding that holiness not ingrained in any object, in
any soil, in any person. Kedushah is independent of considerations of
sovereignty or nationality. On the contrary, an a priori condition for
the sanctity of Yerushalayim is the establishment of peace, doing justice and
righteousness between the two peoples living here.
In Chronicles I (22:7-10), David explains to Shelomo why he was
prevented from building the Bet Hamikdash:
"It
was in my heart to erect a house to the name of the Lord my God. But the word
of God was upon me, saying: You have spilled much blood, and you waged great wars, you
shall not build a house to My name, for much blood did you spill on the earth
before me."
If the desire to rule over the Temple
Mount leads to blood conflict, then there is nothing that can more desecrate
the earth, and divest it of its holiness. There is diametric opposition between
bloodshed – in any form – and a house of God. Beautiful and relevant are the
words of the midrash, which explain the prohibition against hewing stones for
the alter with a tool of iron:
"Because
iron was created to shorten man's days, and the altar was created to extend
man's days. It is not right that the decreasers be waved over the increaser." (Middot 3:4)
We
conclude with words of hope: It is the duty of our leaders to internalize the
words of the "Meshech Chochma", to understand that there is no
religious value to political rule over the Temple Mount or over "Greater
Yerushalayim" or any other piece of land. But this is not enough. The city
of the Mikdash has great importance on the public and social plane in its role
as lighthouse of justice and righteousness, illuminating for all the world the
path to realization of these values. Yerushalayim symbolizes a society in which
there functions a judicial system which is open and available to all. The
Temple Mount expresses, above all, the idea of equal and just attitude to all
inhabitants of the country.
Learn
to do good, devote yourself to justice. (Isaiah
1:17)
Only
following this:
Afterwards
you will be called the city of justice, faithful city" (Isaiah
1:26-27).
Zion
will be redeemed through justice, and her returnees, with righteousness. (Ibid, 26-27)
Shammai Leibowitz is an attorney
Readers
Write:
Under
the very tendentious caption "What is Lag Baomer? Cessation of the Plague
or Cease-fire and Sobering-up from the Messianic Illusion and the Intoxication
with Power?" you quote sources which draw a contradiction (either real or
ostensible) between the Bavli (Yevamot 62),
and the famous letter by Rav Saadya Gaon.
Ostensibly
you left the issue open,
both in the caption and it the various quotes. But your intention was clearly
to favor Rasag's letter – with your interpretation to the effect that what happened to them
was the result of intoxication with power and the messianic illusion.
What, however, are we to do,
when the Rambam, in the Laws of Kings, describes the Bar Cochba rebellion,
supported by Rabbi Akiva, as messianic potential which eventually did not
succeed. That is to say, Rabbi Akiva acted properly, "but the generation was not
deserving" and the masses were not swept away with the enthusiasm of Rabbi
Akiva and his disciples, and therefore the revolt could not succeed.
For it is the spiritual
status which determines, not the physical; see the Hasmonean Wars in which the
few battled the many and they succeeded and they gave us the festival of
Chanukah for generations. As a rule, we, as Jews, are supposed to be adept at
searching out the reasons for failure of redemptive acts throughout the generations,
not on the physical plane of force ratios between armies, etc, but in the
spiritual failings of the Jewish people.
Therefore, there is really
no contradiction between Tractate Yevamot and Rasag's letter:
In my humble opinion, Rasag
described the factual analysis of the historical events: the Talmud reveals the
spiritual failing which existed among the disciples of Rabbi Akiva as the root
of the historical failure of the revolt. An argument about the historic facts –
did Rabbi Akiva's students die of askara or at the hands of the Romans –
is unimaginable, certainly not within the short historic period between the
rebellion and the generation of Amoraim discussing it.
Rabbi Yoram Cohen-Or
Tushiya – Kfar Maimon
Editor's
Note:
I
thank Rabbi Cohen-Or for his remarks which provide us with an opportunity to
clarify our policy in choosing sources such as these:
A. Every week, we publish, in addition to
the main article, selections from the Midrash and various commentaries which
relate to some aspect of the parasha. We quote these sources verbatim
(occasionally, when the quote is from an Aramaic source, in Hebrew
translation), and through them we invite the reader to study from
non-conventional perspectives, to examine issues through the rich and complex
attitudes of Chazal and later commentators. The captions we attach are intended
to be "A reading suggestion". Sometimes it appears as a tendentious
reading, which sees in the sources quoted an unequivocal message. Sometimes,
the caption presents a question marked by complexity.
B. In the sources relating to Lag BaOmer
which we brought in the Parashat "Behar" issue, and in the heading
preceding them, our aim was to present the question of the death of Rabbi
Akiva's disciples in an ideological perspective related to the messianic milieu
prevailing during the period. Therefore, in addition to the sources mentioned,
we also quoted from the Midrash in Eicha Rabba, in which Rabbi Yochanan ben
Torta attacks Rabbi Akiva's messianic position. True, there is not necessarily
a contradiction between the Talmudic tradition and Rasag's letter regarding the
death of Rabbi Akiva' disciples: The two traditions refer to different levels
of the story, as Rabbi Cohen-Or correctly points out. We, too, believe that the
deciding factor is not our physical status, but our spiritual standing, and this is one the central themes of our "Shabbat
Shalom" sheets. After the event, it became clear that Rabbi
Akiva was wrong in his evaluation of Bar Cochba as the mashiach; the
controversy between him and Rabbi Yochanan ben Torta indicates this. The Rambam
in "Laws of Kings" — which we quoted in our Yom Haatzmauth edition –
can also be read as Rabbi Amital reads it: Even Rabbi Akiva erred in this
matter. In our opinion, whoever wishes to understand the period in which he
lives in a messianic perspective is liable to err, and sometimes such an error
can exact a cost too great to pay.
Pinchas Leiser – Editor
Our
Sincerest Condolences
To our member
Rivka Klein and all her family
On the passing
of her father
Dr. Yaakov
Malach, z"l
May you be comforted
from Heaven
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