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The Israel
Koschitzky Virtual Beit Midrash
Introduction to Parashat
Hashavua Yeshivat Har Etzion
PARASHAT CHUKAT
Yearning for the Land
By Rav Michael Hattin
INTRODUCTION
Last week, we read Parashat Korach that detailed the aborted
revolt against the leadership of Moshe and Aharon. That episode unfolded in the wake of a
lengthy series of failures and setbacks that had plagued the people almost from
the moment that they had journeyed forth from Mount Sinai in the direction of
the Promised Land. The people's
unwarranted bout of complaining (11:1-3) was followed by their insatiable
appetite for meat (11:10, 31-35), and Moshe's leadership was sorely tested in
the process (11:11-30). Next,
Miriam and Aharon spoke ill of their humble brother and the prophetess was
temporarily expelled from the camp (12:1-16). The devastating sin of the spies
followed (Chapters 13-14), and after a fleeting interlude in which God extended
to the people the assurance of a brighter future (Chapter 15), Korach and his
cohorts then arose from their midst to destructively fan the flames of
revolt.
While throughout all of these episodes the people of Israel pressed
forward geographically in their march through the wilderness, there was no sense
of progress or of advancement. The
dusty and desolate hills hemmed them in, the foreboding and unforgiving
landscape consumed them, and in that windswept wasteland they found their
end.
Parashat Chukat opens with the mysterious ritual of the Para
Aduma, or Red Heifer (Chapter 19).
According to the proscriptions of the Torah, one who has come in contact
with a human corpse is deemed tameh, or ritually unfit to enter the
precincts of the Mishkan or the Mikdash.
In order to emerge from this state of tuma, the said individual
must first be sprinkled with the Mai Chatat, or Waters of
Purification. After its slaughter
outside of the camp and the ritual sprinkling of its blood, the body of the red
heifer is set alight. As the
bonfire burns, cedar wood, hyssop and crimson are added to the flames. The resulting ashes are collected and
are then combined with spring water; a bundle of hyssop is dipped into the
mixture and, with it, the individual is sprinkled on the third and seventh
days. After immersion in a
mikva at the conclusion of the rite, the person returns to a state of
tahara or ritual fitness, and is again able to enter the Tabernacle or
Temple area.
A NEW GENERATION
It is in the very next section that the Torah relates that "the entire
congregation of Bnei Yisrael came to the wilderness of Tzin in the first month,
and encamped at Kadesh. There, Miriam died and was buried…" (Bemidbar
20:1). As the commentaries point
out, at this juncture the Torah abruptly begins to narrate events that took
place at the CONCLUSION of the period of wilderness wandering, some thirty eight
years after the events of the previous chapter! In fact, as the Ibn Ezra
(12th century, Spain) indicates, the Torah records not a single event
or prophecy that had occurred in the intervening decades, almost from the time
that the people had expectantly marched forth from Sinai until their arrival in
the wilderness of Tzin.
Thus, we know a lot about the period associated with the Exodus and the
arrival and encampment at Sinai, we know a fair amount about the successful
second march towards Canaan that provides the narratives for the latter part of
Sefer Bemidbar, but we know almost next to nothing about the intervening
period – from the debacle of the Spies until the people's arrival at the
wilderness of Tzin – a span of almost four decades. The great majority of the Torah's
narratives and commands, the numerous chapters that comprise four of the Five
Books of Moses (excepting, of course, Sefer Bereishit), are thus properly
compressed into the astonishing time frame of TWO YEARS: the year of the Exodus
and the year of the Entry. The
intervening period, during which a generation came of age, lived out its useful
years and unceremoniously perished, is thus shrouded in utter gloom.
ECHOES OF EARLIER EPISODES
How appropriate, then, that the section concerning the red heifer serves
as the transitional narrative, as the Torah seamlessly proceeds from the account
of the generation of the Exodus to the story of their children, who now stand
ready to enter the Land. As Rashi
(11th century, France) explains, the emphatic expression "the ENTIRE
congregation of Bnei Yisrael came to the wilderness of Tzin in the first month"
implies that the congregation of which the Torah now speaks was whole and
complete, for "the generation of the wilderness had perished, while this new
generation had been separated for life" (commentary to 20:1). In other words, the rite of the red
heifer, necessary to effect the change of state of one who had come in contact
with the corpse, to allow reentry into the life-giving presence of God, is here
presented as the linking passage between the generations. Those who had left Egypt, condemned to
their sad fate in consequence of the sin of the spies, had passed on. Their children now stood ready to cast
off the 'death' associated with their passing, solemnly preparing to perpetuate
life in the new land that beckoned.
But as we read the account of our Parasha, we come across some
narratives that sound painfully familiar, so that on surface reading we may in
fact wonder whether a transformation of the people has in fact been effected at
all. Though thirty-eight years have
passed and the ungrateful generation of the Exodus has expired, their children
seem to echo and even to amplify the unappreciative tone of their parents.
The particular episode in question concerns the march towards Canaan, as
the people skirt the territory of the hostile king of Edom who had refused to
allow them passage through his land:
They journeyed
forth from Mount Hor by way of the Sea of Reeds in order to circumvent the land
of Edom, but the people's patience wore thin enroute. The people spoke out against the Lord
and against Moshe (saying): "Why have you taken us out of the land of Egypt to
perish in the wilderness, for there is neither bread nor water and our souls
have become disgusted by the insubstantial bread!" God sent forth the stinging serpents
against the people and they bit them, so that a great multitude among Israel
perished. The people approached
Moshe and they said: "We have sinned by speaking against God and you, pray to
God so that He might remove the serpents from us!" and Moshe prayed on behalf of
the people. God said to Moshe:
"Fashion a form of a fiery serpent and place it upon a mast, so that anyone who
had been bitten may see it and live".
Moshe fashioned a serpent from copper and he placed it upon a mast so
that if a man had been bitten by a serpent he would look at the copper serpent
and live…(Bemidbar 21:4-9).
Here, we have all of the elements
of a typical wilderness moment: the people suffer some real or imaginary
discomfort, they cry out bitterly against God and/or hapless Moshe while
invoking fond memories of Egypt, the Divine response is immediate, harsh and
corrective, and the people then continue on their scornful way until the next
calamity.
In fact, our Parasha preserves another example of this pattern, in
the very section that had earlier introduced us to this new generation, now
poised to enter the Promised Land:
The people of
Israel – the entire congregation – came to the wilderness of Tzin in the first
month, and the people dwelt in Kadesh.
There Miriam died and there she was buried. There was no water for the congregation,
so they gathered against Moshe and Aharon.
The people strove with Moshe and they said: "If only we had died with our
brethren before God! Why have both
of you brought the congregation of God to this wilderness to die there, we as
well as our cattle? Why have you
taken us out of Egypt to bring us to this evil place? This is neither a place of planting, nor
of figs, grapes or pomegranates, nor is there any water to drink!" Moshe and Aharon came from before the
congregation to the opening of the tent of Meeting and they fell upon their
faces, and the glory of God appeared to them…(Bemidbar 20:1-6).
SIMILAR SENTIMENTS
For the purposes of comparison, consider the earlier events of
Parashat Behaalotkha and Shelach, the sorry episode of the
misplaced desire for meat and then the debacle of the spies. In both situations, the people
experienced the distress of the wilderness, became irritated and upset, and
lashed out at their leaders and at God.
And in both situations, the results for the people were disastrous:
The mixed
multitude that was in their midst acquired a desire, and the people of Israel
also cried out and said: "Who will feed us meat? We remember the fish that we ate in the
land of Egypt for nothing, the squash, the melons, the leeks, the onions and the
garlic! But now our soul is dried
up, and we have nothing to hope for except the manna!"…The meat was still
between their teeth and had not yet dissolved when the wrath of God burned
against the people, and God smote them with a very great strike. They therefore called that place the
"graves of the desire" for there they buried the people who had desired…
(Bemidbar 11: 4-6; 33-34).
The entire congregation lifted up their voices and the people cried that
night. All of the people of Israel
complained against Moshe and Aharon, and the whole congregation said to them:
"If only we had died in the land of Egypt or else in this wilderness, if only we
had died! Why does God bring us to
this land to die by the sword, so that our wives and children will become
spoils, is it not better for us to return to Egypt?!" Each one said to his fellow: "Let us
appoint a leader and return to Egypt!"…God said: "they will not see the land
that I promised to their ancestors, all those who have incensed Me will not see
it!" (Bemidbar 14:1-4; 23).
COMPARISONS AND CONTRASTS
What then is the fundamental difference between these two generations of
Israel? Why did the generation
raised in the wilderness in the shadow of their parents' destructive lack of
trust merit to enter the land, even as their hurtful words and deeds so seem to
mirror the earlier crimes? Perhaps
the answer is to be found not in a COMPARISON between the episodes, but rather
in the CONTRASTS. Note for instance
that while the indiscretions near Edom certainly seemed to recall earlier
gripes, the Divine rage that followed – in the form of the fiery serpents –
elicited an unprecedented response from the people: they admitted their
indiscretion and repented! As the
Torah narrates: "God sent forth the stinging serpents against the people and
they bit them, so that a great multitude among Israel perished. The people approached Moshe and they
said: "We have sinned by speaking against God and you, pray to God so that He
might remove the serpents from us!" and Moshe prayed on behalf of the people…
(Bemidbar 21:6-7). And while
there seems to have been an act of repentance after the episode of the spies as
well (see Bemidbar 14:40), the hollowness of that gesture quickly became
apparent. Though at that time the
people mouthed the words "we have sinned," their subsequent deeds made it clear
that they were prepared to accept neither the Divine judgment nor Moshe's
leadership (Bemidbar 14:41-45).
Here, however, Israel approaches Moshe of their own volition, admits
their wrongdoing, and then acknowledges Moshe's authority by imploring him to
pray on their behalf.
As for the plaint concerning the lack of water, on the surface it
resembles earlier events in which the people bemoaned their wilderness
trials. But reading the text
carefully, we note that the sentiments expressed are not so much about wistful
hopes of a departure from the wilderness and a speedy RETURN to Egypt, but
rather about their growing impatience with that life of wandering, their
mounting anticipation to leave it behind forever and their fervent wish to
instead ENTER and to settle the new land.
When the people say "Why have you taken us out of the land of Egypt to
perish in the wilderness, for there is neither bread nor water and our souls
have become disgusted by the insubstantial bread!" they mention their fears of
dying in the wilderness like their forebears, who consumed the miraculous manna
associated with that place for almost forty years. How much more would they prefer to be
already engaged in the productive pursuit of cultivating their own bread on the
slopes of Canaan! In other words,
when Israel complains about the manna this time around, it is not a spiteful and
impulsive desire for more tasty cuisine that motivates them but rather an
expectant wish to finally enter the land that God had promised so that they
might enjoy more tangible fare.
And when they cry out for water and exclaim "Why have you taken us out of
Egypt to bring us to this evil place?
This is neither a place of planting, nor of figs, grapes or pomegranates,
nor is there any water to drink!," they pointedly refer to the land that they so
want to already enter, a place of cultivation and abundant produce, a place of
luxuriant fruits. Of course these
"figs, grapes and pomegranates" recalls exactly the expedition of the spies so
many years earlier, for they too had brought back "a cluster of grapes borne on
a pole by two men, as well as pomegranates and figs" (Bemidbar
13:23). What Israel therefore now
demands as they enter the wilderness of Tzin is to finally enter the land that
the spies had so glowingly described but ultimately rejected! Note that in neither of these
situations, do the people state any explicit desire to go back to Egypt and to
its imagined luxuries, as was the case in the earlier set of complaints.
In other words, superficial resemblances notwithstanding, Israel has
indeed developed and matured over the course of the wilderness wanderings. Aforetimes, the challenge of traversing
the wilderness elicited from them only deep-seated dread and a misplaced
yearning to return to the oppressive certainties of slavery and servitude. "Let someone else make the decisions!,"
the people seemed to say, "and may God stop troubling us with His incessant
demands that we live consciously and purposefully!" But now, tempered by four decades of
having to daily summon forth trust and fortitude, the people of Israel crave to
enter the land so that they might finally implement the lessons that they have
acquired through so much hard effort.
"Enough of this barren landscape" they now cry out, "let us already enter
the land so that we might embrace our God-given destiny!" What a transformation indeed.
Shabbat
Shalom |