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INTRODUCTION TO
PARASHA
PARASHAT
MASEI
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This shiur is
dedicated in memory of Dr. William Major
z"l.
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CITY AND
COUNTRY
By Rabbi Yaakov
Beasley
A.
INTRODUCTION
The Israelites' 40-year sojourn in the
wilderness draws to a close with the conclusion of Sefer Bamidbar. Our parasha, Parashat Masei, reviews every single journey and
encampment in the desert and describes the delineation and allocation of
Eretz Yisra'el, the Land of Israel.
Its twin and predecessor, Parashat Mattot, sets forth the
lines of battle for invading the land.
The book concludes with laws that guarantee the integrity of the family
plots and the initial inheritance in Eretz Yisra'el.
Despite the excitement, we sense that
even as the Jewish nation prepares for conquest and ownership, there is the
anticipation of later destruction:
"If you do not dispossess the
inhabitants of the land, those whom you allow to remain shall be barbs in your
eyes and thorns in your sides, and they shall harass you in the land in which
you live. Then, I will do to you
what I had planned to do them."
(33:55-56)
"You shall not pollute the land in which
you live, for blood pollutes the land; and the land can have no expiation for
the blood shed on it, except by the blood of the one who sheds it." (35:33)
From the outset, the Jewish people are
informed that residence in the land, ultimately, is provisional. Only obedience to the Divine Writ will
enable them to reside within it permanently.
B. CITY
– INHERITANCE OR EXILE?
Another interesting theme links the last
two parashiyyot. 40 years of wandering end, not with the
invasion of the land, but with the assignment of cities — on the Yarden's east
bank for Re'uven, Gad, and half of Menasheh; and on both sides for
Levi:
"This land shall be yours for an
inheritance before God… Build
yourselves cities…"
(32:22-24)
And Moshe gave them the land by its
cities, according to the boundaries of the land's cities, all
around. (32:33)
They renamed all the cities that
they built.
(32:38)
"Instruct the Jewish people to assign,
from their inheritance, cities for the Levites to dwell
in."(35:2)
"Each shall assign cities to the
Levites in proportion to the share of its inheritance." (35:8)
Apparently, the city represents here the
consummation of inheritance (and its loss symbolizes exile). Therefore, it is interesting to see that
the parasha eventually portrays
city-dwelling itself as exile, when it introduces the unique sentence for
involuntary manslaughter:
You shall provide cities of refuge… from
the avenger, so that the murderer will not die before being brought to
justice. Six cities shall so be
assigned. Three cities shall be
designated beyond the Yarden, and the other three shall be designated in the
land of Kena'an; they shall serve as cities of refuge. If the blood-avenger finds him outside
the limits of his city of refuge… he has no bloodguilt on his account. For he must remain in his city of refuge
until the death of the Kohen Gadol… and you must not accept ransom in
lieu of exile to a city of refuge.
(35:27-32)
Upon further investigation, we discover
that every mention of a city in the two parashiyyot refers to both inheritance
and dispossession. Re'uven and Gad
choose not to inherit Kena'an proper – so they are to build and dwell in cities
instead. The Levites "receive no
inheritance with the Israelites" (26:62) – so they receive cities instead. The accidental killer, who "pollutes the
land" with blood, loses his rights to the land; instead, he finds himself exiled
to one of the six cities of refuge, part of the Levites' portion — "The cities
which you will give to the Levites are the six cities of refuge, and in
addition, you must give forty-two cities" (35:6). The opening of our parasha broadens the equation. We find forty-two encampments during the
period of wandering, parallel to these forty-two Levitical cities – both the lot
of a landless people:
"Forty-two cities" – these parallel the
forty-two encampments, for the Jewish people were then wanderers; this is
similar to the Levites, who have no share in the land, are given forty-two
cities; so too the manslayer, who escapes [to the city of refuge] is a
wanderer…
And this is just like what Yosef did to
the Egyptians, so as to give them the status of wanderers: "Yosef moved the
population into cities, from one end of Egypt to the other" (Bereshit 47:21). (Commentary of the Keli Yakar,
35:6)
C.
CITIES IN THE TORAH
Indeed, we find that the first city
mentioned in the Torah is built in response to the penalty of exile (Bereshit 4:8-17):
And Kayin spoke to Hevel his
brother. And it came to pass, when
they were in the field, that Kayin rose up against Hevel his brother and slew
him. And God said to Kayin: "Where is Hevel your brother?" And
he said: "I know not; am I my brother's keeper?" And He said: "What have you done? The voice of your brother's blood cries
to Me from the ground. And now, cursed are you from the
ground, which has opened its mouth to receive your brother's blood from your
hand. When you till the ground, it shall not henceforth yield
to you its strength; a fugitive and a wanderer shall you be in the
earth." And Kayin said to God: "My punishment is
greater than I can bear. Behold,
You have driven me out today from the face of the land, and from Your face I
shall be hidden, and I shall be a fugitive and a wanderer in the earth; and it
will come to pass, that whoever finds me will slay me!" And God said to him: "Therefore, whoever
slays Kayin, vengeance shall be taken on him sevenfold." And God set a sign for Kayin, so that
anyone who found him would not strike him.
And Kayin went out
from the presence of God, and dwelt in the land of Nod, east of Eden. And Kayin knew his wife; and she
conceived, and bore Chanokh; and he built a city, and called the name of
the city, after the name of his son, "Chanokh."
As Rashi points out in last week's parasha, Kayin's fate, to wander the
land, is the paradigm for the punishment meted out to the Jewish people for
their failure at the sin of the spies:
God was incensed at Israel, and for
forty years He made them wander in the wilderness. (32:13)
"Made them wander" – the same wording
[is found] regarding Kayin, "a fugitive and a wanderer." (Rashi, ad loc.)
The sense of rootlessness that causes
people to build cities is reflected in the halakhot regarding redeeming
family property. Ancestral land can
be bought back at any point in the yovel (jubilee) cycle, and at the
yovel year, it is returned immediately and free of charge. However, when a family sells their
dwelling in a city, they have only one year to buy it back, or else lose it
forever (Vayikra
25:25-31):
If your brother becomes poor and sells
some of his possession, then his close kinsman shall come and redeem that which
his brother has sold. And if a man has no one to redeem it,
and he becomes rich and finds sufficient means to redeem it, then let him count the years of the
sale thereof and restore the remainder to the man to whom he sold it; and he
shall return to his possession.
But if he does not
have sufficient means to get it back for himself, then that which he has sold
shall remain in the hand of the buyer until the year of jubilee; and in the
jubilee it shall go out, and he shall return to
his possession.
And if a man sells a residential home in
a walled city, then he may redeem it within the year after it is sold; for a
full year, he shall have the right of redemption. And if it is not redeemed within the
space of a full year, then the house that is in the walled city shall be in the
buyer's hand in perpetuity, throughout his generations; it shall not go out in
the jubilee. But the houses of the villages, which have no wall around
them, shall be reckoned with the fields of the country; they may be redeemed,
and they shall go out in the jubilee.
We may think it strange to link cities
with wandering – the towering skyscrapers of our modern metropolises cause us to
view the city and its edifices as permanent markers. However, just as the first punishment
ever meted out to humanity is the loss of land, so too, all the experiences of a
people are defined through its relationship to the land on which it lives. Lacking a connection to the land, the
city floats artificially, its great numbers and cultural achievements hiding the
fact that it is fundamentally disconnected from the earth. It is no wonder that the Jewish people,
for two thousand years of exile, spent most of their sojourn in the cities of
the Diaspora, always ready to move at a moment's notice!
Like the cities of refuge specifically,
the Torah assigns cities in general dual roles. They are a form of exile, of a
disconnection from the land. They
are, however, also where the kohanim (priests) and Levites are to be
found. The Levites, in their cites,
are dedicated "to stand before God, and to serve Him" (Devarim
10:8). The ghettos served as the
repository of Jewish heritage as long as the real bond to Eretz Yisra'el
did not exist; the city of exile is also the city of refuge and
reconciliation. May we be
privileged to see the rejuvenation of the cities, as prophesized by Yeshayahu
about Yerushalayim (1:27): "You will be called 'the City of Justice,' 'the
Faithful Metropolis.'" |