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epar61037.doc "And G-d opened the mouth of the donkey" [Bamidbar 22:28]. PARASHAT HASHAVUA " בס"דHowever, you will only say what I tell you" [22:35]. The issue of freedom of expression was once again raised in the Supreme Court about a week ago. And the "High Priest" sitting at the head of the court made his pronouncement: "Freedom of expression takes precedence over curtailing religious feeling" (as quoted in the press - the same is true for the other quotes below). The case involved a request for an injunction by the residents of a religious town (Mitzpeh Keramim, in the Binyamin area) who were photographed for television. They had not given permission to broadcast the program on Shabbat, since they did not realize when it was scheduled. The "high governor" of the court rejected the request for an injunction, because in comparing the two values, "the aspect of freedom of expression takes precedence unless the harm to religious feeling is immediate and serious... beyond the limits of tolerance of Israeli society." For the sake of fairness, it should be noted that his honor agrees that if the subjects make an explicit condition that the film should not be screened on Shabbat this condition should not be violated. (Evidently, agreements are more important than feelings, since "the entire land is filled with justice" [in the words of the learned judge], and there is no room left for feelings.) In all honesty, from the point of view of strict halacha, it may well be that there is no obligation for one who is being filmed to protest loudly that his kippa or her kerchief should not be shown on the screen on Shabbat. I have not come across any detailed and wellreasoned halachic discussions of this matter. The prohibition of "helping another to commit a sin" (which seems to be the relevant issue, as far as I can tell) is not so simple in the modern world of mutual religious-secular existence. Another issue, that of "desecration of G-d's name," can also change depending on circumstance such as time, place, and expectations of the surroundings. Some other distinctions can be made, such as: whether this is the first showing of the film or a replay; the difference between an interviewer and one who is being interviewed; the difference between the main participant of a show and one who makes an incidental appearance; and possibly a difference between a newscast and a talk show. I have no doubt that any serious halachic ruling on this matter will be based in a large measure on issues of "halachic policy" (there really is such a thing!), often called "a Torah opinion" (there really is such a thing!). Thus, it is no surprise that both the plaintiffs and the attorney general's office were able to bring rabbinical opinions of roughly equivalent stature to bolster their sides of the case. Thus, I am really not upset about the halachic issue as such, because "the world is not concerned only with halacha." What does upset me greatly are the declarations of principle which fan the fires of "judicial activism." After the statement that freedom of expression takes precedence over religious feeling (and this was accepted as an axiom by the judges), Barak made a very strange pronouncement: "If the injunction is accepted, this will lead to the end of television broadcasting on Shabbat... There is a good chance that television on Shabbat will be turned off, and radio will soon follow suit." And here we have the truth that was so well hidden. "T-h-e-y a-re a-f-r-a-i-d!" The Supreme Court, with its presidential style of rule, has accepted a role as an enemy of the religious community, and it thus feels threatened. At the very least, this is the way the "High Priest" of the court feels. As if to say, "If we give these religious people a finger they will demand the whole hand, and who can tell where this will lead?" Since this week's Torah portion is Balak, it is a simple matter to look at Bilam and his curses from the point of view of freedom of expression. Even the great sorcerer has his limits, as he was commanded by the angel in the incident of the donkey: "However, you will say what I tell you" [22:35]. PARASHA : BALAK Date : 16 Tammuz 5761, 7/7/2001 “The Best of Parashat HaShavuah” Articles taken from list subscriptions on the internet, edited, reformatted and printed for members of Kibbutz Sde Eliyahu (Editor: Arieh Yarden) Dedicated to the loving memory of Avi Mori Moshe Reuven ben Yaakov z”l Please respect the Holiness of these pages These pages are also sent out weekly via the internet in MS Word format. Anyone interested in receiving them, please feel feee to contact me at the following email address: [email protected] Arieh. 1 - SHABBAT B’SHABBATO (Tzomet) Extract from SHABBAT-B'SHABBATO, published by the Zomet Institute of Alon Shevut, Israel MIDYAN IS THE ENEMY by Dina Amir, Be'erot Yitzchak This week's Torah portion starts with an initiative by the king of Moav, who fears Bnei Yisrael and therefore invites Bilam to curse them. As is written in the Talmud, the name Bilam hints at "ben bli am," a person without a nation (Sanhedrin 105a). The initial delegation includes the wise men of Midyan (Bamidbar 22:7), but they quickly see the light and leave, after the first time Bilam refuses to come (see Rashi). Bilam's advice is, "The G-d of these people despises harlotry" [Sanhedrin, ibid, and Rashi, 24:14], but the actual action was performed by the daughters of Moav. Only one woman from Midyan joins those from Moav. This is Kozbi daughter of Tzur, a tribal chief of Midyan, who was struck down on the day of the resulting plague. It may be that the people of Midyan do not fear Yisrael in the way their neighbors from Moav do. After all, Midyan has "a representative in the palace," Moshe's wife Tziporah, the daughter of Yitro, who was from Midyan. However, behind the scenes it is Midyan that initiates action. For example, when the leaders of Moav were afraid, the elders of Midyan advised them to appoint Balak ben Tzipor as king (Ramban, 22:4). And while it was the daughters of Moav who invited Bnei Yisrael to join their pagan sacrifices, they were following a plan suggested by Midyan. G-d reveals this behind-the-scenes activity in the command, "Irritate the Midyanites and strike them" [25:17]. This is different from Moav, about whom we were commanded, "Do not upset Moav and do not challenge them to war" [Devarim 2:9]. It would seem that there is a paradox: Those who said "perhaps I can strike them and expel them from the land" [Bamidbar 22:6] were not punished, while those who left Bilam and returned home were slain by the sword. "For they bothered you with their fraud" [Bamidbar 25:18]. There is a special reason for waging war with Midyan, and this is their trait of dishonesty. They give the appearance of being friendly, with a desire for peace, but in reality they are the worst possible examples of fomenting war and controversy. Fraud has characterized the people of Midyan from the very beginning. They were the ones who passed by and raised Yosef up from the pit, but his brothers thought that they were selling him to Yishmaelites (Bereishit 37:28). The Midyanites do not have a reputation of commerce in human beings. If they ever go to war, they make sure to find a partner, so that they will not be held exclusively responsible. When they fought Hadad ben Badad, King of Edom, he defeated them in the fields of Moav (Bereishit 36:35). In the time of Gidon, they joined the forces of Amalek and Bnei Kedem (Shoftim 6:3,33). There are many reasons to wage war, and even to transform this into the obligation of a mitzva. One reason is to fight against fraud. If we have been openly commanded to destroy the people of Midyan, there is without a doubt an additional internal reason too. FROM THE HAFTARA: The Moral of the Torah Portion of Balak by Rabbi Amnon Bazak In the Haftara (Micha 5:6-6:8), we are told about the "argument" and the "controversy" (6:2) between the Almighty and Bnei Yisrael. G-d complains, "my nation, what have I done to you and how did I upset you?" [6:3]. He continues with a description of the good things He did for Bnei Yisrael by taking them out of Egypt. It is surprising, however, that of all the miracles in the desert, which are discussed in many places in the Tanach as an expression of G-d's kindness (for example, Tehillim 70:52-53, 105:39-41, 106:9-15), Micha only mentions one event. "Remember what Balak, King of Moav, planned, and what Bilam ben Be'or answered him... In order that you will know the righteousness of G-d" [6:5]. Why is this the only event noted as part of the "controversy?" It seems that the controversy was a reaction to the actions of Bnei Yisrael described in the beginning of the Haftara. The main criticism of the nation is related to the verse, "I will eliminate magic from your hands, and you will not have any sorcerers" [5:11]. This is similar to other places where Micha sharply criticizes the prophets who are evil sorcerers (see 3:5-12). The portion of Balak is mentioned not only as an example of G-d's kindness but also as a proof that the magicians and the sorcerers of the world are powerless. Thus, the phase "in order that you will know the righteousness of G-d" has a double meaning: it refers to righteousness and kindness but also to justice and truth. Only the service of G-d is truth, while sorcerers can be described by Micha's verse elsewhere: "The seers will be ashamed and the sorcerers will be disgraced... For G-d did not answer them" [3:7]. This is exactly what happened to Bilam in this week's portion. TORAH WORDS FOR A JOYOUS OCCASION: Marriage by Rabbi Yehuda Shaviv Bilam uses his evil point of view to find fault with Bnei Yisrael, in order to curse them. He searches but he does not succeed, for what he sees is so spectacular that he becomes excited by it. In spite of himself, he approves the sight and blesses the people. "How good are your tents, Yaacov, your dwellings, Yisrael" [Bamidbar 24:5]. Exactly what did he see? According to the sages, "he saw that the openings of the tents were not pointed towards each other" [Bava Batra 60a]. This demonstrates the traits of good manners, protection of personal privacy, and respect for the unique identity of each family. Every family has its own house, and every house has its own opening. When coming face to face with this reality, even one who wanted to curse makes a blessing instead. This must also certainly apply to one who comes with the intention of making a blessing. And here is my blessing for the new couple: Let the house and its offspring "stretch out like a stream, like a garden by a river, as aloe trees planted by G-d" [24:6]. "These are worthy of having the Shechina rest on them" [Bava Batra, ibid]. POINT OF VIEW: Freedom of Expression and Cursing Bnei Yisrael SHABBAT OF THE LAND: Discarding the Fruits of Shemitta by Rabbi Yisrael Rozen 1 by Rabbi Zev Vaitman Produce that has Shemitta sanctity must be put through a process of "bi'ur," removal, before the date that each species no longer exists in the fields. For example, in the current season it is possible to buy cherries, which can be used to prepare liqueur that can then be stored for a long time. When there are no longer any cherries in the fields, because all the fruit has been picked or has become overripe, any cherries remaining in the house must be destroyed or discarded. Fruit that is not removed becomes forbidden, and there is no way to return its permissible status. As to the details of the process of bi'ur, some of the early commentators felt that it is necessary to physically destroy all the produce. However, the halacha is that "hefker" is sufficient, that is, relinquishing ownership of the produce, after which it is possible to regain possession and then continue eating it. In general, the precise time of bi'ur is not known, since it is not easy to determine exactly when each different type of produce disappears from the fields. Therefore, the best alternative is to relinquish ownership at the earliest possible time, not retaking possession until it is absolutely clear that the time has passed. With respect to the specific case of cherries, it can be assumed that the final time of harvest is during the month of Av, so ownership of any cherries should be relinquished before Av begins, and the status should be maintained until the beginning of Elul. Some types of produce are specifically mentioned in the Talmud. One example is grapes, which should be discarded the day before Pesach of the eighth year. This includes wine made from grapes that grew during Shemitta. The procedure of relinquishing ownership consists of removing the produce from the house and formally declaring the "hefker" in front of three men who do not belong to the household. (They could be close friends who will not try to take possession for themselves.) When the exact date of bi'ur is not known, the owner should explicitly declare that by taking "hefker" produce into his house he does not mean to take possession of it, and that anybody who wants to take some for himself is permitted to do so. NOTES ON THE RASHBAM: Why Should Bilam have been Killed? by Rabbi Uri Dasberg The angel tells Bilam, "And the donkey saw me and turned away from me... If it had not turned away I would have killed you" [Bamidbar 22:33]. This has been translated here in accordance with Rashi, that the word "ulai" in this verse means "if not," including the negative. However, the Rashbam disagrees with this, since the word that means "if not" is "lulei," not "ulai," which carries a positive connotation. See, for example, "Perhaps there is hope" [Eicha 3:29]. The Rashbam therefore interprets the word "ulai" as referring to a positive possibility: If the donkey had turned away only after it reached the angel and not before reaching him, Bilam would have been killed. That is, the donkey was startled, and stopped before it reached the angel, but if it had passed the position of the angel "you would not have remained alive, with the small harm of having your leg pinched, rather I would have killed you." The difficulty with this reasoning is its implication that as long as Bilam had not reached a specific point in front of the angel his trip was acceptable. Are we to assume that the only reason he was to be killed is that he went beyond this point and passed around the angel (even though he did not know the angel was there)? It may be that he incurred the death penalty because of the sin of cruelty to an animal. The point of the angel is that Bilam's blows to the donkey were relatively mild, in that they caused it to stand still but not to continue in spite of the angel that it saw. For this, Bilam was punished with a limp, but he was not worthy of death. However, if he had struck the donkey so hard that it would have continued and passed the angel, this would have shown that his blows were extremely harsh, and Bilam would have been liable for the death penalty. Thus, we can see the seriousness of the sin of unnecessary cruelty to an animal. This is even more severe in the case of striking a human being. An example might be if the victim is more afraid of his attacker than of the legal authorities, and is afraid of reporting the incident to the police. MEDICINE IN THE TORAH: "Falling, with Uncovered Eyes" [Bamidbar 24:4] - Epilepsy by Rabbi Yoel and Dr. Chana Catane Epilepsy is caused by a sudden rapid electrical discharge in the brain. It is unique in that a person who suffers from a severe attack usually returns to normal after a short time. This is a chronic illness, but there is no way to predict when an attack will occur. The details of an attack may vary greatly. Examples are loss of consciousness, disturbed behavior, cramps, foaming at the mouth, and more. An attack may last from a brief moment to several hours. This illness can appear from any age, and about one percent of the population suffer from it. Epilepsy is not contagious in any form. In most cases, the attacks can be prevented by regularly taking medicine, which gives most of the patients the opportunity to live normal lives. Many patients can be fully cured. Most of the rabbis agree that epilepsy is a mortally threatening illness, and it is therefore permitted to take medicine on Yom Kippur and to violate Shabbat prohibitions in order to treat an epileptic. Some rabbis have written that after each epileptic attack the patient should recite the "hagomel" blessing, thanking G-d for being saved. Doctors are required by law to report every person who has epilepsy to the traffic bureau in order to test him or her for the ability to drive a car. IN THE CHEMED RELIGIOUS SCHOOLS: "Water will Flow from his Well" [Bamidbar 24:7] by the Center for Religious Education in Israel Six years have gone by since the passing of Rabbi Shaul Yisraeli, of blessed memory. We will take the opportunity to review some of the highlights of his very active life. Rabbi Yisraeli was born in White Russia in 5569 (1909). He studied Torah clandestinely, until he escaped from Russia at great peril to his life. Rabbi A.Y. Kook brought him to Eretz Yisrael in 1934, and he studied at Yeshivat Merkaz Harav. He served as the rabbi of Kefar Haroeh and as a teacher in the yeshiva there, the first of yeshivot Bnei Akiva. He was one of the founders of the Rabbinical Council of Hapoel Hamizrachi, and he was a leader of the organization for many years. Rabbi Yisraeli established and then edited the influential journal "HaTorah V'Hamedina," Torah and the State. He was head of Yeshivat Merkaz Harav and a member of the rabbinical appeals court. He established the Eretz Chemda Institute for studying to be a rabbinical court judge, and he served as its head. He had a profound spiritual influence on the path of religious Zionism, taking an active role for more than sixty years. He passed away on 19 Sivan 5755 (1995). More details can be found in a special website that has been established at the "kipa" portal, under the auspices of Ma'aleh, the center for religious Zionism. The URL is: www.kipa.co.il/israeli. More details are available from Ilan Friedman, at telephone 050563735. A TALE TO BE TOLD: An Appropriate Punishment by Eliyahu Misgav Ariel had the status of a "lone soldier." He had left his family in France and had come on Aliya by himself. He was clearly a "foreigner" in every way: his thick accent, his European manners, and the way he handled himself. In spite of his difficulty in acclimating to the new country, his comrades and his officers liked him very much and even chose him as the outstanding recruit of his platoon. Near the end of basic training, his parents came for a four-day visit, in order to get a look at their son in uniform. The day they arrived he was given a pass for a few hours to meet them. After a brief visit he left his parents, hoping to be able to see them again on Shabbat, since they had not seen each other for one and a half years. However, on the way back to his base, in a dramatic radio appeal, he heard about a baby hurt in a traffic accident who needed a donation of a rare blood type. Ariel, who had this type of blood, made a stop at Magen David Adom, and only then returned to his base. The next morning, before he was given an opportunity to explain, the company commander gave him a punishment for returning late. While the other soldiers would go home for Shabbat, Ariel would remain in the base on guard duty. The commander evidently held fast to the Talmudic principle, "once something has been said, it cannot be changed." No amount of pleading by his officers was able to change the ruling. Ariel did not tell anybody why he had returned late - he was not one to boast about his own good deeds - and he reconciled himself with being away from his family. However, to his surprise, Ariel's officers refused to accept the company commander's ruling, and they raised the issue at a meeting with the brigade commander, who decided that the punishment was too severe. And Ariel was once again called before the company commander, who informed him that the punishment was rescinded, and that he would be given a pass for Shabbat. However, as a punishment for coming late, he would be required to find time during his leave to visit Magen David Adom and to donate blood. The commander informed Ariel that he would ask to see a confirmation of his donation when he returned on Sunday morning... 2 - MACHON MEIR MACHON MEIR - http://www.virtual.co.il/education/machon-meir/parasha.htm text 3 - NYCI (Block) NCYI Weekly Divrei Torah, From:Kenneth Block ([email protected]) Rabbi Binyamin Hammer Young Israel of New Hyde Park, NY The saga of Bilaam and his cruelty to manipulate and curse Klal Yisrael is well known to us and our youngest of children. Bilaam stands without equal, the only individual in the Torah to be described as wicked, referring to him as Bilaam HaRasha. Furthermore, the Talmud in Masechet Sanhedrin 105a portrays Bilaam as possessing the most immoral and disgusting behavior, lowering himself to the level of sinning with animals. Yet, for every valid reason not to allow Bilaam to accompany Balak to curse the Jewish people, HaShem's primary motivation is, (Bamidbar 22:12) "lo telech imahem," you shall not go with them. Rashi commenting on the pasuk, (Bamidbar 22:13) informs us, that HaShem was protecting Bilaam's dignity from traveling with these lowly emissaries. The Ohr HaChaim takes this thought one step further; HaShem was questioning, how Bilaam, a messenger of G-d, could even meet with such unworthy people. The Ohr HaChaim adds, HaShem was so bothered with preserving the dignity of Bilaam, that he killed the chamor - donkey, who stood up to Bilaam, so that people would not say, "This is the donkey that brought down Bilaam." Why is HaShem so concerned with Bilaam's dignity? Wouldn't keeping the donkey alive create a greater Kiddush HaShem - sanctification of G-d's name, showing that HaShem has dominion over all his creatures and can even have a donkey speak? Rabbi Chaim Shmulevitz z"l, the Mirrer Rosh Yeshiva, offers a profound insight into Kavod HaAdam, the dignity of the human being. Although disgracing Bilaam would have created a Kiddush HaShem, in G-d's estimation preserving the majesty of man takes preference to His own honor. This donkey which HaShem created in the last moments of Creation was not needed to protect Klal Yisrael from Bilaam's wickedness. Their salvation was relying in HaShem. Rather, G-d created this donkey for Bilaam's self-protection, to have him 2 reexamine his own evil intentions. So important is the dignity of every human being, that HaShem defends even the least deserving. Our life's goal is to walk in the path of HaShem, trying to reach lofty heights. If we perceive life as walking an obstacle course with difficult challenges along the way, we miss the message that HaShem is sending us. The steps to growth are paved with G-d's love for us and deep respect for our dignity. We must continue to walk on that dignified road and help save those who have fallen by the wayside, despite how much they have declined. If HaShem could look out for a Bilaam HaRasha, we can be certain, that He is looking out for us as well. 4 – RAV RISKIN Rabbi Shlomo Riskin: http://www.ohrtorah.org.il/index.htm#top Efrat, Israel - "There is no sorcery for Jacob, there is no magic for Israel" (Numbers 23:23). What is the true message of an entire Torah portion of Balak dedicated to the hiring of a Gentile soothsayer to curse the Israelite nation - but who instead becomes inspired to bless Israel and portray the ultimate messianic destiny of Israel in the most exalted and majestic of poetic metaphors? Are there indeed individuals with true power to foretell future events - and ought we seek out such individuals to help us tackle difficult moments in our lives which threaten to overwhelm us? And if indeed Balak is a superior human being with profound prophetic insights emanating from a Divine source, why does the Torah triumphantly record the fact that "Balaam Ben Beor the magician" was killed by Israel with the sword together with the corpses of our Midianite enemies during the conquest of Israel (Joshua 13:22)? And why does our Biblical text juxtapose the sublime poetry of Balaam with the seemingly ridiculous tale of the talking donkey? I believe that the entire portion of Balaam is a study in contrast between the legitimately earned prophecy of Moses and the venally inspired sorcery of Balaam. The Torah understands that there exist individuals who seem to have been born with special powers: superior physical strength, a phenomenal photographic memory, sharp vision which can penetrate the thickest of partitions, intense concentration that can cause physical objects to explode, and can perhaps even bring messages from the dead. There is even a difference of opinion amongst our Sages as to whether such phenomena reflect actual occurrences or are merely slight-of-hand trickery. When the Bible records King Saul's last ditch attempt to discover his destiny by asking the witch of Endor to seek the counsel of the dead Samuel - and she indeed provides the true message that "the Almighty will tear the kingdom from your hands and give it over to your friend David" - the commentaries are divided as to the factual truth of the account: Rabbenu Saadya Gaon accepts the Biblical story as it is written, and Rabbi Shmuel Ben Hafni Gaon insists that the witch of Endor deceived King Saul (Samuel 1, Chapter 28 and its Geonic commentaries. In a later generation, the arch-rationalist Maimonides calls all pronouncements emanating from supernatural communications and insights - including the writing and wearing of mystical amulets (kameyot)- "false and vain", bordering on idolatry (Maimonides, Mishneh Torah, Laws of Idolatry 1, 16 and Guide, Part 1, Chapter 61); on this basis, Rav Yosef Karo similarly dismisses all magical incantations as "not availing in the least," but merely exercising positive psychological influence upon individuals in distress (Shulhan Aruch, Yoreh Deah, 179, 6). The Vilna Gaon, on the other hand, suggests that Maimonides' philosophical study "misled or corrupted him," insisting that there are amulets and incantations, perhaps and perhaps even communications from the beyond, which are rooted in the sacred and the divine (ibid, paragraph 13). Perhaps the most important and representative view on the issue is presented by Rav Shlomo Ben Aderet (Rashba, Responsa 548), when he had to judge the credibility of a Reb Nissim who claimed to have received the messages from an angel; the great Talmudic scholar Rashba insists that divine communication akin to Prophesy can only rest on one who is truly wise and pious, strong and courageous, and sufficiently wealthy as to not be in need of monetary contributions from those seeking his advice. Claims, and even what seems to be empirical facts, of supernatural abilities by individuals who are not outstanding in Torah scholarship and piety dare not be taken seriously - at the risk of flirting with idolatrous and even demonic blandishments. The truth is that the Bible is indubitably clear when it warns us against seeking after any manner of magic or sorcery and exhorts us to be whole-hearted and pure in our service of the Divine (Deuteronomy 18:9-14). Our prophets did not major in futuristic prophecies but rather in chastising towards more ethical and genuine behavior; they certainly did not take remuneration for their words. And individual devoid of the proper - difficult to acquire - intellectual and spiritual prophetic attainments who makes pronouncements which even may appear to be vindicated by future discoveries is no better than the "talking donkey" in our Torah portion; a prophet of G-d must first and foremost be a model of Torah scholarship and piety. Moses was a prophet of G-d; Balaam was a soothsayer. Moses sought Divine truth while Balaam yearned for gold and silver. The conclusion of our Torah portion is most succinct and specific: ''There is no sorcery for Jacob nor magic for Israel. Now I'll tell you how G-d works: when individuals rise early for their Torah study, they triumph like the lion cub, grabbing onto the commandments, wearing the ritual fringes, reciting the sh'ma and putting on the phylacteries. They do not eat before reciting the Evening Prayer. And they drink the blood of corpses as when they killed Balaam the soothsayer"(Numbers 33:34 as interpreted by Rashi through the eyes of our Sages. See too Joshua 13:22.) 5- UNITED SYNAGOGUE Copyright 1999 United Synagogue Publications Ltd. WHEN A CURSE IS NOT A CURSE Rabbi Alex Chapper - Reading Hebrew Congregation There is a strange sequence of events that tends to be overlooked in the whole bizarre episode of Bile'am and Balak's attempts to curse the Jewish people. After Bile'am's first attempt fails, Balak asks him to go with him to another place from which to see the Jewish nation and curse them from there. When this also fails, Balak says: 'Please come. I will take you to another place. Perhaps it will be fitting in the eyes of G-d that you may curse them for me there.' (Bemidbar 23:27) What was Balak hoping to accomplish by the repeated change of location? The Sforno (15th century) comments: 'So that you will be able to look at them with evil intent.' Balak perceived that Bile'am's perspective was perhaps preventing him from performing his mission. I would like to suggest something similar, taking into consideration a famous episode in the Book of Joshua. Supernatural help When it came to the conquest of the fortified city of Jericho, G-d gave specific instructions. It was quite clear that natural means would be insufficient. Therefore, the people were told to circle the city seven times and when the shofar sounded they were to shout loudly and the walls of the city would collapse. This is exactly what happened and the battle was won by spiritual achievement only (Joshua Chapter 5). (See also Michtav Me'Eliyahu by Rav Dessler who gives a beautiful explanation of the significance of the number seven.) These two incidents appear to contain a similar metaphor. From Bile'am, we see that challenges often beat us. Even changing positions did not enable him to successfully curse the Jewish people. However, in the challenges that we face, in our struggles to succeed, maybe we should try to view the situation from a different angle, from a new perspective or with a fresh approach. In this way, we might find that a problem is not insurmountable, that what appears to be a blessing is not always so and that a curse is not necessarily a curse. Trust From the walls of Jericho, we can learn that sometimes our own physical prowess is not enough. Six times round the wall had no effect, only the added dimension of the seventh achieved results. Human effort is not always necessary. Sometimes it is more important to admit that matters are not in our control - the shouting loudly did just that. Ultimately, we might find that obstacles do not have to be tackled head on and that, with time and consideration, they may just disappear. Rav Dessler in Michtav Me'Eliyahu writes: 'The essence of bitachon - the mitzvah of trust and confidence in G-d - is to know that everything comes from G-d. True, we engage - and we are commanded to engage - in activities directed towards achieving certain results in the physical world. But we must realise that these actions are not the true causes of the results which seem to flow from them. The true cause is always the will of G-d.' If that was our worldview, we could live with a lot less fear, anxiety and doubt. PETHORAH: 'TO PETHOR'. The accent is on the Tav; ah means 'to, towards'. Balak sent to Bileam, a native of Pethor on the river, Euphrates. In Devarim 23:4, it is Pethor of Aram Naharaim, meaning Aram of the Two Rivers, or, translated by many, including the Greek, as Mesopotamia (roughly Iraq), which actually means 'The land between two rivers'. Pethor has been identified as Pittiru, mentioned among the towns of Syria captured by Thotmes III of Egypt (15th century BCE). Two of his obelisks are now in the West: Cleopatra's Needle by the Thames and the other is in Central Park, New York. Pethor was later taken by the Hittites, who in turn lost it to Shalmaneser III, King of Assyria (859 - 825 BCE). BK HALACHAH IN PRACTICE Outward Signs Tzitzit When we say Baruch She'amar (Singers p.37), we hold the two front Tzitzit and kiss them at the end of the prayer. The several expressions of baruch at the beginning are an incomplete berachot without the name of G-d. The sixteen strands and ten knots of the two tzitzit make up the number twenty six, the numerical value of the Tetragrammaton (G-d's four lettered name), and thus complete the berachot. We hold all four tzitzit (four corners of the earth) during the Shema, from veha'avienu (ibid. p.63) to kayamet (ibid. p.71). When we mention them in the third paragraph, we hold them to our eyes and kiss them. We likewise kiss them at emet and kayamet. Tefillin We touch the shin and bayit of the hand and the knot and bayit of the head at poteach et yadecha in Ashrei (ib. pp.47 and 125) and when we mention them in the first and second paragraphs of the Shema. It is also recommended that we touch them at intervals to remind us that we are wearing them. Mezuzah We kiss it as we leave and enter our homes, though some do so whenever they leave and re-enter a room, house or other property. BRAGGING SPEECH Bernd Koschland According to Pirkei Avot (5:6), the mouth of the ass (Bemidbar 22:28) was created at twilight on Erev Shabbat. The explanations for this miraculous phenomenon are many. (See the Hertz Chumash p.671.) The ass itself was not created during the six days for it could not have lived until the period of Bile'am! Yet the mouth of the ass had to be included somehow in the act of Creation; otherwise it would have meant that the laws of nature were to be changed on the spot. The Talmud explains: planted stolen seeds cannot be prevented from growing; if they were, it would be an alteration in Nature. Hence, it was by Divine decree that, when the 3 appropriate time would arrive, the potential (the items mentioned in Ethics 5:6) would become actuality - the mouth of the ass would be opened and speak. A Midrash observes that the speaking ass illustrates that the mouth and tongue are in the power of G-d. If He wishes to curse, He is able so to do and, likewise, to change it to a blessing. It further asks how did the speech of the ass benefit us humans? It replies that the power of speech is G-d's gift, to enable an animal to speak like a human and a human like a beast. Dayan Swift z"l comments: the ass once complained about its role and urged to be given speech to plead for consideration from overwork. G-d granted the request. Bile'am's ass, instead of berating him for his evil intent, bragged about itself: 'Am I not the ass you have ridden to this day ...?' Because it spoke of its own yichus and did not defend others, the ass would remain dumb. Speech, says Dayan Swift, is for the loftier things of life and not for selfaggrandisement and vain pride. The test of a person is how he or she defends others. 'We do not speak for ourselves, but for the other Jew.' Whilst nowadays 'ass' is a derogatory term, it is not so in the Tenach, where it occurs some one hundred and thirty eight times from Abraham (Bereshit 12:16) onwards. The King (Messiah) will arrive riding an ass (Zechariah 9:9). Bimherah Beyameinu. STANMORE APPEARS ON THE STAGE OF JEWISH HISTORY Elkan D Levy - Former President, United Synagogue The medieval Hebrew conveyance of the Manor of Stanmore is in a form that is not unlike current Hebrew deeds. It begins with the phrase: 'ani hachotem mata mode hAdam of Stratton', who bought the Manor of Little Stanmore from Hagin (Chayyim) of Lincoln. Adam was a very curious character. An ordained clergyman, he openly flouted the church's restrictions on money lending and seemingly also dabbled in black magic. When he was arrested, he attempted to throw away a bag that was in his possession; when recovered it proved to be full of artefacts, such as bats' wings and mouse skeletons used by the magicians of the day. He had a long and very controversial career, which came to a temporary halt in 1290 when his involvement in homicide was finally too much for King Edward I, and he was arrested. Sir Adam of Stratton ensured that he would be kept alive by forging a document purporting to prove that the King owned the Isle of Wight and after a few years he was released! When arrested, however, he still had in his possession the deed by which Chayyim of Lincoln had sold to him the manor of Little Stanmore. This was taken into Government records. To this day, it can be found in the Public Record Office at Kew. The Hebrew is clearly legible, particularly the signature at the end - Chayyim of Lincoln, the leader of the Jewish community in those days. There is, however, one strange footnote. When Chayyim's brother Rabbi Elijah Menachem of London died, his estate came into the possession of the King. The usual practice in those days was for the assets of the deceased to be sold by the monarch, but in this case he gave certain of Menachem's assets to Stephen of Chenduit. One wonders whether Chayyim of Lincoln's conduct was as upright as it might have been, whether Stephen of Chenduit remained very angry that he had lost the manor of Little Stanmore and whether, as compensation, he was given assets which had belonged to Chayyim's brother. 6 -PROJECT GENESIS The Jewish Learning Network Email: [email protected] URL: http://www.torah.org/ A). PG LIFELINE: "How goodly are your tents, Jacob, your dwelling places, O Israel." [24:5] As we know, Bilaam wanted to curse Israel, but G-d prevented him from doing so -- by putting blessings into his mouth instead. In the Talmud [Sanhedrin 105b], Rebbe Yochanon tells us that if we read the blessings carefully, we can find within them the curses which Bilaam wanted to deliver. Bilaam wanted to curse Israel to deny them houses of prayer and study, but HaShem forced him to say "how goodly are your tents" (as we see in Genesis where Yaakov is referred to as a "dweller in tents," which means that he sat constantly in the House of Study). Bilaam wanted to say that the Divine Presence should not rest upon Israel, but he was forced to say "your dwelling places, O Israel" (the word for "dwelling places" is Mishkanos, from the root Mishkan, the Tabernacle -- the place where the Divine Presence rested). And in this vein Rebbe Yochanon analyzes the verses which follow as well. Rebbe Aba bar Kahana says in conclusion: "all of these reverted to curses, with the exception of the blessing for Houses of Prayer and Study, as it says [in Deuteronomy 23:6] '...and G-d reversed the curse to a blessing, for HaShem your L-rd loved you' -- curse, and not curses." Although Bilaam's curses were many, all of the other curses -- save the one for Houses of Prayer and Study -- eventually came to pass. The Temple was destroyed, and Israel was left with neither kings nor kingdom. Houses of Prayer and Study, however, are with us always. Why is this true? Why was it that G-d preserved this blessing above all the others? R. Shabsay ben Meir HaKohen, author of the Sifsei Kohen commentary on the Code of Jewish Law, says that as long as Israel has Houses of Prayer and Study, as long as Israel makes requests and trusts HaShem to hear their prayers and remains devoted to Torah study, then the other curses are very limited. They can damage, but they cannot destroy. This one curse was "everything" -- by comparison, all the others are nothing! By reversing this one curse, G-d prevents the others from having terminal impact (Heaven forbid!). Torah study and prayer keep us alive as a people. What happens to peoples whose kings are dethroned, and who are exiled from their lands? They assimilate into their new surrounding culture, and disappear as a distinct population. For 2000 years of exile, Israel has proven the exception. For Israel, Torah study and prayer keep us alive, far more so than land or rulership. [As we see so sadly in our own era, when we have our land but not study of Torah, nothing prevents young Jews from moving to other countries and disappearing from the Jewish community. With the current grave situation, 'yeridah' -- leaving Israel -- is only likely to get worse. Even in the Land of Israel, we need the Torah of Israel.] As we say in our prayers, "we will rejoice in the words of Your Torah and your Mitzvos for all eternity, for they are our lives and the length of our days!" B). RAV FRAND: WAS G-D BILAAM'S AGENT? DOING IT FOR 'THE CAUSE' VS. FOR THE MONEY Parshas Balak contains the well-known story of Balak the King of Moav worrying about the imminent approach of the Jewish people. Moav correctly surmised that, given the fate of the other kings and nations that had challenged Bnei Yisrael [the Children of Israel] with conventional military tactics, Moav would not stand a chance confronting them in traditional battle. Therefore, Balak devised a "secret weapon" -- the chemical weapon of his day. "And he sent messengers to Bilaam son of Beor..." [Bamidbar 22:5] Bilaam had the ability to curse someone. When he did so, the curse would in fact take effect on its intended victim. So Balak requested that Bilaam curse the "nation that has gone out from Egypt and covered the face of the land." Bilaam asked the messengers to stay overnight, so that he could answer Balak's request the next morning based upon what G-d would tell him. G-d told Bilaam, "Do not go with them; do not curse the people, for they are Blessed" [22:12]. Bilaam relayed that message to Balak's messengers. When Balak heard that Bilaam would not come, he assumed that the reason was because the proposed compensation was inadequate -- that he had tried to get away too cheap. Therefore, Balak sent a more prestigious delegation promising Bilaam a great reward and granting his every request. Bilaam, not being anyone's fool, casually mentioned to the messengers, "Even if Balak will give me his entire treasury filled with silver and gold, my hands are tied -- I can only do that which G-d permits me to do." Again, they proceeded through the whole process of waiting overnight. This time, G-d told Bilaam, "If these people are coming for your advantage (likra lecha), then go with them -- just only speak that which I tell you" [22:20]. If we can even use such terminology, it appears as if G-d changed his mind! The first time that Bilaam asked for permission, G-d said "No. You can not go!" Then, G-d appeared to suddenly change His mind. What changed? Rash"i comments on the words "Im Likra Lecha," that if these people are coming for your benefit -- to give you payment, go with them. In other words, if you stand to make profit out of this venture, then I have no objection to your going. That was the difference! The first time, when they asked Bilaam to come, they did not offer him anything -- neither money nor honor. In that situation, G-d told Bilaam, "Do not go." The second time, Balak offered Bilaam wealth and honor. In that situation, G-d told him, "If you stand to gain from this, then you can go." Is G-d worried about Bilaam's livelihood? Is He acting as Bilaam's agent? Pro bono, you cannot go. If you charge by the hour -- then you can go? I heard a fantastic insight regarding this concept from Rav Shimon Schwab (1908-1995). The difference, says Rav Schwab, is that one of the most potent forces in the universe is doing something "Lishma" - for it's own sake, without ulterior motives. Doing something altruistically, for the sake of what one believes to be right, is a force beyond belief. However, when people do things because they stand to make a dollar, rather than for the sake of a cause, it loses its potency. Rav Schwab related this insight in the context of explaining the rise and fall of the Communist system during the previous century. Communism was a very successful movement. Until very recently, there were more than a billion and a half people who lived under Communist domination - and yet in recent times we have seen Communism disintegrate. What made Communism so successful? Rav Schwab argued that Communism became so successful because there were "Lishma-niks." People like Lenin and Trotsky and Marx were people who wanted to give the world a better order. They wanted to give the world a new system to replace the "bankruptcy of capitalism," in which some are fantastically wealthy and some beg on the street. In a sense, Communism was based on very noble ideals. These were people who were -- for lack of a better word -- L'shem Shamayim [for the sake of Heaven]! They did it for the sake of Communism. They were Lishma! Rav Schwab related that he remembered a Communists parade in his city in Germany in the 1920s. There was a Jewish kid who had rebelled against his parents and marched in the front line of this parade. He was despised. He was an outcast of the entire community. But this did not faze him, because he did it Lishma. He believed in what he was doing, like so many of our Jewish brethren who unfortunately believed in it. When people are willing to give up their lives and souls for the sake of a cause, that is a very potent force. We can look back now, over 70 years later, and try to discover what happened to the movement that caused it to collapse. We can suggest that to a large extent, the system failed because it lost this element of 'Lishma'. When we saw that all the leaders of the various "Iron Curtain" countries had stashed away Swiss bank accounts and when we 4 saw all the corruption and graft, we quickly recognized that the Lishma had been abandoned. Once they lost the element of Lishma, the potency of the force was gone. This is what G-d was telling Bilaam: When Balak came and said "Curse the Jews" without offering honor or money, the reason why Bilaam was going was because he hated Jews. "We have to curse Jews! I want to eradicate Jews." This is a philosophy. It is a CAUSE. In that case, "Watch Out! You may not go." G-d knows that a sincere CAUSE is a lethal and potent force. However, when Balak said, "I will give you Honor and Money," then G-d told Bilaam: If this is for your own benefit -- if you are doing it for the money, then go. That is a different story. If you are "in it" for the money and honor, rather than Lishma -- then your ability will not be nearly as potent. C). PARSHA PARABLES (Rabbi M Kamenetzky) IS SINCERITY AT STEAK? This week, we find the gentile world's greatest prophet, Bila'am, challenged by bot his conscience, Hashem's will and of course, a formidable foe. Balak, the King of Moav asked him to cast a curse upon the Jewish nation. He sent a delegation of servants to implore him, but Bila'am refused. His hands were tied, or more accurately, his lips were sealed. After besseching the Almighty for permission to curse the Jewis nation, "Hashem said to Balaam, 'You shall not go with them! You shall not curse the people, for it is blessed!'" (Numbers 22:12) Despite Bila'am's initial refusal, Balak was determined. He sent another delegation, this time, distinguished officers, "higher ranking than the previous" (ibid v.15) "They came to Balaam and said to him, "So said Balak son of Zippor, 'Do not refrain from going to me. for I shall honor you greatly, and everything that you say to me I shall do; so go now and curse this people for me.' Balaam answered and said to the servants of Balak, "If Balak will give me his houseful of silver and gold, I cannot transgress the word of Hashem, my G-d, to do anything small or great:But Bila'am does not leave it at that. He really wants to be a part of the plot. That night he resubmits his request to Hashem, and this time G-d acquiesces. Hashem came to Balaam at night and said to him, "If the men came to summon you, arise and go with them, but only the thing that I shall speak to you -- that shall you do" (ibid v. 20). And so, the Torah tells us, the next day, "Bila'am arose in the morning and personally saddled his she-donkey and went with the officers of Moab." " (ibid v. 21). The next verse seems strange. Even though just a few p'sukim prior, Bila'am had attained permission, the Torah tells us, "Hashem's wrath flared because he was going, and an angel of Hashem stood on the road to impede him." The question is straightforward. If Bila'am attained permission to accompany them, why was " Hashem's wrath flared"? After all if G-d said yes, what did he expect? There is an old Jewish story about the shnorrer who goes collecting one Sunday in the prestigious community synagogue, pleading for funds. Though the prestigious synagogue had a "no solicitor" policy, the President of the congregation was somehow convinced of the beggars sincerity. After the three morning minyanim, depart the man walks out of the synagogue with a smile. A few hours later he parks himself in the town's most elegant restaurant and orders a rib-eye steak. The President of the synagogue walks in and notices the schnorrer, cloth napkin tucked conspicuously under his chin, with a succulent steak resting on his plate nestled comfortably between a portion of fried potatoes and asparagus. "Hands on his hips the flabbergasted president accosted the man. "Is that what you do with the money you collected in our synagogue?" The pauper shrugged his shoulders and shrugged. "I don't understand. When I don't have money I can't eat steak. When I do have money I shouldn't eat steak. So when, may I ask, can I eat steak?" Billam, at first is refused permission to go with Balak's advisors. He seems to be reluctant to even consider the offer, claiming that even if he is offered a houseful of the gold and silver he can't go. Yet Balak perseveres, Bila'am re-requests and Hashem finally agrees, caveats attached. But instead of Billam using his new-found permission to reluctantly trudge along, he develops a whole new attitude. He is up at the crack of dawn, he passionately saddles his own donkey, a chore normally delegated to his servants, Hashem sees that Billam is not being coerced, nor schlepped, rather, "He is going." Then His ire flares. Hashem's reluctant approval turned into Bila'ams enthusiastic accompaniment. Life often presents us the opportunities, in which our ingrained convictions are challenged. Sometimes we must bend the rules. Attend a meeting, in an unfamiliar atmosphere; sharing a drink with an unsavory client; spending an evening with a haughty politician. The question is simple; once we have the opportunity to drift, do we attach ourselves to the flotsam and ride the waves with zest. Or is every step of the way met with the original emotions of reluctance and apprehension. Billam's originally refused to go along. He told Balak he just couldn't go. But when he received permission from Hashem, his attitude changed quickly. From a pronounced subservience to G-d's the reluctant prophet became the enthusiastic co-conspirator saddling his own donkey and excitingly joining the evil plotters. How quickly do his loyalties adjust! When given the opportunity, it is easy for a despondent pauper to turn into an indulging guzzler. Sometimes, it doesn't matter if our conscience is at stake, when a steak intrudes upon our conscience. D). P’SHUTO SHEL MIKRA (Rabbi Yitz Etshalom) text 7 - HAR ETZION (VBM) Virtual Beit Midrash, Alon Shevut, Gush Etzion 90433 e-mail: [email protected], Home Page: http://www.virtual.co.il/education/yhe A) INTRODUCTION TO PARSHAT HASHEVUAH THE PROPHECIES OF BILAM By Rav Michael Hattin INTRODUCTION Last week, we read of the remarkable Israelite victory over Sichon and Og, the ominous Amorite kings. With their triumph, the people secure and begin to settle the lands east of the Jordan River. The Kingdom of Moav and its provisional leader Balak, still smarting from their own loss of territory at the hands of Sichon, feel even more threatened by the Israelite tribes now at their doorstep. With the demise of Sichon and Og, regarded as the regional superpowers, the people of Moav and their nomadic Midianite kin abandon any hope of successfully engaging the Israelites in battle. Instead, they opt for a more supernatural if less materially gratifying approach: the imposition of an execration by the well-known Eastern seer Bilam. Hailing from the town of Petor on the banks of the distant Euphrates, Bilam is a well-known personality in the occult circles of the region. The efficacies of his curses and blessings have gained him a unique reputation and have also provided him with a substantial and steady source of income. Eager to answer the call of Balak and his Midianite henchmen but conscious of his own limitations, Bilam inquires of the Deity and requests His sanction for the mission, but God's response proves inconclusive: "…that which I shall say to you, you shall do" (Bemidbar 22:20). Thus, although Bilam saddles his ass and accompanies Balak's messengers, he will provide no guarantees. In the most peculiar encounter which follows, the invisible angel of the Lord thrice bars the path of Bilam's donkey, each time with greater menacing effect. Bilam, dumb to the vision of the beast but impatient with its increasing reluctance to proceed, strikes the donkey harshly. Finally, God, in an event without parallel in the Scriptures, grants the ass the power of speech, and its eloquent protests to Bilam are succeeded by the revelation of the angel to Bilam's senseless eyes. Warning him to not stray from God's directives, the angel allows Bilam to proceed, and finally he arrives at the border of Moav. STRUCTURAL SIMILARITIES At Balak's impatient behest, Bilam attempts to pronounce his curse against the people of Israel, but three times his efforts meet with failure. The textual structure of the three, and of a fourth that Bilam pronounces to a startled Balak unprompted, is quite similar. Invariably (excluding the final fourth pronouncement), the endeavor begins with Balak's invitation to Bilam to view the extremity of the Israelite encampment from afar. This is followed by Bilam's directive to Balak to erect a series of seven altars and to offer a bullock and a ram on each of them. Bilam then ascends alone to the designated high place to receive Divine inspiration. God encounters him, "places words in his mouth," and sends him back to Balak and his officers, who patiently await his return. To the surprise and consternation of Balak, Bilam then proceeds to pronounce a Divinely mandated blessing of the people of Israel. This is followed by a frustrated outburst by Balak, and countered by Balak's apologetic remark that he can only communicate the message that God "places in his mouth." With respect to the fourth pronouncement, Bilam offers it without Balak's invitation, without prior preparation, and without the need to 'ascend on high' to receive God's word. His final blessing is presented as a fitting climax to the entire narrative, an eloquent pronouncement that surpasses his earlier words, both in composition and style. POINTS TO PONDER Clearly, the Torah invites us to consider the content of Bilam's pronouncements through the prism of their similar structure, as if the pattern that seems to inform the entire account must in some way contribute to the significance of his words. Additionally, we are called upon to investigate the connection of the introductory 'donkey' episode to what follows. Why would the Torah have Bilam's donkey stop in its tracks three times and no more, if not to bluntly suggest a link with his three subsequent attempts to curse the people of Israel? Examining his three pronouncements in turn will be helpful to not only highlight their similarities, but more importantly to point out their contrasts. What we may discover is that there is more here than simply three independent proclamations of roughly equal weight. In fact, we shall see that Bilam's words affirm a very deliberate and meaningful progression. FIRST ENCOUNTER "The Lord incidentally encountered ('VayiKaR') Bilam…and placed words in his mouth…He (Bilam) declared his oracle and said: 'Balak King of Moav has brought me from Aram, from the eastern mountains, to arise and to curse Yaacov and to pronounce words of wrath against Yisrael. But how can I curse, since the Almighty has not? How can I be wrathful when God is not? I see them from the heights of the mountains and gaze on them from the hills. They are a nation that dwells alone, that is not reckoned among the peoples. Who can count the dust of Yaacov or ascertain the number of Yisrael's descendants? Let my soul perish like the righteous, let my end be like theirs!" (Bemidbar 23:4-10). In this first attempt, we notice that 'THE LORD' ('Elohim') encounters Bilam INCIDENTALLY ('VayiKaR), and that Israel is SINGLED OUT as a nation that is like no other. Additionally, we are impressed by descriptions of Yisrael's abundance, of descendants as numerous as the dust of the earth. There seems, however, to be no definitive historical period to which Bilam may be alluding. SECOND ENCOUNTER "God incidentally encountered ('VayiKaR') Bilam and placed words in his mouth…He (Bilam) declared his oracle and 5 said: 'Arise Balak and hear, hearken to me son of Tzippor. The Lord is not like man to waver, nor is He Hemortal to change His mind. Does He proclaim and not fulfill, does He speak and not carry out? I have taken a blessing, for He has blessed and I cannot reverse it. He sees no wrongdoing in Israel, no iniquity in Yisrael, God the Lord is with them and the glorious presence of the King is in their midst. The Almighty brought them out of Egypt and He is like the mighty horns of the bison for them. No magic can prevail against Yaacov, no occult against Yisrael, for now the works of the Almighty shall be told to Yaacov and to Yisrael. They are nation that rises like the lion and lifts itself like the lion. They too shall not lie down until they have consumed the prey and drank the blood of the kill'" (Bemidbar 23:16-24). This time, we notice that it is not 'the Lord' ('Elohim') that encounters Bilam, but rather GOD ('HaShem'). We are told of His immutability, of His desire to bless, and of His CONTINUOUS PRESENCE in Israel. Significantly, a historical note is inserted into the proclamation, for Bilam speaks of God's involvement in the EXODUS. Finally, there is a somewhat obscure allusion to a lion, to a mighty people of Israel that will consume its undefined 'prey' before 'lying down.' Bearing in mind the chronological element introduced by the Exodus, we would perhaps not be overstepping our bounds by understanding it as a reference to the CONQUEST OF CANAAN (the 'prey'), and the beginning of the process of SETTLEMENT (the 'lying down'). THIRD ENCOUNTER "When Bilam saw that it was fitting in God's eyes to bless Israel he did not seek out occult forces as before. Instead, he set his gaze towards the wilderness. Bilam lifted his eyes and saw the people of Israel dwelling according to their tribes, and the spirit of the Lord came upon him. He (Bilam) proclaimed his oracle and said: 'These are the words of Bilam son of Be'or, the words of the man with the seeing eye. These are the words of the one who heard the words of the Almighty, who perceived a vision of the All Powerful, falling down with open eyes. How goodly are your tents, Yaacov, your dwelling places Yisrael. They are like outstretched streams, like gardens by the river, likaloes planted by God, like cedars by the waters. His wells shall overflow with water, his crops shall be watered abundantly, his king shall be greater than Agag, and his kingdom shall be exalted. The Almighty who brought them out of Egypt and is like the mighty horns of the bison for them, shall devour the nations that oppress them, grinding their bones and wounding them with His arrows. They shall lie down and sleep like the lion, and who shall bestir them? Those that bless you shall be blessed, those that curse you shall be cursed!'" (Bemidbar 24:1-9). Here, we see how Bilam finally recognizes the INEFFICACY OF THE OCCULT against Israel. Now it is the SPIRIT OF THE LORD that inspires him, for he has seen a VISION of the Almighty. In his mind's eye, Bilam sees the tribes of Israel planted SECURELY AND PRODUCTIVELY by the waters. He sees their KING, whose KINGDOM will be glorious and great, surpassing that of 'Agag.' Their ENEMIES SHALL BE COMPLETELY VANQUISHED, for the lion that is Israel will devour them and chew on their proverbial bones. This time, Bilam sees farther into the future, for the tribes that in his second vision could not settle in security before conquering their foes, are here described as 'lying down' with none to dare rouse them. In this third encounter, Bilam sees a king in Israel, greater than 'Agag.' This Agag is none other than the King of Amalek, vanquished by Israel's first king, Shaul (see Shmuel/Samuel 1, Chapter 15). The reference would therefore be to the founding of the monarchy in Israel, an event that took place about three hundred and fifty years after the Exodus from Egypt. This development culminated with the ascent of David to the throne, the sovereign who finally conquered Israel's hostile neighbors and laid the groundwork for the founding of an empire. LAST ENCOUNTER As stated above, Bilam's final prophecy is offered unsolicited. Balak is not called upon to undertake any preliminary preparations, and God is not sought out but rather appears. Significantly, Bilam presents his parting words as a vision of what the people of Israel shall do to Moav 'at the end of days': "He (Bilam) proclaimed his oracle and said: 'These are the words of Bilam son of Be'or, the words of the man with the seeing eye. These are the words of the one who heard the words of the Almighty, who knows the knowledge of the Most High, who perceived a vision of the All Powerful, falling down with open eyes. I see him but not now, I gaze upon him but not soon. A star will shoot forth out of Yaacov, a scepter shall rise from Yisrael, who shall crush the princes of Moav and demolish all of Shet's descendants. Edom shall be their inheritance, Se'ir their enemies shall be their inheritance, and Israel shall be triumphant. A ruler from Yaacov shall destroy the remnant of the city…'" (Bemidbar 24:14-19). In this last vision, Bilam submits that he peers far into the future, seeing the so-called 'end of days' that elsewhere in Tanakh connotes the MESSIANIC AGE (see Devarim 4:30, 31:29; Yishayahu/Isaiah 2:1; Yechezkel/Ezekiel 38:16; etc.). This time, his perception of God's words is complemented by KNOWLEDGE of the Most High. Bilam sees a MESSIANIC FIGURE, an ideal king, who will finally and irrevocably make an end of Israel's foes, who will vanquish Moav and Edom, its ancestral enemies. ALL OF HUMANITY, the sons of Shet (Seth, the third son of Adam and Chava, whose descendants constitute the human race), will reluctantly recognize Israel's ascendancy and their message shall finally triumph. THE READING OF THE RAMBAN 6 Noticing the textual cues pointed out above, the Ramban (13th century, Spain) perceptively comments: "All of Bilam's prophecies see progressively farther into the future. First he pointed out that Israel is God's portion and inheritance, then he spoke of their conquest of the land and domination of its kings. Thirdly, he saw them securely dwelling in their land and becoming abundant upon it. He saw them appoint a king that would vanquish Amalek, and establish a kingdom that would achieve victory under David…In this fourth vision, Bilam goes on to see the Messianic Age, and he therefore describes his vision as 'not now' and 'not soon'…" (commentary to 24:14). In other words, Bilam's visions are not simply three or four selfcontained units, but rather a progression of ideas that taken together describe the complete historical development of the people of Israel. Poised to enter the land of Canaan, the stages of Israel's conquest, settlement, securing of borders, and establishment of an empire that will foreshadow its Messianic redemption are already all revealed to Bilam's perceptive eyes. PROPHECY AND PROGNOSTICATION It is indeed striking that the depth of Bilam's discernment, the quality of his encounters with God, appears to be enhanced with each unfolding vision. Thus, the first encounter, haphazard and incidental ('VayiKaR'), is with 'Elohim,' a name of God that signifies not only power and transcendence, but also remoteness and inaccessibility. The second encounter is with the more intimate 'Hashem' ('God'), the Sustainer and Supporter of the cosmos. In the third encounter, a 'spirit of the Lord' comes upon him as he hears His words and perceives His vision. Finally, in his last encounter, Bilam also acquires 'knowledge of the Most High,' an expression that seems to signify an intimate engagement with the Deity. In perfect consonance with Bilam's prophetic progression, the text describes in more and more striking language the exclusivity of the people of Israel. First, they are perceived as a nation that dwells alone, then they are singled out as a people privy to God's acts, then they are described as having a unique relationship with the Deity, and finally they are presented as the triumphant bearers of His message to humanity. To the procession of the two complementary themes of Bilam's personal journey and the nation of Israel's destiny, we may add a third: the impotency of magic, sorcery and the occult to affect the fate of the people of Israel. Thus, Bilam enters the scene as a gifted sorcerer and seer, but his ostensible powers soon prove wholly inadequate. In the meantime, the fundamental message that no such powers can sway God or dictate Israel's fate, is repeatedly hammered home with increasing intensity. These three themes of exclusivity, prophecy, and inefficacy of augury, are actually interwoven. At the most elemental level, prophecy concerns God's communications to human beings. The more cohesive the relationship with God, the more intense is the prophetic experience, and the more obvious how coarse and ineffectual is divination by comparison. If Bilam speaks of Israel's potential for exclusivity and intimacy, then he must also address their unique capacity for prophecy, and at the same time highlight his own failure to achieve significant results through prognostication. THE DONKEY All of this, of course, leads us back to Bilam's donkey. What is the meaning of its encounter with the angelic figure, with its unprecedented speech, and with Bilam's eventual perception of what it can 'see' all along? Again, we return to the words of the Ramban: "The reason for this miracle was to impress upon Bilam that God is the Bestower of the power of speech, and can even open the mouth of the 'mute.' Certainly, He can also stop up the mouth of those who speak, or place in their mouths the words that He wishes them to speak, for nothing is beyond His ability. Let not Bilam follow then his magical and mysterious practices in order to curse the people…" (commentary to 22:23). On three occasions, the donkey instinctively pauses and refuses to proceed, sensing that its path is barred. Bilam's secret desire to honor Balak's request and consequently secure fame and fortune hangs in the balance, and he is impatient to reach his destination. With unusual viciousness, he lashes out at the dumb beast whose behavior seems so inexplicable. Finally, the creature addresses him in some sort of communication that the text plainly describes as 'speech.' Bilam engages the donkeyin dialogue and in the end is granted a vision of the 'angel' that impresses upon him his accountability to a Higher Power Who will brook no disobedience to His will. Is this curious encounter not the story of Bilam's subsequent travails? On three occasions, Bilam attempts to circumvent God's directives, in order to curse the people of Israel. In each case, his 'mouth' is instead filled with blessings that he pronounces against his natural inclinations. In the end, he is forced to concede that his powers have no impact against Israel, that God directs his speech, that he, like the donkey, is nothing more than an instrument in His hands. The dull-witted, four-legged brute gropes for a glimmer of a higher truth that God progressively but graciously provides. After three 'communications,' the donkey is finally able to speak intelligible words that loudly proclaim God's involvement and guidance. Bilam, too, after three 'attempts' to prove otherwise, must eventually come to the profound realization that all of his faculties, including the speech that constitutes the very source of his strength, are subject to God's authority and command. As soon as he is able to internalize that message, his fourth and final vision of the ideal Messianic Age must follow, for it is the culmination of the process. B) INDEPTH PARSHAT SHEVUAH I WILL BLESS THOSE WHO BLESS YOU By Rav Yair Kahn The story of Balak is inserted into sefer Bemidbar after the successful campaign against the kingdoms of Sichon and Og. Of course, this may be merely an accurate chronological description, assuming that Balak's fears were generated by the total collapse of these kings' powerful armies (see Rashi). However, one might add that at this juncture, when the Jewish people are in the final stages of preparation for entry into the promised land, the Torah was interested in describing the spiritual victory of Israel over the dark spiritual forces of the rest of the world, represented by Bilam. Although the spiritual victory detailed in the final section of Bilam's prophecy will be fully implemented only in the future "What I see for them is not yet, what I behold will not be soon" (Bemidbar 24:17) - nevertheless, this victory lies at the root of Jewish destiny. The Torah presents us with a fascinating tale touching upon important theological issues. It is a story pregnant with symbolic references and coded messages. Before attempting an interpretation, one must be aware that Torah is not literature, and only then may one proceed with a sense of humility and an awareness of the limits of human perception. Anyone versed in Scripture is familiar with the story of Bilam and his donkey, however, most people gloss over the enigmatic section that follows, containing the blessings and prophesies transmitted through Bilam. I will attempt to explain a certain aspect of the latter, based upon an analysis of the former. Using this method, I hope to highlight certain basic issues which I believe the Torah is trying to convey. What did Bilam attempt to accomplish? What was God's response? What eternal message does the Torah wish to transmit in this section? When reading the story, we are troubled by a basic problem. The Torah tells us: That night God came to Bilam and said to him, "If these men have come to invite you, you may go with them. But whatever I command you, that you shall do." When he arose in the morning, Bilam saddled his donkey and departed with the Moabite dignitaries. But God was incensed at his going; so an angel of God placed himself in his way as an adversary. (Bemidbar 22:20-22) It is not clear what Bilam did to arouse God's anger. He made it very clear to Balak's emissaries that he was dependent upon God's wishes, and he refused to join Balak without divine permission. Rashi (22:20) explains that in some way, Bilam planned to deviate from the express will of God: "But whatever I command you, that you shall do" - "But" means that against your will you shall do what I command you; nevertheless, "And Bilam went," for he thought, "Perhaps I shall lead Him astray and He will consent." When the first group of messengers arrive, God refuses Bilam permission to join Balak, explaining that Bnei Yisrael are a blessed nation and should not be cursed. God said to Bilam, "Do not go with them. You must not curse that people, for they are blessed." (Bemidbar 22:12) Why, then, did Bilam repeat his request to God at the behest of the second group of messengers? Did he really believe that Bnei Yisrael were no longer blessed simply because Balak had sent a more impressive entourage? What did he think when God changed His mind, as it were, and allowed him to travel to Moav? When Bilam finally embarks on his journey to Moav, God, through His heavenly angel and a verbal donkey, wishes to convey to Bilam that he has no personal freedom in this matter. Just like the donkey, he merely must repeat that which God places in his mouth (see Ramban). However, we are immediately struck by the repeated attempts leading up to Bilam's eye-opening encounter with the angel. The donkey manages to circumvent the angel twice, until she is finally brought to a stop on the third encounter. What is the Torah trying to tell us by reporting the failed attempts? Is the Torah informing us that God sent an incompetent angel who managed to connect only after two strikes? Or is the Torah educating us regarding the stubbornness of donkeys? Let us take a closer look at the angel's two failed attempts to stop Bilam. In the first encounter, the angel blocks the path with sword drawn. The donkey manages to continue by leaving the path, venturing into the field and circumventing the danger. Bilam then beats the donkey to return him to the path. We already noted that the donkey's miraculous speech indicates that, just as the donkey merely verbalizes the sounds that God places in her mouth, so too Bilam has no choice but to repeat that which is put in his mouth by the Almighty. We therefore may assume that the donkey in the entire episode represents Bilam (Bilam himself may be playing the role of Balak). In fact, doesn't the donkey act exactly like Bilam? God prohibits him from placing a curse on Bnei Yisrael because they are blessed. However, instead of stopping, Bilam tries to circumvent God's will and paradoxically avoid the Omnipresent's eye, in order to place a curse the Jewish people. Bilam at this juncture believes his words have power independent of God. If only he can escape the path and the view of God, he will succeed in bringing calamity on the Jewish nation. Bilam's heresy was already detected by Rashi at the beginning of our parasha. When the first entourage from Moav arrived, God appeared to Bilam in a dream and asked: "What do these people want of you?" (Bemidbar 22:9). Rashi comments: "He came to mislead him. He said apparently at times not everything is known to him ... [and therefore Bilam thought,] 'I shall find a time that I will be able to curse them and He will not understand.'" The first prophecy placed in Bilam's mouth counters this idea explicitly. God notes the absurdity of this position as He forces Bilam to proclaim: How can I curse who God has not cursed, how doom when 7 the Lord has not doomed? (Bemidbar 23:8) It is preposterous even to entertain the possibility of bringing a curse upon a nation blessed by God. Moreover, it is ridiculous to attempt to escape the presence of God: "Where can I escape from Your spirit? Where can I flee from Your Presence? If I ascend to the heaven, You are there; if I descend to Sheol, You are there too." (Tehillim 139:7-8) The angel tries to stop Bilam a second time. He chooses a place enclosed by fences on both sides; there is no possibility of straying from the path. Nevertheless, the donkey manages to pass the angel by squeezing to one side of the path in order to avoid the sword of the celestial messenger. If we continue our approach, viewing the donkey as symbolizing Bilam, it seems that the Torah is hinting at a second tactic Bilam employs. Even if he cannot hide from God and must remain on the path, he may nonetheless succeed in sidestepping God's will. He might be successful in finding some alternative which will enable him to place a curse on Bnei Yisrael. Again we find that Rashi detected Bilam's position at the beginning of the parasha. When the second group of emissaries arrived and God assented to Bilam's request, allowing him to travel to Moav, He warned Bilam that he was free to say only that which God would place in his mouth. According to Rashi, Bilam embarked on the journey because he believed that he would succeed in somehow influencing this divine decision, and thereby be allowed to place a curse on Bnei Yisrael - "Perhaps I shall lead Him astray and He will consent." The second prophecy contains an explicit rejection of this possibility. Before this prophecy, Bilam makes a renewed attempt at placing a curse on the Jewish people, although he has already been informed that they are a blessed nation. Balak tries to help him by finding a nlocation from which only a segment of Bnei Yisrael can be viewed. Then Balak said to him, "Come with me to another place from which you can see them - you will see only a portion of them; you will not see all of them - curse them for me from there." (Bemidbar 23:13) Bilam had been forced to concede that the Jewish people as an entirety, a complete organic entity, is blessed. But, he thought, it may be possible to sidestep this problem by placing a curse on a limited section of the nation. Although the nation as a unit is blessed, it is reasonable to assume that this does not include every individual. Nevertheless, Bilam's attempt at altering the will of God is rebuffed. God is not man to be capricious, or mortal to change His mind. Would He speak and not act, promise and not fulfill? My message was to bless: When He blesses, I cannot reverse it. (Bemidbar 23:19-20) The divine decision to bless the Jewish people remains intact, and the tactics of Balak and Bilam will not succeed in qualifying the divine will. Despite being beaten for a second time, Bilam prods the donkey to continue the journey. The donkey continues until she meets God's messenger for the third and final time. She finds herself totally surrounded with no possibility of avoiding the angel's sword. She stops dead in her tracks and refuses to advance. She has finally acknowledged that she cannot but comply with the will of God as expressed by the angel. Similarly, we find that prior to the third prophecy, in spite of Balak's prodding, Bilam submits himself to God's will. Now Bilam, seeing that it pleased the Lord to bless Israel, did not, as on previous occasions, go in search of omens, but turned his face toward the wilderness. (Bemidbar 24:1) It is only at this point that Bilam finally surrenders himself to the Almighty. He can neither escape God's presence nor alter His will. He must humbly accept the divine decision. At this juncture, we are confronted by a basic problem which lies at the very core of our parasha. How are we to understand the entire concept of blessing and curse? Why should human utterance have any significance? If one is worthy, we would expect divine justice to bestow blessings upon him, whether or not humanly blessed. The reverse is true with respect to one who is unworthy. In what way can man intervene and influence the Almighty? What role is played by the human word? What was the basis of Bilam's power to bless and curse, if ultimately only the divine will is relevant? A complete discussion of this difficult topic is beyond the scope of this shiur. However, I would like to present a gemara (Avoda Zara 4a-b) that seems to address this issue. Our Rabbis taught: "God is angry every day" (Tehillim 7:12), but how long does His anger last? - A moment. And how long is a moment? - One 53,848th of an hour is a moment. No creature could ever precisely fix this moment except Bilam the wicked, of whom it is written, "who knew the knowledge of the Most High" (Bemidbar 24:16). Is that possible? He did not know the mind of his animal; how could he have known the mind of the Most High!? ... What, then, is the meaning of "He knew the knowledge of the Most High?" - He knew the exact hour when the Holy One, blessed be He, is angry. This indeed, is what the Prophet is alluding to when he says (Mikha 6:5), "O my people, remember now what Balak king of Moav consulted, and what Bilam son of Beor answered him from Shittim unto Gilgal; that you may know the righteousness of the Lord." Said R. Eleazar: The Holy One, blessed by He, said to Israel: O my people, see how many righteous acts I did for you, in that I abstained from anger all those days, for had I been in anger, none would have remained or been spared of Israel. This, too, is what Bilam refers to when he says, "How can I curse, seeing that God does not curse, and how can I be wrathful, seeing that the Lord has not been wrathful?" (23:8). And how long does His wrath last? - A moment [rega]. And how long is a rega? Said Amemar (others say, Rabina): As long as it takes to utter this word. And whence do we know that His wrath lasts a moment? Because it is written, "For his anger is for a moment, His favour is for a life-time" ... When is He wrathful? - Said Abaye: During the first three hours, when the comb of the cock is white. And is it not white at all other times? - At other times it has red streaks, at that time there are no red streaks in it. Without attempting to interpret the details introduced in this passage, it seems clear that Bilam's power to curse was associated by our sages with the "midat ha-din," the divine attribute focusing on absolute justice and truth. According to the above gemara, this attribute finds its purest expression during a fleeting moment within the first three hours of the day. At that instant, Bilam succeeded in placing a curse. It would appear that Chazal understood the concept of blessing and curse within the parameters of "midat ha- din" (strict justice) and "midat ha-rachamim" (the divine attribute associated with compassion). These two attributes, which seem contradictory from the limited perspective of finite man, somehow coexist within God, and together describe His involvement with the world. A blessing is ineffective where it is totally unwarranted. It can only appeal to the "midat ha-rachamim," which may result in a response reflecting God's compassion and loving-kindness. Conversely, a curse merely appeals to the "midat ha-din" and demands an uncompromising and exacting response, but does not cross the boundary of justice. Rashi (22:21) notes that the impossibility of placing a curse on the Jewish people is rooted in our father Avraham. "And [Bilam] saddled his donkey" - God said: Scoundrel, Avraham their father has already preceded you, as it says (Bereishit 22), "And Avraham awoke early in the morning and saddled his donkey." According to our approach, it is specifically Avraham and the legacy he imparted to his children that protect them from the "midat ha-din." After all, Avraham is renowned for his kindness and sensitivity. Give kindness to Avraham, which you have promised to our fathers from days of yore. (Mikha 7:20) God shows his compassion and loving-kindness to those who act with kindness. With a kind man You will perform kindness. (II Shemuel 22:26) Therefore, the children of Avraham, who continue his legacy, are protected from harsh expressions of exacting justice. Hence, they may be blessed, but can never be cursed. I will bless those who bless you, and curse him that curses you. (Bereishit 12:3) C) SICHAT ROSH YESHIVA Harav Yehuda Amital Shlit"A SELECTIVE CONFRONTATION:THE ROLE OF THE MODERN JEWISH LEADER PART 1 OF 2 With the destruction of the Second Temple, the Nation of Israel began what was to become a long and cruel exile. Our ancestors were forced to move constantly, traversing endless miles in search of some friendly country which would allow them to remain within its borders. Wherever they went, the Jews were never permitted to remain for long, and they were constantly emigrating from city to city, and from country to country in the attempt to find one place which they might call their own. One generation established roots while the next was forced to sever them and continue the relentless search for yet another temporary refuge. Each new city, every new country that the Jews entered forced them to weigh new values, ethics, culture and customs against their own. One of the greatest challenges that these Jews faced was how to sustain the values of their own religion during their constant displacement. How could they preserve the Torah in its totality, constantly maintaining the ethical and moral standards that the Torah demanded, while living among a foreign people and within an alien culture which was often diametrically opposed to the Torah's values? This problem has taken on special significance in the last century, in light of the Holocaust and the subsequent founding of the State of Israel. Although our nation is at present experiencing the long awaited "kibbutz galuyot" - the ingathering of the exiles - many Jewish communities still function and thrive in a foreign atmosphere, often finding themselves bereft of traditional Jewish values. Another, more serious, factor has served to compilcate the problems that these communities face in their battle to live at one with the modern world while striving to maintain a Jewish identity. I am referring to the swift changes that take place in our world, changes that often leave us feeling somewhat superfluous in our relations with the world at large. A sense of alienation sets in, where the individual is no longer sure of those values, morals and ideals that he once took for granted. In our modern world culture, ideas, ideals, the worth and importance of values, all change at a pace that is simply too overwhelming for the individual to comprehend. If such changes remained in the realm of physical and material values; if the demand of material success was the only one that modern man had to live up to; if the competition along life's long and often arduous journey were limited to mere accumulation of wealth and comfort, then perhaps we would be able to face the modern world with a great deal more confidence and ability. However, our world demands not only a change in the realm of the material, but taxes the spiritual world as well. The spiritual wellbeing of each individual is no longer a hidden aspect of his being; rather, it is being constantly challenged, and the values he once upheld as true and eternal become enveloped in doubt. Suddenly, the individual finds that his once secure metaphysical world has been breached and he watches helplessly as it slowly dissolves in a mass of unrequited dreams. With no objective, spiritual standard by which to judge himself and his surroundings, the individual is lost, and consequently the meaning in one's life becomes a mass of uncertainty and riddles. We as Jews are facing a twofold problem. First, it is incumbent upon us to transplant the values inherent in the Torah into our mundane, everyday existence despite the constant change taking place around us. Second, we must be secure in our dedication to the values of the Torah, so that we can be assured that these values will maintain their fundamental meaning even when facing the challenge of foreign lifestyles and cultures. The Zohar calls the "taryag mitzvot" (613 commandments of the Torah) the "taryag eitim," which means "commandments of counsel and advice." According to this perspective, one must view the entire gamut of mitzvot as a continuous process of counsellng one on how to contend with a world that often places itself in direct opposition to the values of Judaism. As the Zohar subtly tells us, the commandments are there to help man confront a world that is antagonistic to the ideals of righteousness, charity, justice, mercy, humility and fear of God. The qualities we call "derekh Hashem" "the path of God" - seem to change in meaning from era to era, place to place, day to day, hour to hour, in a world ignorant of Torah. Different situations and changing times give these values new forms and meaning. The problem is not insuring that these mitzvot, these commandments of counsel and advice, remain effective in all times and places. The Torah has proven again and again its own worth and eternal wisdom. Rather, the problem is our ability to safeguard our people, and protect them from all the pitfalls that confront them in their dealings with the modern world and its confusing range of ideals and values. Perhaps we can single out two specific commandments to illustrate the problems that face us in the modern world. The first is the mitzva of "machatzit ha-shekel" - the donation of half a shekel to the Temple every year, and the second is "Tu Bi-Shevat," the New Year for plants. The half shekel donated to the Temple pays for the upkeep and running of the Temple; the Halakha tells us that a korban tzibbur (congregational sacrifice) offered at the Temple must be brought in the name of the entire people of Israel. Each individual has a part in the congregational sacrifice, because these sacrifices are paid for with the funds collected in the donation of the half shekel. On the other hand, another halakha tells us that if there is any money left over from the previous year, these funds are not allowed to be used for the purchase of sacrifices during the current year. Sacrifices must be purchased and offered only during their allotted time (see Rambam, Hilkhot Shekalim 4:10- 12). A similar idea is expressed within the laws that pertain to Tu Bi-Shevat. The central theme of this holiday is the seperation of the teruma and ma'aser (the portions set aside for the Priest and Levite) from the current crop. Here again the halakha informs us that we cannot use fruit from the previous year in the determination of what must be set aside for teruma and ma'aser. Tu Bi-Shevat, the New Year for Trees, marks the cutting-off point, and from that point the farmer may determine his yearly crop yield (see Rambam, Hilkhot Teruma 5:11; Hilkhot Ma'aser 1:70; Mishna Rosh HaShana 1:1). Both commandments revolve around the central thesis that one can offer or count only those objects that belong to the present the here and now - as part of the mitzva. Use of old funds or fruits from a previous year is not considered to be a fulfillment of the mitzva. These commandments teach us the necessity of constant awareness of the time and place in which we function. Yet we are also commanded to serve God without deviating in any way from the Torah which He has given us. How can we achieve such an ideal state? How can one remain aware of what goes on around him, living in the present, without becoming receptive to negative influences exerted upon him daily? Is it at all possible for the individual to remain within the four walls of the Torah, while functioning in a world alien to those very precepts that the Torah espouses? Throughout the exile people have grappled with this very problem. It would seem that we have found three methods which we may apply in order to preserve our identities as Jews. Each method met with a varying degree of success and failure, yet the first two seem to have only succeeded for the unique individuals within our midst. The first method is for one to sever himself completely and totally from the world around him, rejecting out of hand anything that the outside world might - be it a positive or negative influence. This method considers any idea or value that has emerged in an alien atmosphere to present a direct challenge to the Torah, and is thus invalid. There is no doubt that many of those who adopt such a method in dealing with the outside world can point to some success within a short period of time. Yet in the long run this method can prove very detrimental to those who live by such rules. For it tends not only to cut people off from the outside world, but from the rest of the Jewish people as well. By its nature, it causes friction and leaves those who live by such a method to detest anyone who does not come into their fold. The second method is more radical and enjoys less success than the first. While acknowledging the existence of the world around him, and at times even displaying understanding for it, the individual chooses to wage an all-out war on those ideals and values that are not in congruence with the Torah. This route envelops the individual in total seclusion, yet also leaves him no rest and pits him against impossible odds. It forces him to live with constant friction and enmity, conducting what he believes to be a holy war to protect the Torah. It is a route that is doomed to failure, if only because a human being cannot function within a 8 constant environment of hostility and antagonism. The third course upon which one might embark is neither an effort at total seclusion nor an insistence upon waging war on society. It is one that might be summed up in the term "selective confrontation." There are many reasons for choosing such a course of action. It will help to avoid (to some extent) those great problems of faith that have plagued our people throughout the last century. It will, as well, offer a practicable alternative in which the masses of Jews will feel a desire and need to return to a Jewish way of life, abandoning the foreign ideas and values which have been inplanted in its stead. Selective confrontation allows one to remain aware of the world that functions outside of Judaism, and then to weigh those values against those which Judaism has to offer. In the Kabbalistic phrase, it is the process of "ha'alat ha-nitzozot," the raising of the sparks of holiness inherent in all people. The process itself is one that serves to differentiate between those values which can add to the richness of a Jewish life, and those values which remain diametricelly opposed to Judaism. It is a sifting of ideas, while synthesizing and accepting only those virtues and ideals which remain in congruence with what the Torah and Halakha demand of the Jew. This refining process guarantees that the negative aspects cannot and will not enter and possibly tarnish or defile the Law. One can then clothe and incorporate the good within an amicable atmosphere willing to accept it. Maimonides, in his "Epsitle to Yemen," expressed his opinion regarding the imbuing of foreign ideas and values into Judaism. He explains that the verse, "No weapon that is formed against thee shall prosper; and every tongue that shall rise against thee in judgment thou shalt condemn" (Yishayahu 54:17), is referring to the methods which the gentile world applies in its battle with Judaism. The first method is the use of physical force, in oppression and war. The second method is more metaphysical, where the art of dialectical argument, propaganda and debate is used to wield influence upon the Jewish people. The prophet informs us that God has promised that neither of these methods will succeed. As Isaiah continues in the same verse, "This is the heritage of the servants of the Lord and the recompense of their righteousness appointed by Me, says the Lord." I am well aware of the dangers of embarking upon such a path specifically because it forces upon the individual a terrible obligation, one which causes constant confrontation and selection between cultures and values. Yet it will surely help alleviate many of the dangerous problems and enigmas of faith with which our people have found themselves challenged, especially during the last century. [To be continued next week.] (This speech was delivered at the Dinner for Yeshivat Har Etzion in New York, in Kislev 5741 [1980].) 8 BAR ILAN UNIVERSITY A project of Bar-Ilan University's Faculty of Jewish Studies, Paul and Helene hulman Basic Jewish Studies Center, and the Office of the Campus Rabbi. Sponsored by Dr. Ruth Borchard of the Shoresh Charitable Fund (SCF). Published with assistance of the President's Fund for Torah and Science.Web Site: http://www.biu.ac.il/JH/Parasha ON ENTERING THE SYNAGOGUE WITH A KNIFE OR WEAPON Prof. Yaakov Spiegel Department of Talmud On the basis of the verse at the conclusion of this week's reading, "When Phinehas, son of Eleazar son of Aaron the priest, saw this, he left the assembly and, taking a spear in his hand, ..." (Numbers 25:7) the Sages arrived at the following interpretation (Sanhedrin 82a): "Hence we conclude that one is not to enter the Temple carrying arms." According to Rashi, this is deduced as follows: the word assembly ('eda) means Sanhedrin, for the High Court was sitting and deliberating the capital case of those who had gone over to Baal Peor. The Rabbis considered that Scripture was alluding to the Sanhedrin, which convened in the Temple area, and Phinehas therefore was in the Temple during this event. Since Scripture says of Phinehas that he "left ... and took ..." it follows, according to Rashi, that prior to that time Phinehas did not have a spear in is hands and that he had to take specific action in order to get the spear in his hands. Thus we conclude that one is not to enter a court - or a Beit Midrash - carrying a weapon. This rule was applied here to a Beit Midrash. Tractate Megillah (27a) indicates that we follow the view that the sanctity of a Beit Midrash is stricter than that of a synagogue. Maimonides ruled (Tefillah 11.24) as follows: "A synagogue may be turned into a Beit Midrash, but a Beit Midrash may not be turned into a synagogue, since the sanctity of a Beit Midrash exceeds that of a synagogue, and one may increase sanctity but not decrease it. The Tur and the Shulhan Arukh ruled likewise (Orah Hayyim 153.1). Thus there were grounds for saying that proscription against entering with weapons applies only when entering a Beit Midrash, whose level of sanctity is greater; but when entering a synagogue, one could argue, carrying weapons is permissible. The posekim, however, ruled that bringing weapons into a synagogue is also forbidden, as we shall see below. Rabbi Joseph Caro wrote in Beit Yosef (Orah Hayyim 151, Machon Yerushalayim ed., p. 80) as follows: It is written in Orhot Hayyim (Hilkhot Beit ha-Knesset 7) in the name of Rabbi Meir of Rothenburg (Tashbetz Katan[1] 202), that one may not enter the synagogue with a long knife, since prayer lengthens a person's days and a knife shortens them; and entering with one's pouch is also forbidden, as it is said (Mishna Berakhot 54a), one may not enter the Temple Mount with a money-belt. The gloss on this by Rabbi Peretz (Tashbetz, loc. sit.) says that 'nevertheless one should not be concerned except with the head being uncovered' (end quote). And Masekhet Soferim (14.15) says that 'a person with a bare head is not to mention the name of G-d' (end quote). Thus, in the opinion of Rabbi Meir of Rothenburg, a great Ashkenazi rabbi of the 13th century, one may not enter a synagogue with a knife. His opinion, apparently, was based on the Sages' homily in the Mekhilta (end of Parashat Jethro), [2] which is also cited by Rashi: "And if you make for Me an altar of stones, do not build it of hewn stones; for by wielding your tool [lit. "sword"] upon them you have profaned them" (Ex. 20:22). Hence Rabbi Simeon b. Eleazar used to say that the altar was created to prolong a person's life, and iron was created to shorten a person's life; one may not wield that which shortens [life] upon that which prolongs [it]. Rabbi Rothenburg's remarks are founded on the same idea. For it says in the Talmud that prayer prolongs life,[3] and that being so, it is unfitting for something which shortens [life] to be wielded upon that which prolongs it. We see from the above that also a synagogue may not be entered when carrying a knife. Rabbi Rothenburg may not have wanted to rely on Tractate Sanhedrin 82a for this prohibition, since that passage refers to a Beit Midrash; hence he wished to prove that also in a synagogue, which is of lesser sanctity, this proscription applies.[4] Now let us examine in greater detail the gloss by Rabbi Peretz, mentioned above by R. Joseph Caro. Rabbi Peretz of Corbeil, among the last of the Tosafists, also wrote glosses on Tashbetz, in which he expressed his opinion on certain subjects. Here, too, as we have said, he wrote: "Nevertheless one should not be concerned except with the head being uncovered." Below we shall see how later rabbis understood his gloss. The Shulhan Arukh 151.6 says: One may enter a synagogue with one's staff, one's pouch, and one's money-belt; some forbid entering with a long knife or with an uncovered head. In Eliah Rabbah Rabbi Eliah Shapira wrote: This is a strange opinion, for nothing is mentioned in O.H. (Orhot Hayyim, which is the source that Beit Yosef cited for this halakhah) about the head being uncovered. I looked in Kolbo (Venice, 1547), p. 10 (sect. 17), who cited [O.H.] as follows: 'nevertheless, one is not to be concerned unless it is uncovered,' end quote. Similarly [is the quote] in Tashbetz 202. Thus, in my opinion, clearly he was speaking about a knife or money-belt actually being exposed, but if they are concealed, one may enter with them; and he was not writing at all about being bare headed. The views of the authors of Shulhan Arukh, the Levush, and the aharonim (later rabbinic authorities) are puzzling. Rabbi Eliah was asking about the ruling of the Shulhan Arukh which is based, of course, on the glosses of Rabbi Peretz. In his opinion, the words of Rabbi Peretz had been misunderstood. After all, Rabbi Peretz was referring to things written by Rabbi Meir of Rothenburg, which are cited in Orhot Hayyim; but Orhot Hayyim makes no mention of the head being bare. Therefore Rabbi Eliah questioned what Rabbi Peretz was commenting about. Rabbi Eliah looked back at the Tashbetz itself and found that Rabbi Peretz is cited differently in this source: "Nevertheless one is not to be concerned unless [it is] uncovered" (without the word "head"); the same wording appears in Kolbo. Now Rabbi Peretz is understandable; Rabbi Meir of Rothenburg forbade entering the synagogue when carrying a knife, without making any qualifications. Rabbi Peretz came along and explained that the prohibition only applies when the knife is exposed. Therefore Rabbi Eliah concluded that the ruling of the Shulhan Arukh, that some people forbid entering the synagogue with a knife, is incorrect and that, moreover, it is surprising that subsequent rabbinic authorities followed his lead. Rabbi Eliah was challenged by the Hida [R. H.Y.D. Azulai] in his work, Birkei Yosef, loc. sit. In brief, he argued that Rabbi Eliah had not had access to Orhot Hayyim, but now that this book had come out in print,[5] we observe that the wording there is the same as that cited in Beit Yosef. One cannot rely on the formulation in Kolbo, as Rabbi Eliah did, since the Kolbo is an abridgement of Orhot Hayyim, and, as we have said, the wording in Orhot Hayyim[6] is the same as that which we have, with the word 'head'; therefore the Kolbo must contain a scribal error. According to R. Hida, one must say that the error is in the Kolbo and not in Orhot Hayyim, for Orhot Hayyim immediately continues with a passage from Masekhet Soferim that deals with going bareheaded; thus we see that the version which read "with head uncovered" is indeed correct.[7] On this basis R. Hida said that R. Peretz meant to rule that one may enter the synagogue with a knife, a pouch, and the like, and only forbade entering the synagogue bareheaded (i.e., without a kippa or a hat). Rabbi Peretz saw fit to emphasize the point about being bare-headed since the approach of Rabbi Meir of Rothenburg, as R. Hida proves, was that entering the synagogue bare-headed was a "mild" prohibition, considered an act of piety (middat hasidut). Therefore Rabbi Peretz saw fit to stress the prohibition here. We can add further that today printed editions are available of Hiddushei Mahari Abohav on the Tur, Orah Hayyim, based on the manuscript.[8] All the words of Orhot Hayyim that were cited by Beit Yosef appear there, in exactly the same formulation. Thus we have additional evidence in support of Rabbi Hida's contention that one should notemend the words of Rabbi Peretz and it appears that the Hida was correct in his understanding of Rabbi Peretz. However, further explanation of Rabbi Peretz' words are to be found in Rabbi Y. M. Epstein's Arukh ha-Shulhan. In section 151.10 he writes as follows: It is not clear what one has to do with the other (i.e., what connection there is between a knife and a bare head); moreover, entering the synagogue bare-headed is forbidden in any case (meaning this proscription was already explained in Shulhan Arukh, loc. sit., sect. 91; that being so, what was the Shulhan Arukh adding here?).[9] Thus we agree with those who say it should be understood as follows: 'with a long knife and head uncovered' (thus, and not "or with a head"); that is to say, when the knife itself is uncovered and not in a pouch, for when it is in a pouch it is permitted (Eliyah 9 Rabba, 110). Therefore it says, accurately, 'with a long knife', since a short one could be hidden under one's garments or in one's pouch.[10] According to Arukh ha-Shulhan there is no need to emend the words of Rabbi Peretz, as Rabbi Eliah had done; rather, one should interpret his words as meaning "if the head is revealed," referring to the knife itself. In other words, only in the event that the knife is exposed,[11] is it forbidden to enter the synagogue. Accordingly, the remark of Rabbi Peretz relates directly to the words of Rabbi Meir of Rothenburg, and hence they are comprehensible, unlike the understanding of Rabbi Eliah. In the opinion of Arukh ha-Shulhan, if we make a slight emendation in the words of the Shulhan Arukh (reading "and [Heb.u-] with head" instead of the text which we have, "or [Heb. o-] with head"), then they too accord with what was said by Rabbi Peretz. It follows from what Arukh ha-Shulhan says that Rabbi Hida's testimony from the wording in Orhot Hayyim does not contradict his suggestion, so one could say that the approach of Arukh ha-Shulhan is similar to that of Eliah Rabbah. Incidentally, it appears that the author of Arukh ha-Shulhan had not seen Rabbi Hida's work and therefore in his remarks did not mention that they resolve the difficulty which Rabbi Hida observed. Nevertheless one difficulty raised by Rabbi Hida appears not to have been resolved by the remarks in Arukh ha-Shulhan. Namely, why does Orhot Hayyim mention immediately after this subject Masekhet Soferim had written regarding mentioning the name of G-d with a bare head? According to Arukh ha-Shulhan this is in no way related to the text that precedes it. We have presented three ways of reading Rabbi Peretz, which actually reflect only two different approaches. According to both of these approaches Rabbi Peretz is more lenient than Rabbi Meir of Rothenburg, but the question is how much so? According to one approach, that of Eliah Rabbah and Arukh ha-Shulhan, Rabbi Peretz forbade entering a synagogue with a knife unless it is concealed. The second approach, that of Rabbi Hida, holds that Rabbi Peretz did not forbid entering a synagogue with a knife. To complete the picture, let us add that also the rabbis of our times have discussed this issue,[12] except that they extended it to include weapons in use today, such as guns and pistols. Naturally they also related to the different ways of reading the remarks of Rabbi Peretz. From what they have written they appear to have taken a stricter interpretation.[13] That is, from the outset one should not enter a synagogue carrying arms; but when one cannot help entering with arms, it is preferable to conceal them. Only when there is no other option may one rely on the words of Rabbi Peretz as understood by Rabbi Hida, that one may enter with no restrictions. [1] Written by R. Samson b. R. Tzadok, a disciple of R. Meir of Rothenburg, who recorded some of his rabbi’s teachings in this work. Katan is added to the title to distinguish this work from the responsa of Rabbi Simeon b. R. Tzemah, a 14thcentury rabbi from North Africa, which is also entitled Tashbetz. [2] This is the source noted by Rabbi Ovadiah Yosef, Resp. Yehaveh Da'at, Part 5, sect. 18. [3] The reference is apparently to Berakhot 54b: "Rabbi Judah said three things, [when done at length] prolong a person's days and years: lengthy prayer, ..." Also cf. Dikdukei Soferim, loc. sit. [4] This is mentioned by R. E. Waldenberg, Resp. Tzitz Eliezer, Part 10, sect. 18; R. A. Yofe Schlesinger, Resp. Be'er Sarim, 1978, Part 2, sect. 10; R. O. Yosef, Yehaveh Da'at, Part 5, sect. 18. [5] The book was first printed in Florence in 1750, while Rabbi Eliah passed away in 1712. Therefore there is no room for R. Mordechai Karmi's wonder, as expressed in Maamar Mordechai, sect. 151.2, how it happened that Rabbi Eliah had not seen what was written in Orhot Hayyim. [6] This has been discussed at length by the rabbis, but this is not the place to go into details. [7] Rabbi Y. Z. Kahana, Teshuvot Posekim u-Minhagim la-Maharam me-Rothenburg, Jerusalem 1957, Part 1, p. 150, par. 65, remarked on the formulation in the printed edition of Orhot Hayyim, which supports Beit Yosef, and did not note that R. Hida had already observed this. (Incidentally, he compared the version in Orhot Hayyim with the Kolbo, which, as we said, is not to be done.) [8] R. Hosea Rabinowitz ed., Jerusalem, 1994. [9] R. Hida had already responded to this point in his comments; see loc. sit. [10] It is remarkable that in Torah Temimah, loc. sit., his son, Rabbi B. Epstein, himself wrote almost the exact same thing in the very same words (see the next note), but he did not mention what his father had said. We have previously observed that this was his tendency regarding other books (see my remarks in the Parashat Hashavua of Parshat Bo, 1999), and here we see this also with respect to his father's teachings. [11] He interprets the "head of the knife" as the "knife itself", apparently meaning the blade; one should investigate whether this was indeed what he had in mind. Nevertheless, it should be noted that we have not found such a phrase used to refer to the blade of a knife, so this interpretation seems to us far-fetched. Note that the author of Torah Temimah wrote in his glosses as follows: "If the head of the knife is revealed", and by this emendation one could say that he meant even if the head of the knife is revealed, i.e., part of the knife is revealed although most of it is concealed, the knife is still considered revealed and may not be taken into the synagogue. [12] R. Waldenberg, Resp. Tzitz Eliezer, Part 10, sect. 18; R. E. Yafe Schlesinger, Resp. Be'er Sarim, 1978, Part 2, sect. 10; R. O. Yosef, Yehaveh Da'at, Part 5, sect. 18. The question is also discussed in several books dealing with rulings concerning the army and war, such as Hilkhot Tzava by R. Zekhariah ben Shlomo, Yeshivat Sha'alavim, 1988, p. 75, and others. [13] One of the reasons for this is that their rulings are not based solely on the words of R. Peretz, but also cite other posekim on this issue, who agreed that if the knife is covered it is not prohibited, independently of anything that was said in Eliah Rabbah. They derived this from the stress on a "long knife"; hence it follows that a short knife which can be covered may be brought into the synagogue. י"א 9- AISH HATORA (C) 1999 Aish HaTorah International - All rights reserved. Email: [email protected] Home Page: http://www.aish.edu MI-ORAY-HA-AISH (Rabbi Ari Kahn) email: [email protected] or [email protected] URL:. http://www.jewishsoftware.com/kahn/index.html THE EVIL EYE As the children of Israel are encamped in the plains of Moav, danger looms from outside the camp. A plot is in formation designed to mortally harm them. The assault is a strange one -- the conspirators will use spiritual powers to attack the Jews. Balak, the king of Moab who is credited with being a significant diviner in his own right, seeks the assistance of Bil'am, a powerful seer. Readers of the text have a difficult time understanding how Bil'am possessed such destructive power in the first place. It seems peculiar that God should have to get involved in order to frustrate this nefarious plan and not allow the curse to be uttered. The traditional explanation is that Bil'am had an "evil eye" 1 and therefore was theoretically able to attack the Jews. This idea may be seen in the verses in the numerous references to "eyes" and "sight": He sent messengers, therefore, to Bil'am, the son of Beor, to Pethor, which is by the river of the land of the sons of his people, to call him, saying. "Behold, there is a people come out from Egypt; behold, they cover the eye 2 of the earth, and they are dwelling opposite me. Come now therefore, I pray you, curse this people for me; for they are too mighty for me; perhaps I shall prevail, that we may defeat them, and that I may drive them out of the land; for I know that he whom you bless is blessed, and he whom you curse is cursed." (Numbers 22:5-6; see also Numbers 22:10-11,31) And when Bil'am saw that it pleased the Lord to bless Israel, he went not, as at other times, to seek for enchantments, but he set his face toward the wilderness. And Bil'am lifted up his eyes, and he saw Israel abiding in his tents according to their tribes; and the spirit of God came upon him. And he took up his discourse, and said, "The speech of Bil'am, the son of Beor; the speech of a man whose eyes are open. The speech of him who heard the words of God, who saw the vision of the Almighty, falling down, but having his eyes open." (Numbers 24:1-4; see also Numbers 24:15-16) The Midrash relates to this quality as characteristic of Bil'am and his teachings: From this you can infer that he possessed three qualities, viz. an evil eye, a haughty spirit, and a greedy soul. How do we know that he had an evil eye? Because it is written, And Bil'am lifted up his eyes, and he saw Israel dwelling tribe by tribe. (Numbers 24:2). (Midrash Rabbah Bamidbar 20:10) THE POWER TO BLESS AND CURSE This destructive quality of Bil'am may explain a separate problem presented by Parshat Balak. If Bil'am senses that his attempts to curse the Jews are being frustrated, then why doesn't he bless Balak and his people? Either cursing the Jews or blessing the Moabites should have the same results: a victory for Moab. This question is predicated on the assumption that Bil'am has the ability to bless and curse with equal competence. This would seem to be the meaning of the verse cited above: For I know that he whom you bless is blessed, and he whom you curse is cursed. (Numbers 22:5,6) The ability to bless is foreign to Bil'am -- it does not seem to be a part of his make up. Perhaps the potential was there but the ability to bless seems to elude him now. There are some men specially fitted for the transmission of blessings, as, for instance, a man of "good eye." There are others, again, who are specially fitted for the transmission of curses, and curses light wherever they cast their eyes. Such was Bil'am, who was the fitting instrument of evil and not of good, and even when he blessed his blessing was not confirmed, but all his curses were confirmed, because he had an evil eye. (Zohar, Leviticus 63b) While the subject of "evil eyes" and similar magical phenomenon is vast and beyond the scope of this work, perhaps we can try to penetrate at least a partial understanding of the topic.3 Rabbi Soloveitchik once suggested that there is a difference between a evil eye which is used in some sources to describe a trait, and the destructive "evil eye" which is found in other sources. The latter may be better described as an outlook more than a trait. One type is internally centered, while the other is aimed at the outside toward others. GOOD EYE VS. EVIL EYE The Mishna in Avot recalls a conversation between Rav Yochanan ben Zakkai and his prized disciples. He asks them to discern a major trait to which a person should cling: He [Rabbi Yochanan Ben Zakkai] said unto them: "Go forth and observe which is the good way unto which a man should cleave?" Rabbi Eliezer said, "A good eye." ... He [further] said unto them: "Go forth and observe which is the evil way from which a man should remove himself far?" Rabbi Eliezer said, "An evil eye." (Avot 2:9.) Rabbenu Yona in his comments to the Mishna identifies the "good eye" or the "evil eye" in this context as a trait. To feel miserly is a manifestation of this negative trait. To be generous is a manifestation of the positive "good eye." Perhaps the paradigmatic example of the "good eye" would be Abraham. His kindness was ingrained to the core of his being and was not merely an outer directed behavior, lacking inner spiritual consistency. In a later Mishna in Avot we are told a "good eye" is prominently included in the description of traits of "students of Abraham." What is interesting in this context, is how Abraham's students' traits are contrasted with the traits of disciples of Bil'am. Whoever possesses these three things, he is of the disciples of Abraham, our father; and [whoever possesses] three other things, he is of the disciples of Bil'am, the wicked. The disciples of Abraham, our father, [possess] a good eye, an humble spirit and a lowly soul. The disciples of Bil'am, the wicked, [possess] an evil eye, a haughty spirit and an over-ambitious soul. (Avot 5:19) The meaning of "evil eye" is not immediately clear in this context. Is it the destructive evil eye, or is it the trait which would serve as a better counter balance to the "good eye" of Abraham and disciples? Because of the mention of Bil'am one would be tempted to associate the evil eye with Bilaam's destructive power. However, the text is surely easier to understand where the two types of disciples are contrasted. Furthermore, all the items listed in this Mishna sound like traits. Therefore, we may conclude that Bil'am possessed both types of evil eye, the negative personality trait in addition to the destructive outlook. The classical "evil eye" which mesmerizes and haunts alike, and causes people to automatically say bli ein hara, is somewhat more elusive. THE POWER OF JOSEPH We are told that there are people who were impervious to its nefarious power, namely Joseph and his children or "students." 4 Joseph is a fruitful vine, a fruitful vine above the eye (Genesis 44:22). This teaches that the evil eye has no power over them. (Midrash Rabbah - Genesis 97) 5 Rabbi Yochanan was accustomed of sitting at the gates of the bathing place. He said: "When the daughters of Israel come up from bathing they look at me. and they have children as handsome as I am." Said the rabbis to him: "Is not the Master afraid of the evil eye?" He replied: "I come from the seed of Joseph, over whom the evil eye has no power, as it is written, Joseph is a fruitful vine, a fruitful vine above the eye." Rabbi Judah son of Rabbi Hanina derived it from this text: And let them multiply like fishes in the midst of the earth. Just as the fishes [dagim] in the sea are covered by water and the evil eye has no power over them, so the evil eye has no power over 1 0 the seed of Joseph. Or, if you prefer I can say: "The evil eye has no power over the eye which refused to feed itself on what did not belong to it." 6 (Berachot 20a, Baba Metzia 84a, Also see Sotah 36b) Rabbi Soloveitchik explained Joseph's invulnerability in the following manner. Certain people live their lives based on the comments and perceptions of others. Joseph knew who he was and had confidence in himself, and did not change according to the whims of others. Joseph was not "swayed by the crowd." Therefore, Joseph was not susceptible to the "evil eye." This is a deeper meaning of the last line in the citation from the Talmud. Joseph did not live based on things which did not belong to him therefore the destructive comments of others had no effect. RABBINIC DREAM THEORY This idea would have a parallel within rabbinic dream theory. On the one hand dreams are seen to have a certain affinity with prophecy. On the other hand dreams can be ignored with no ill effects. However, if a person receives an interpretation for his dream then a power is unleashed. In a word, dreams are in the eye of the beholder. Rabbi Bana'ah: "There were twenty-four interpreters of dreams in Jerusalem. Once I dreamt a dream and I went round to all of them and they all gave different interpretations, and all were fulfilled, thus confirming that which is said: 'All dreams follow the mouth.'" (Brachot 55a) This aspect of dreams is closely associated with prophecy itself. Often the prophets would receive images or visions and not specific words. This is known as receiving prophecy through a prism. 7 Moses was the only prophet to receive exclusively words from God. Therefore, the prophet had a certain amount of leeway in describing, and interpreting his vision. 8 Theoretically, Bil'am would receive his revelations at night, therefore in the morning he would be able to interpret his vision using his own words and create the negativity with his subjective interpretation. Obviously, if this were the case then the results would be devastating. 9 BIL'AM VS. MOSES This understanding allows us to penetrate the strange statement of the Sages describing the exalted status of Bil'am. The Torah states: And there has not arisen since in Israel a prophet like Moses, whom the Lord knew face to face, Israel. (Deut. 34:10) The rabbis explain: And there has not arisen a prophet since in Israel (Deut. 34:10): "In Israel" there had not arisen one like him, but there had arisen one like him among the nations of the world. This was in order that the nations of the world might have no excuse for saying: "Had we possessed a prophet like Moses we should have worshipped the Holy One, blessed be He." What prophet had they that was like Moses? Bil'am the son of Beor. There was a difference, however, between the prophecy of Moses and that of Bil'am. There were three features possessed by the prophecy of Moses which were absent from that of Bil'am: When He [God] spoke with Moses the latter stood on his feet; as it says, But as for you, stand you here by Me, and I will speak unto you, etc. (Deut. 5:28). With Bil'am, however, He only spoke while the latter lay prone on the ground; as it says, Fallen down, and his eyes are opened (Numbers 24:4). With Moses He spoke mouth to mouth; as it says, With him do I speak mouth to mouth (ib. 12:8), while of Bil'am it says, The saying of him who heareth the words of God (ib. 24:4), which teaches that He did not speak with him mouth to mouth. With Moses He spoke face to face, as it says, And the Lord spoke unto Moses face to face (Exodus 33:11), but with Bil'am He spoke only in parables; as is confirmed by the quotation, And he took up his parable, and said, etc. (Numbers 23:7). (Midrash Rabbah - Numbers 14:20) Of all prophets only Bil'am is compared favorably to Moses in terms of the quality of his prophecy. Though the Midrash takes pains to differentiate between the two, the very suggestion of a comparison seems obscene. However because of Bil'am's misanthropic personality, once it was established that he must have the ability to prophesize, it was decreed that he must receive specific words - in order that he have no leeway in terms of interpretation. While other prophets received images and visions, their pure souls produced positive true approximations of the Divine will. The prophetic evil Bil'am could not be given this ability - especially with his "evil eye." He received direct words from God, not because he was on a higher level than all the other Jewish prophets, quite the opposite, because he was on a far lower level. 10 The Zohar stresses the immense difference between the spiritual strata enjoyed by Moses, and the lowly Bil'am: Said Rabbi Yehuda: "As Moses excelled all prophets in Israel in respect of the superior, holy prophecy, so Bil'am excelled all other pagan prophets and soothsayers in respect of the inferior, unholy prophecy. In any case Moses was above, Bil'am below, and there were numerous stages between them." (Zohar, Exodus Page 22a) Bil'am would only be able to prophesize when prostrated. The Zohar understands this gesture, as if he were reaching down to grab something from the nether world, or at least something which was once a part of a higher world. In this context the ,Zohar proceeds and explains the source of Bil'am's power: What is man that You are mindful of him, and the son of man that You visit him? (Psalms 8:5). Rav Shimon said: "[This] was uttered by those in charge of the world at the time when God expressed His intention of creating man. He called together various companies of heavenly angels and stationed them before Him. He said to them: 'I desire to create man.' They exclaimed, 1 1 'Man abides not in honor, etc. (Psalms 49:13).' God thereupon put forth His finger and burnt them. He then set other groups before Him, and said: 'I desire to create man.' They exclaimed, 'What is man that You should remember him? What is the character of this man?' they asked. He replied: 'Man will be in Our image, and his wisdom will be superior to yours.' "When He had created man and he (man) sinned and obtained a pardon, Uzza and Azael approached Him and said: 'We can plead justification against You, since the man whom You made has sinned against You.' He said to them: 'Had you been with them you would have sinned equally.' And He cast them down from their high estate in heaven ... "How are we to explain Bil'am's saying of himself, 'Falling and with eyes open'? For if this was merely an empty boast, how comes a false statement in the Torah? And if it is true, how could that sinner attain to a degree higher than that of all the true prophets, especially as the holiness from above rests only on a spot qualified to receive it? The fact is, however, that after God cast Uzza and Azael down from their holy place, they went astray after the womenfolk and seduced the world also. It may seem strange that being angels they were able to abide upon the earth. " ... Now when God saw that these fallen angels were seducing the world, He bound them in chains of iron to a mountain of darkness. Uzza He bound at the bottom of the mountain and covered his face with darkness because he struggled and resisted, but Azael, who did not resist, He set by the side of the mountain where a little light penetrated. Men who know where they are located seek them out, and they teach them enchantments and sorceries and divinations. These mountains of darkness are called the 'mountains of the East,' and therefore Bil'am said: 'From Aram hath Balak brought me, from the mountains of the East,' because they both learnt their sorceries there. "Now Uzza and Azael used to tell those men who came to them some of the notable things which they knew in former times when they were on high, and to speak about the holy world in which they used to be. Hence Bil'am said of himself: 'who hears the words of God' not 'the voice of God,' but those things which he was told by those who had been in the assembly of the Holy King." He went on: "And knows the knowledge of the Most High", meaning that he [Bil'am] knew the hour when punishment impended over the world and could determine it with his enchantments. "Who sees the vision of the Almighty: this vision consisted of the 'fallen and the open of eyes,' that is Uzza, who is called 'fallen' because he was placed in the darkest depth, since after falling from heaven he fell a second time, and Azael, who is called 'open of eye' because he was not enveloped in complete darkness. Bil'am called both of them 'the vision of the Almighty.' At that time he was the only man left in the world who associated with them, and every day he used to be shut up in those mountains with them." (Zohar, Numbers, Page 208b) FALLEN ANGELS The Zohar understands that the knowledge which Bil'am possessed came from heaven via "fallen angels" 11 who knew the goings on in heaven. The idea of Bil'am having knowledge of heaven is also mentioned in the Talmud: A God that has indignation every day. And how long does this indignation last? One moment ... And no creature has ever been able to fix precisely this moment except the wicked Bil'am, of whom it is written: He knows the knowledge of the Most High. Now, he did not even know the mind of his animal; how then could he know the mind of the Most High? The meaning is, therefore, only that he knew how to fix precisely this moment in which the Holy One, blessed be He, is angry... Rabbi Eleazar says: "The Holy One, blessed be He, said to Israel: 'See now, how many righteous acts I performed for you in not being angry in the days of the wicked Bil'am. For had I been angry, not one remnant would have been left of the enemies of Israel.' And this too is the meaning of what Bil'am said to Balak: How shall I curse, whom God has not cursed? And how shall I execrate, whom the Lord has not execrated? (Berachot 7b) In the course of the normal dealing with the world God would allow but a moment of anger. This idea seems obscure. One explanation which I have heard which is attributed to the Hassidic dynasty of Belz, explains this phenomenon. Chesed, "kindness," is a wonderful attribute. But even kindness must have its limits. We know that chesed taken to an extreme is associated with incest, and illicit sexual relations: And if a man shall take his sister, his father's daughter, or his mother's daughter, and see her nakedness, and she see his nakedness; it is a chesed. And they shall be cut off in the sight of their people. He has uncovered his sister's nakedness; he shall bear his iniquity. (Leviticus 20:17; see Rashi) Chesed is wonderful, but too much chesed can be destructive. On a normal basis God holds back one moment a day from chesed, and allows strictness in order to help man avoid this spiritual pitfall. However, on that day while Balak and Bil'am were plotting and trying to harm the Jews there was not even a moment of judgement - only chesed. SEDUCTION AND CHESED Now we can understand the end of Parshat Balak. After Bil'am and Balak give up on cursing the Jews we find that the daughters of Moab have made their way to the camp of the Israelites. And Israel stayed in Shittim, and the people began to commit harlotry with the daughters of Moab. And they called the people to the sacrifices of their gods; and the people ate, and bowed down to their gods. And Israel attached himself to Baal-Peor; and the anger of the Lord was kindled against Israel. (Numbers 25:13) Too much chesed allowed the appearance of illicit relations, perhaps Bil'am learned this idea from his erstwhile heavenly mentors. They too had turned God's gift for chesed and compassion into depraved relations on earth. The Jews -- who were truly students of Abraham, and therefore had a "good eye" -- allowed these wayward women into their camp. In this instance a moment of strictness would have been in order. Bil'am saw that the Jewish camp is based on a "good eye" and the spiritual barometer pointed to a forecast of excessive chesed. Bil'am used the Jew's gifts and good traits against them. In this instance the community should have shown restraint, and understood, that as God has a moment of strictness so must the Jewish community. 12 How ironic - while the "evil eye" did not harm them, the "good eye" did. NOTES 1. 2. See Rashi 24:2 The Hebrew here is "eye" some English translations prefer the term "face of the Earth". However, the Midrash clearly renders the word "eye." (Midrash Rabbah Numbers 20:7 3. Zohar, Genesis, Page 68b 4. It is interesting, that when he was younger Joseph was susceptible to the Evil Eye: Midrash Rabbah - Genesis 89:10 5. Zohar 2:225a Observe, likewise, that no evil eye had any power over the seed of Joseph 6. The Zohar has a different explanation for Joseph's imperviousness to the "evil eye": Zohar, Numbers, Page 202b 7. See Zohar Genesis, Page 183a 8. Chagiga 13b 9. Significantly rejecting a bad dream is directly related to God's frustration of Bil'am and his visions. (Berachot 55b 10. This idea may be found in the Or Gidalya, see the discussion there (Parshat Balak) and the teachings taught in the name of Rav Diskin. 11. See Genesis 6:4 in reference to the Nifilim, and the comments of the Targum Yonatan 12. Perhaps this is the connection between the death of the 24,000 as a result of the plague (25:9) for displaying too much chesed, and the death of the 24,000 students of Rabbi Akiva (Yevamot 62b) who died because they did not perform enough chesed MAYANOT (by Rabbi Noson Weisz) THE LOOKING-GLASS WAR At first glance, Parshat Balak seems difficult to relate to from the perspective of the modern person. A frightened, superstitious, primitive monarch, Balak, hires the services of an evil wizard to place a curse on the head of his enemy, the Jewish people. The wizard, Bilam, following extensive negotiations with God over permission to take on the job, and with Balak over the terms of his employment, finally accepts the commission and sets out on the road to deliver his curse. On his way he has a seemingly pointless encounter with a talking donkey and is admonished by an angel who seems to have been left out of the loop by God and does not know Bilam has God's permission. In the end Bilam's mission is foiled and he ends up blessing the Jews instead of cursing them. The entire story seems straight out of "Grimm's Fairy Tales." But on closer examination, not only does the story make sense in its own context, we also seem to be mirroring the current situation in modern day Israel. THE BIBLICAL CONTEXT First the Biblical context: Lacking the military prowess to contend successfully against the Jewish might -- demonstrated by the victories over the mighty Amorite armies of Sichon and Og - Balak, King of Moab, was desperately seeking an equalizer. His intelligence service informed him that the secret of Israeli success was primarily spiritual. It was the prospect of confrontation with Israel's spiritual might that his people found so hopelessly demoralizing. They were willing to face the Israeli army, which was untrained and unprofessional and merely a single generation away from 210 years of Egyptian slavery, but it seemed futile to contend with the God of Israel. Balak reasoned that against a spiritual power you need your own spiritual weapon. Bilam was a world-famous wizard. His presence in Balak's camp was a sure-fire morale booster. Bolstered by the spiritual power of their own link to God, the Moabites would be emboldened to face the enemy physically. Balak could only profit by hiring Bilam whether his curses proved effective or not. Rabbi Samson Raphael Hirsh explains that this was the reason Balak sent the low-level delegation that God instructed Bilam to dismiss the first time around. In modern terms he sent well-known journalists instead of public officials. He wanted the maximum public exposure of the mission to Bilam, because he needed the mileage of a powerful morale booster more than he needed the actual spiritual powers of Bilam concerning which he was skeptical. But more than anything he required Bilam's services because he needed to discredit the Jews in the eyes of his people. He reasoned that the Jews must indeed be morally superior people to have God so firmly on their side. The moral superiority of the Jews was also accompanied by a perception that the right was also on their side. The power of Bilam was in his "evil eye." His curses came to rest where his evil eye was able to uncover some moral lapse in the character of his victims. You cannot curse anyone using God's spiritual power unless that person has become vulnerable through his own evil deeds, to some sort of misfortune. Engaging Bilam to curse the Jews was equivalent to hiring a master psychologist who is able to highlight the moral flaws of your enemy. A judicious campaign of public exposure of the defects which discredit the enemy can demonize him in the eyes of others to such an extent that it becomes just for everyone to oppose him. The failure of Bilam's mission was worth far more than a military victory. The fact that he could uncover no blemish on the face of the Jewish national character on which a curse could rest meant that even the penetrating power of Bilam's evil eye was unable to discover any serious moral defect in the Jewish people. Even the great Bilam could not weaken the justice of the Jewish cause. To appreciate the immense importance of this we shall now switch our focus to modern day Israel. MODERN DAY ISRAEL Post Holocaust Jewish history closely parallels the Biblical account of the conquest of Israel that began with the war against Sichon and Og. In both eras the Jewish people was the only entity in the family of nations who had yet to win its homeland through the conquest of native peoples. Just as it did back in Biblical times, this type of conquest necessarily required a great deal of widely acknowledged moral superiority to be successful. While many nations both then and now had originally won their countries through conquest, in case of other nations this conquest took place long ago and far away. Unlike the fresh occupation of foreign soil by the Jewish people, in their case the post conquest realities were in place for many centuries. They did not have the problem of having to respond to the claims of multitudes of dispossessed addressing themselves to the international tribunal of nations and protesting the injustice of being ousted from their ancestral lands. Wherever conquest of native peoples is attempted today, as in the Balkans for example, conquering nations do not have an easy time of it. The need to justify conquest is not a uniquely Jewish problem, even if it is aggravated for Jews by the force of antiSemitism. The successful conquest of Israel can never be accomplished without Divine intervention. The ultimate reason for Jews being allowed to settle in the Holy Land is exactly the same as it was back in Biblical times -- God's oath to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob to award this land to their descendants. Our topic is the way in which this conquest plays out on the stage of the actual world. The conquest is miraculous by definition, but even back then, as the story of Bilam illustrates, and especially in the world of today, the moral perception of Israel by the nations is a major factor in the actualization of the miracle. In terms of such moral considerations, the successful reconquest of Israel by the Jewish people in modern times was based on two factors: The first was the mass slaughter of Jews in the Holocaust and the long history of virulent world-wide anti-Semitism and persecution which preceded it. Against the background of the freshly concluded Holocaust, the need to allow a safe haven for the victims of the horrendous Nazi genocide was temporarily self-evident to most thinking human beings, and therefore Jewish re-settlement of the land of Israel was accepted as morally correct by the civilized nations of the world. The second was the David and Goliath phenomenon. The ability to overcome vastly superior forces and numbers with gallantry, determination and heroic self-sacrifice is a sure mark of moral merit in the eyes of the world. Even the undiscriminating mass murder of women and children such as that carried out by Ho Chi Minh was excused based on this heroism factor and allowed the Vietnamese Communist to gain moral legitimacy for his cause. But the Holocaust is now almost two generations behind us. With the help of God the Jewish people have recovered. The David and Goliath factor is no longer applicable to a country that is perceived as the local superpower. The Palestinians are busily seeking out the Achilles heel of Israel's moral superiority. Frustration leads to aggression. If Israel can be provoked into using the full power of its military might against the relatively unarmed and seemingly defenseless Palestinians it will lose its moral edge entirely, and the credibility of its conquest will vanish along with the appearance of its flaws. In modern day terms the Palestinians have stepped into Bilam's shoes and are looking to reduce Israel's military might through the power of the curse of negative public opinion. LOOKING FOR FLAWS Let us now step back again into the Bilam story. Why couldn't Bilam find any flaws? Was the Exodus generation of the Jewish people indeed so unblemished? We seem to be reading about nothing else than its moral flaws all through the book of Numbers. Why couldn't Bilam locate any? A close examination of the three opportunities that Bilam attempted to curse the Jewish people and the reasons for each of his failures should offer us the insight to answer this question and possibly provide useful guidance in developing a successful approach to our present day problem. ATTEMPT TO CURSE #1 "How can I curse? God has not cursed. How can I anger? The Lord is not angry. For from its origins, I see it rock-like, and from hills do I see it. Behold! It is a nation that will dwell in solitude and not be reckoned among the nations. Who has counted the dust of Jacob, or numbered a quarter of Israel?" (Numbers 23:8-10) Explains the Ohr Hachaim: All people are guilty of transgressions of various sorts during their lifetimes. The fact that we continue on as though nothing had happened is due to an attribute of God called (surprisingly) "supporter of iniquity" one of the thirteen attributes of mercy revealed in the Book of Exodus (34:6-7). Whenever a person commits a sin he assigns part of his life force to the "anti-force." Until the sin is punished or atoned for, the "anti-force" has the right to withdraw a portion of the fresh Divine life force that pours in to the human soul constantly and without cease, the endless stream of life necessary to keep us alive. But to draw on this life force, the "anti-force" must be able to attach itself to the soul of the sinner. It attaches itself to the sinner in two places, the highest point of origin of his soul, and at the lowest point where the soul connects with his lower being. As long as these points are sealed off, the "anti-force" cannot attach itself at all and is therefore incapable of drawing off any of the sinner's life force. 1 2 The sages reveal to us that Bilam's statement -- For from its origins, I see it rock-like -- is a reference to the patriarchs, and From the hills do I see it is a reference to the matriarchs. (See Rashi ibid.) The highest point of origin of the collective Jewish soul is rooted in our three patriarchs and our four matriarchs. Furthermore, the sages also inform us that the dust of Jacob and the quarter of Israel refers to the next generation of Jewish children. (See Rashi.) The lowest point of the collective soul, the point where it enters the nether world, is in the succeeding generation of Jewish children. All individual grownups make mistakes. Sin is an almost inevitable part of human existence given the fact that we have free will. While everyone will have to account for his own failures and shortcomings when he faces the Final Judgment, this does not affect the collective moral merit of the Jewish people as long as two things remain in place: the unshakable commitment to continue the tradition of the patriarchs and matriarchs; the teaching of this commitment to the next generation of Jewish children in its purest form, free of the compromises that the present generation of Jewish adults has seen fit to make in its interaction with the outside world. These two commitments preserve the unique flavor of the Jewish people and keep it a nation that will dwell in solitude and not be reckoned among the nations. It is not any particular generation of Jews that functions as the source of the collective moral force of the Jewish people. It is the unbroken chain of tradition stretching from the patriarchs and ending in the children that is the repository of the Jewish moral force. As long as these two points are inviolate, the "anti-force" has no place in which it can take root. If modern Israel would be clearly perceived by all as the direct continuation of the Jewish nation that originates in Abraham, stood at Sinai and suffered through the vicissitudes of 2,000 years of persecution and exile without ever abandoning its traditions or hope of return to his lost homeland, then the moral claim of the Jewish people to their land would have to be recognized by all. But it is a fact that modern Israel perceives itself as something new and different. Its inhabitants may be descendants of the Jews of exile but they have made a fresh start in the 20th century. In this respect, Israel has more in common with modern nations than with the traditions of the patriarchs and this is precisely what renders it so vulnerable to world criticism. As we are not teaching our children even the barest minimum of the observances and practices that have preserved us through our 2,000-year exile as a distinct people among the nations, it is clear that we no longer associate our present with our past. How can we expect to derive any moral justification for our present behavior from a past that we ourselves no longer acknowledge? Why shouldn't we be judged within the narrow focus of present day events if we were born only yesterday, in the 20th century? ATTEMPT TO CURSE #2 "One does not see iniquity in Jacob, and saw no perversity in Israel. The Lord his God is with him, and the friendship of the King is in him ... For there is no divination in Jacob and no sorcery in Israel. Even now it is said to Jacob and Israel what God has wrought." (Numbers 23:21-23) (Rashi: they are deserving of blessing because they have no magicians or sorcerers among them.) The Hebrew word for witchcraft is keshofim. The Talmud understands this is an acrostic that stands for the idea that witchcraft gives the lie to the decisions of the heavenly court (Talmud, Chulin 7b). You can even manipulate the forces of heaven by emphasizing the evil that is in people, which makes them vulnerable to spiritual attack. As long as the evil in a person remains hidden and unexposed, the court of heaven is generally prepared to be patient and tolerate it. When someone focuses the light of day on concealed evil and places it on public display it often cannot be tolerated even if the aim of exposure is to further a lie. A typical modern-day example is the Palestinian use of children in surprise attacks. In the act of repulsing such attacks the Jewish defenders will often inadvertently injure the exposed children. If this is recorded on video-tape the images make it appear that the defenders were specifically targeting the child victims. If it were crystal clear to everyone that the Jewish defenders, now accused of child murder, are totally incapable of the deed, it would be utterly impossible to credibly pin them with such responsibility even with the aid of the convincing evidence of the images on a video tape. But if somewhere in their souls, because of the immense frustration and anxiety that has built up inside over a long period of exposure to danger, there lurks a dark corner that is willing to contemplate murdering innocent children -- even if this tiny corner would always be restrained in practice -- then it is possible to manipulate the situation. Thus, we see that those who inadvertently killed innocent children can be actually held responsible for infanticide with all the negative consequences that accrue. After all, in some dark part of their souls, they were indeed ready to commit the deed. Once this point is recognized and exposed, the actual facts become a matter of interpretation. Interpretation tends to follow prejudice. The Palestinians are ready to sacrifice their children to portray Jewish soldiers as guilty of infanticide. They know that this isn't an credible accusation. They know that Jewish soldiers would never actually set out to kill little children. But they also know that after being subjected to repeated stoning attacks by these same children over extended periods of time the thought must have crossed their minds. Some dark corner of their souls must surely have felt the desire. This is enough to present the actual deed as being a reflection of the Jewish soldier's soul. Thus, the Jewish soldier is condemned in the eyes of the world as a child killer. Bilam knew that the will of God was not to punish the victims of his curses at the present time. He knew that he was manipulating the Divine will by exposing the flaws of the victims of his curses to the open air, where even a benign and patient God cannot ignore them. He didn't care. He wanted his will to win. He didn't care about God's will. This insistence of imposing one's own will on God constitutes the sin of witchcraft. Jews are free of the evil of witchcraft. They have their own moral flaws but they have no interest in manipulating the Divine will and frustrating the will of the heavenly court. They are willing to wait and be told what God has wrought. As long as this is the national character Jews are invulnerable to this type of manipulation. When we also begin playing this game, and adopt policies that are contrary to what we would follow out of considerations of manipulating world opinion, we become guilty of engaging in witchcraft. A nation that sacrifices the blood of its citizens to manipulate opinions invests in witchcraft and also becomes vulnerable to enemy witchcraft. If we consistently followed the policies that are best for the protection of our own citizenry in a level-headed way, we would be as invulnerable to this type of curse as the Jews were to Bilam's curses in Biblical times. ATTEMPT TO CURSE #3 "How goodly are your tents, O Jacob, your dwelling places, O Israel; stretching out like brooks, like gardens by a river, like aloes planted by God, like cedars by water." (Numbers 25:5-6) (Rashi: this was the final attempt of Bilam to use the power of his evil eye. It was repulsed by the arrangement of Israel's tents.) The tents in the Jewish camp were set up so that no one could see into his neighbor's tent. There was a deliberate attempt to avoid discovering the flaws that people like to keep hidden. The comparison to brooks and gardens by a river etc. emphasizes communal generosity - the "generous eye." When there is water in plenty, no one is interested in seeing whether his neighbor has more or less. There is no jealousy as everyone is blessed with sufficient water and there is a spirit of generosity prevailing in the world. One of the most pernicious myths of the modern world is justified on the basis of "the need of the public to know." Modern research has uncovered things about Kennedy, FDR, Thomas Jefferson, and many other great men of the past that would have totally paralyzed them from doing the things that made them great had they been known at the time. The pernicious practice of sneaking around people's bedrooms has ensured that the people who rise to great office are corrupt or mediocre. They have no other skill than spinning the truth in a way that puts them in a good light and are thus able to survive the merciless scrutiny of people looking into each other's tents. The essence of Bilam's power - "the evil eye" -- is based entirely on exposing the hidden flaw that is kept carefully concealed, as this entire essay has demonstrated. All of us have flaws. We ourselves are ashamed of them. We are generally willing to live up to the public face we present to the world. That is our best side, our public persona, and we are willing to keep our public activities on a par with the face we present to the world. Exposing our secret lives to the light of day has the opposite of its intended effect. Instead of forcing us to adjust our private selves to match the face we present to the world, it allows us to function in public with our flaws exposed since after they are exposed there is little point to making the effort to rise above them. No one will let us do it anyway. The best defense against the evil eye is the generous eye. If the Jewish people today made sure that they could not see into each other tents the way our ancestors did in the desert, we would also be sheltered from the power of anyone's evil eye. It is wrong to blame journalists for the relentless invasion of privacy that is part of our modern world. Journalists only feed us what we ask them to. If we were determined not to see each other's faults they would rapidly cease to attempt to expose them. There is nothing more central to Judaism than the avoidance of lashon hara. God wants us to be blessed, to be immune from the power of anyone's curse. May we be granted the wisdom of following in the footsteps of our ancestors. We are facing the identical problems and only their tried and tested solutions can help us overcome them. FAMILY PARASHA OVERVIEW The ability to speak is a precious gift. Even though our words are invisible, they have the power to save lives, or destroy them. The Torah relates that Balak, the King of Moab, knew this when he sought to hire Bilaam, the famous sorcerer, to attack the Jewish people by cursing them with words. But God foiled the plot by confusing Bilaam's speech so that instead of cursing the Jewish people he ended up blessing them. Even though we're not sorcerers, each of us also has the ability to bring blessing and happiness into the lives of others when we speak kind, uplifting words and refrain from hurting others with putdowns and nasty comments. STORY In our story a boy experiences the power of words. "UPS AND DOWNS" It was a typical spring day and Danny Feld was walking home from school. Danny was a pleasant, likeable boy. Although he was a little short for his age, he tried his best not to let it bother him. As he was walking, he felt something stabbing his foot. "A rock in my shoe," he thought to himself and bent down to shake it out before continuing on his way. At first he didn't even notice the raucous voices and bursts of laughter coming from across the street. But as they grew louder it became obvious that they were being directed at him. 1 3 Danny looked up and saw to his dismay a group of mean-looking boys pointing in his direction and laughing. In the middle of the group stood Greg Jones, or "Mr. Put Down," as he was known in school. Greg seemed to enjoy nothing better than insulting, cursing out, and otherwise putting down anybody who wasn't part of his crowd. Although he didn't actually beat people up, he could be so cruel with his words that sometimes his victims felt he had done just that. And now, it seemed, was Danny's turn to face Greg's wrath. "Hey you runt," Greg snarled at the boy who was still bent down over his untied shoe. "What are you doing? Talking with your friends the ants? They're just about your size, hah hah!" Danny felt the blood rush from his face as he burned with shame. He tried not to show that he was paying any attention to the taunts that were being hurled at him. But inside, he felt terrible. Even though he knew deep down that he was a good person no matter what anybody said, Greg's cruel words still hurt a lot. After a couple of minutes that felt like forever to Danny, Greg and his gang got tired of picking on him and moved on down the street in search of their next victim. Danny slowly stood up and, with his tormentors safely out of range, let flow the warm salty tears that he had been trying to hold back with all of his strength. As he slowly shuffled home Danny remembered that he had told his mom he would pick up some toothpaste for her at the corner drug store. He ducked into the store, grabbed a tube, and headed toward the counter to pay. But as he walked down one of the aisles he felt a tug on his shirt. It was Rob, a younger kid who lived down the block. "Hi Danny," he said cheerfully. "Boy am I happy to see you! I need to reach that bottle of shampoo up there. My mom is waiting in line at the checkout. She said if I couldn't reach I should ask somebody tall to help me, so I'm glad you came by. Could you reach it for me please?" Danny smiled and handed the boy the bottle from the top display shelf. "Gee thanks a lot Danny," he said. "I can't wait until I'm big like you!" The younger boy hurried toward the checkout. Suddenly Danny noticed that he felt much better after his encounter with Rob. The boy's kind words were like a soothing bandage on the wounds of Greg's stinging insults. Danny made his purchase and headed home, having learned a big lesson that day about just how much somebody's words could hurt ... and heal. QUESTIONS Ages 3-5 Q. How did Danny feel when Greg started to call him names? A. He felt very hurt. Words can sometimes hurt as much as sticks and stones. Q. How did he feel after he spoke with Rob at the store? A. Rob's kind words made him feel much better. We should always try to speak words that will make people feel good. Ages 6-9 Q. Did Greg's nasty name-calling actually make Danny into less of a good person? Did he become a better person because Rob complimented him? Why or why not? A. Danny may have felt less of a good person, but in reality nothing changed. Every person has tremendous worth that has nothing to do with what anybody says or thinks of us. We are all children of God who loves us unconditionally and made us in a way that is perfect for our own good and for the good of the whole world. We should try to remember this if we ever find ourselves feeling the pain of other people's unkind words. Q. What are some ways we can use our power of speech positively? A. We can try to encourage others with our words. We can speak to people truthfully and honestly. We can "bless" people by sincerely wishing them success and giving them sincere compliments. We can pray to God. We can try our best to speak in a clean and respectful way to everyone we meet. In fact, nearly every time that we open our mouths to speak, we can bring something good into the world if we set our minds to it. Ages 10 and Up Q. The sages tell us that in a certain sense words have even more potential to damage than a physical attack. How do you understand this? Do you agree? A. The old adage "sticks and stones may break my bones but words can never hurt me" is patently false. The most painful bodily wounds generally heal. But the psychological scars of a verbal attack can haunt a person his entire life. Our power of speech is a dynamo within us that can be used to bring great blessing and joy into people's lives if used properly, but if abused can be devastating. Q. What if Greg had claimed that he wasn't serious but was only joking around? Would that have been a valid justification for him to say the things he did? Why or why not? A. There is a tendency to let almost anything go in the name of a good joke. But to the person on the receiving end, such crude attempts at humor are painfully not funny, even if he or she pretends to laugh along. A sense of humor is a wonderful thing and has the potential to be used to cheer others up and bring light into the world. But this is true only when the joke isn't at anybody else's expense. Q. What are some ways we can use our power of speech positively? 10- HALACHA (Gross) Selected Halachos Relating To Parshat HaShevua By Rabbi Doniel NeustadtDustributed by The Harbotzas Torah Division of Congregation Shomre Shabbos THE 17TH DAY OF TAMMUZ The three-week period known as Bein ha-Metzarim, the time of year when we mourn the destruction of the two Batei Mikdash, begins with a fast day on the 17th day of Tammuz, and ends with a fast day, on the ninth day of Av. Let us review the laws of the day known as Shivah Assar b'Tamuz - the 17th Day of Tammuz. In most places the fast begins 72 minutes before sunrise (alos amud ha-shachar)(1) and ends 50 minutes after sunset (tzeis hakochavim)(2). Sunrise and sunset times are calculated by 1 4 various government agencies and are readily available to the general public. Food and drink may be consumed any time(3) during the night of the 17th(4) - but only if one remains awake all night. Once a person retires for the evening, the fast begins, because people do not normally eat until breakfast the following morning - which is well past alos amud ha-shachar. Retiring the evening before, therefore, is tantamount to starting the fast. Consequently: Unless one explicitly states(5) before going to sleep that he plans to wake up early to eat before the fast begins, he may not eat in the morning upon awakening, even before alos amud ha-shachar. For him, the fast has already begun(6). One who normally drinks coffee, juice, etc., in the morning upon arising, does not need to stipulate that he will drink this morning as well. One who normally does not drink anything in the morning should stipulate before retiring that he is planning to get up in the morning to drink. B'dieved, if he failed to do so, he may drink nevertheless(7). "Going to sleep" means deep sleep, whether in a bed or not. Napping or dozing does not mean that the individual has finished eating and begun the fast(8). Although, as stated, it is permitted to eat before alos amud ha-shachar [if one intended to do so the evening before the fast], one who eats then must contend with another halachic issue - the strict prohibition against eating before davening Shacharis(9). The rules are as follows: According to the Zohar(10), one who wakes up at any time during the night [after midnight] may not eat before davening - even though the time of davening is several hours off. Although there are special individuals who abide by the Zohar(11), the basic halachah is not as stated in the Zohar and the prohibition does not begin until the earliest time for davening, which is alos amud ha-shachar(12). As stated, it is permitted to eat until alos amud ha-shachar. However, one who did not begin to eat until he was within half an hour of alos amud hashachar must do one of the following(13): Limit his food intake: Eat fruit (any amount)(14), eat any shehakol type of food but without being kovei'a seudah (eating a regular, scheduled meal)(15), or eat less than 2.2 fl. oz. of bread, cake, cereal, etc.(16) All drinks,- except intoxicating beverages,- are permitted in any amount(17). Eat any kind and any amount of food, but appoint another person to remind him to recite Kerias Shema and Shemoneh Esrei(18). Once alos amud ha-shachar arrives, it is questionable if it is permitted to go back to sleep before davening. If he does go back to sleep, he should appoint another person to wake him up for davening(19). An alarm clock is not sufficient for this purpose(20). FAST DAY ACTIVITIES Although it is permitted to bathe on a fast day, it has become customary not to take a hot shower or bath(21). It is also proper for adults to refrain from swimming(22), unless it is needed for a medical condition or to cool off on a hot day. The poskim differ as to whether it is permitted to rinse one's mouth with water on the 17th of Tammuz(23). Some permit rinsing the front part of the mouth, taking care that no water enters the throat area(24), while other poskim allow this only when in distress (tza'ar)(25). According to the second view, then, one may not schedule a fast-day visit to a dentist [which will require him to rinse his mouth] unless he is in pain(26). Medications prescribed by a doctor may be taken on the 17th of Tammuz. One who has difficulty swallowing pills without water may drink the amount of water required to swallow them. There is no need to ruin the taste of the water before drinking it(27). When suffering from a severe headache, etc., aspirin or Tylenol, etc., may be taken. The poskim, however, do not permit taking those medications with water, unless the water is first made to have a bad taste(28). DAVENING ON A FAST DAY: During the reading of the Torah on a fast day, the custom is that certain verses are read aloud by the congregation. The individual who is called up for that aliyah should not read the verses aloud with the congregation. Instead, he should wait until the reader says them aloud and read along with him(29). One who mistakenly ate on a fast day must resume and complete the fast(30), and he may recite aneinu at Minchah(31). One who is not fasting altogether should not say aneinu(32). A minor who is not fasting need not say aneinu [for the purpose of chinuch](33). One who is davening Shemoneh Esrei together with the sheliach tzibur should not say aneinu as a separate blessing like the sheliach tzibur does; he should say it as it is said in private recitation, in Shema koleinu(34). At the Minchah service, Avinu malkeinu is recited,- even when one is davening without a minyan(35). FOOTOTES: 1 Beiur Halachah 89:1 quoting Rambam. [While some calendars list alos amud ha-shachar as 50 minutes before sunrise, there is no halachic basis for this calculation.] The custom in Israel is to calculate alos amud ha-shachar as 90 minutes before sunrise. In England and in other countries, alos may be much earlier; see Minchas Yitzchak 9:9. 2 Igros Moshe O.C. 4:62. 3 Some authorities maintain that it is improper to eat more than one normally does on the night before the fast, since that defeats the purpose of fasting (Eliyahu Rabbah 563:1). This stringency is quoted by some poskim but omitted by the Mishnah Berurah and many others (see Be'er Heitev 568:22; Aishel Avraham Tanina, ibid.; Elef ha-Magen 602:6; Kaf ha-Chayim 563:11; Igros Moshe O.C. 3:88; b'Tzeil ha-Chochmah 2:48). 4 A ba'al nefesh should begin the fast before nightfall of the 17th; Sha'ar ha-Tziyun 550:9. See also Sha'ar ha-Tziyun 565:8. 5 It is preferable to do so verbally, but it is valid as long as one had the condition in mind. 6 O.C. 564:1. One who did not know this halachah and ate in the morning without having made the stipulation the night before, may still recite aneinu (Shevet ha-Kehasi 1:180). 7 Mishnah Berurah 564:6 and Aruch ha-Shulchan 564:2 based on Rama, ibid. See, however, Mateh Efrayim 206:6, who is more stringent. 8 Mishnah Berurah 564:3. 9 O.C. 89:3. According to the Minchas Chinuch (#248), this may be a Biblical prohibition. 10 Quoted by the Magen Avraham 89:14 and by all the latter poskim. 11 Aruch haShulchan 89:26. 12 Consensus of all the poskim; see Mishnah Berurah 89:28; Aruch ha-Shulchan 89:26; Yalkut Yosef, pg. 147. 13 Women are exempt from the following rules (Harav S.Z. Auerbach, written responsum published in Lev Avraham, vol. 2, pg. 20). 14 Based on Mishnah Berurah 232:34 and 286:9. 15 Based on Mishnah Berurah 639:15. 16 Mishnah Berurah 89:27. 17 Based on Mishnah Berurah 232:35. 18 Based on Mishnah Berurah 235:18. See also 89:34. 19 See Siddur ha-Gra, pg. 88, quoting Harav Y.L. Diskin and Binyan Olam 1. See Siyach Halachah, pg. 149. 20 Harav S.Z. Auerbach, quoted in Shevus Yitzchak, vol. 2, pg. 287. 21 Sha'ar ha-Tziyun 550:8; Aruch ha-Shulchan 550:3. 22 Be'er Moshe 3:77; Harav M. Feinstein (oral ruling quoted in Mo'adei Yeshurun, pg. 108). Minors, however, may swim; Nitei Gavriel, pg. 34 quoting Puppa Rav. 23 O.C. 567:3. 24 Aruch ha-Shulchan 567:3 This seems to be the view of Be'er Heitev 567:5 and Da'as Torah 567:3 as well. See also Magen Avraham, who allows rinsing the mouth as long as less than 3.3 fl. oz. of water are used at a time. 25 Mishnah Berurah 567:11 following the view of the Chayei Adam. Kaf ha-Chayim 567:13-14 also rules stringently. 26 Nishmas Avraham O.C., pg. 290. 27 Harav S.Z. Auerbach (quoted in Nishmas Avraham, vol. 5, pg. 46). This is permitted on Tishah b'Av as well, ibid.; Harav M. Stern (Debreciner Rav, written responsum in Nitei Gavriel, Bein ha-Metzarim, pg. 30). 28 See Nishmas Avraham O.C., pg. 282, concerning Tishah b'Av. 29 Mishnah Berurah 566:3. 30 Ibid. 549:3. 31 Ibid. 568:3. See Shevet ha-Levi 5:60. 32 Beiur Halachah 565:1. 33 Shevet ha-Levi 8:131. 34 Ibid. 565:1. 35 Sha'arei Teshuvah O.C. 584:2 quoting Shevus Yaakov and Kitzur Shalah; Harav M. Feinstein (oral ruling quoted in Mo'adei Yeshurun, pg. 112). See, however, Da'as Torah 584:1 who states that some do not recite Avinu malkeinu when praying without a minyan. 11-D'VAR TORAH U'MADA Jerusalem College of Technology - Machon Lev 21 Havaad Haleumi St., POB16031 Jerusalem, 91160 ISRAEL http://www.jct.ac.il e-mail: [email protected] Tel: 972-2-675-1193 Fax: 972-2-675-1190 MIRACLES AND NATURAL LAW Yehudah Leo Levi Two weeks ago, we read in the weekly portion: "And the earth opened its mouth, and swallowed them up, and their households, and all the men who appertained to Korach, and all their goods." (1). A week ago, we read how Moshe created a well, drawing water from the rock by striking it with his staff - the staff "with which he performed the signs." This week, we read how "G-d opened the mouth of the donkey, and she said to Balaam, What have I done to you, that you have struck me these three times?" (2). The impression arising from here is that of a miraculous existence. On the other hand, we are instructed to act according to the laws of nature. We follow the rabbinic dictum "One should not rely on miracles" (3), and one who fills his Chanukah lamp with vinegar instead of oil has not fulfilled the mitzvah. So, this is a good opportunity to examine the relationship between miracles and natural laws. Let us start with the Mishnah: "Ten things were created in the twilight period of Sabbath eve [the sixth day of Creation]: the earth's orifice, the well's orifice, the donkey's mouth, the rainbow, the manna, the staff, the shamir, the letters, the writing and the tablets" (4). Maimonides comments here: As I mentioned in chapter 8, they [the Sages] did not believe in the constant renewal of the [Divine] Will. Rather, anything that is to happen, whether the action is constant - termed "natural" - or extraordinary - termed "wondrous"- was put into nature from the beginning of creation. Hence, it says that on the sixth day the earth was ["programmed"] such that Korach and his followers would sink into it, and that the well would give water, and the donkey speak, etc. Clearly, it is G-d's Will that everything follow rules determined from the outset, at Creation. True, there are deviations from natural laws, but these were planned from the beginning, such as the earth's orifice, the well's orifice and the donkey's mouth. Here we have a philosophical basis for the natural sciences. Let us examine their foundation. Natural science has a fundamental limitation of which many are unaware. Indeed, we observe a constant pattern in nature's behavior. Every morning, the sun rises in the east, and in the evening it sets in the west, according to exact unchanging rules. Likewise, whenever one drops an object, it drops towards the earth's center, and so forth. We can formulate laws that can describe what appears to be regular natural behavior. But the reason for this behavior nobody knows. Consequently, not knowing the reason behind nature's obeying certain rules, we can't be sure that tomorrow the world will continue to follow the same behavior as today. Even if I see a watch ticking every second for 24 consecutive hours, can I be certain that it will continue to tick in the future? It may be that this is a 24-hour watch, and the spring driving it has now run down. Only by knowing how the watch functions, can one derive conclusions regarding the future based on the past. In fact, the fundamental reasons for nature's laws remain unknown. True, we can offer explanations for different natural phenomena, but these explanations are always based on more elementary laws; and when we reach the most elementary of these, we can not explain it. I remember well the beginning of our mechanics course at the University. The professor entered the classroom and started his lecture with a question: "A body in motion stays in uniform motion unless a force acts on it. - Why?" We had no answer. Why, indeed, should a ball I throw continue along its path after it has left my hand? We sat and thought about it. One of the students announced: "That is Newton's first law!" The professor responded: "True. But why did the body act this way before Newton passed his law? We continued to brainstorm; the question seemed so simple, but we couldn't come up with an answer. Finally the professor said: "You should all know that physics does not offer an answer to this question; it is outside the limits of science. This is a philosophical question, which we do not deal with here. For the answer to that, you will need to look elsewhere." It was somewhat difficult to accept what he said; but, in the end, he was right. We can formulate rules that nature seems to follows. But science cannot provide a basis for these. Just as science can't explain why a moving body tends to keep moving uniformly, and why like electric charges repel, likewise it can only explain any fundamental law in terms of an even more fundamental law. Perhaps, one day, everything will be explained in terms of a single universal elementary law, but the reason for it will also be beyond science. Given this limitation of science, the 18th Century English philosopher David Hume concluded that there are no "natural laws," only "customs of nature"- reminiscent of our Rabbis' expression "the world follows its own custom" (5). The question of who maintains these customs remains beyond the bounds of science. To summarize: our senses tell us that the world follows a constant pattern of behavior; but the existence of laws that control the world is a mere article of faith. As a result, any scientist who does not believe in the existence of a Creator and Master of the world lacks a basis for believing in nature's laws. One can observe regular patterns in nature but not "laws". Clearly, there is no basis for denying their existence, but neither is there a basis for this scientist to believe in them. What about the believing scientist? In light of Torah, how will he view nature's laws? It is easy to see that such laws are required to make possible the fulfillment of the Torah's mitzvoth. Merely picture a world acting arbitrarily - without laws. Imagine: when planting certain seeds in the ground, sometimes wheat will grow and sometimes onions. Or: the same human effort will sometimes raise the hand and sometimes lower it. Clearly, such a situation does not allow for human control of his surroundings and even of his own actions; man would feel like a puppet and live an utterly passive life. Evidently laws of nature are prerequisite to make mitzvot 1 5 executable. If G-d wishes that we observe His commandments, He must supply us with dependable laws of nature. Perhaps this was part of the prophet's intention in saying, "If not for my covenant day and night, I would not have set the laws of heaven and earth" (6). The Jew, who has learned Torah and tasted its wisdom, understands well why set laws govern nature. They are necessary for the Torah's fulfillment; they are the means by which the Torah is realized. For him, faith in the laws of nature remains in the realm of faith, but it is a reasonable and sound belief, while for the agnostic scientist it is an utterly arbitrary belief. As Rabbi S.R. Hirsch put it: The belief in G-d Who created man and other living creatures is also the foundation of man's theoretical knowledge. Remove belief [in G-d] from theoretical science, and you have taken away its very basis. Hopeless agnosticism will be your lot, and who assures you that you are not merely deriving a dream from a dream, and proving one dream with another? (7) Truly, "The fear of G-d is the beginning of wisdom." (8) R. Yehuda Levi teaches Torah in the JCT Beis Medrash. He is a Professor for electro-optics and rector emeritus of JCT. Notes 1. Num. 16:32 2. Ibid. 22:28 3. Pesachim 64b 4. Mishnah Avot 5:6 5. Avodah Zara 54b 6. Jeremiah 33:25 7. Rabbi S.R. Hirsch, Gen. 20:19 8. Psalms 111:10 12-HARAV MOTTI ALLON Keren YishaiYishai is a non-profit organization that has grown out of the perceived need for a new forum for dialog between Jews from all walks of life, all ethnic origins, religious beliefs and political views. http://www.kerenyishai.org text 13 - TORAH TIDBITS (Israel Center) Phil Chernofsky, OU/NCSY Israel Center, Jerusalem Home Page : http://www.cyberscribe.com/tt text 14-TANACH STUDY CENTER (Leibtag) In Memory of Rabbi Abraham Leibtag [http://www.virtual.co.il/torah/tanach] text