Parashat Balak
No & Maybe
We cannot slip into loopholes and forego responsibility.
By Evan Wolkenstein
This commentary is provided by special arrangement with
American Jewish World Service. To learn more, visit www.ajws.org.
In Parashat Balak, a distinguished entourage
knocks at the humble door of Bilaam, the soothsayer. Bilaam's eyes fall on
the silk-robed emissaries of King Balak. The King, they say, requires Bilaam's services to
curse Israel. Bilaam asks them to spend the night while he inquires as
to God's
direction. God prohibits the mission and Bilaam dutifully sends the emissaries
home.
When,
once again, a knock comes at the door, Bilaam finds himself standing before
princes more honorable than the first. Gold-encrusted and bejeweled, they
promise great wealth from the king if Bilaam takes up the task. Bilaam, again,
invites them to stay. In the dark of night, God tells Bilaam to go with the
princes.
A Forbidden Mission?
When
Bilaam sets out on the journey, a puzzle unfolds before us. First, we are
informed that God is angry about Bilaam's actions. Then, an invisible
angel stands in Bilaam's
way, sword in hand, and Bilaam's donkey (who by miracle, speaks) comes to save
his life.
Why
does God initially forbid the mission, and afterward permit it? And why does
God then push Bilaam within inches of his life for following God's instructions?
As
a high-school teacher, I encounter a mindset in many of my teenage students
that is reminiscent of Bilaam's. It is the mindset I call, "I know
you said no,
but perhaps you meant maybe?" It emerges when students ask to work alone when
the explicit assignment is to work with a partner, when they suggest using
Tanach hevruta time as Algebra II
study time, when they insist on being allowed to visit a shop while the rest of
the class waits for the tour guide. And when I give the answer, "no,"
they hear, "maybe." Perhaps they
cannot imagine that a rational, compassionate adult would say no to their
request. Or perhaps they have difficulty seeing the needs of the community
beyond their own.
Saying No
We all struggle with this same challenge. I look at my own
life and consider the commitments I have made: to attend rallies, to send
letters and sign petitions, to consume responsibly. I say 'no' to sweatshops. I
say 'no' to the abuse of economic and gender privilege.
But when I review the facts of my life--what I do with my
free time, what I buy day-to-day--I see that during times of busyness and
stress, my desire to be socially conscious slips lower and lower on my list of
priorities. And replacing consciousness
on the list are convenience, profit, and personal preference. The frustration I
feel at my students is actually a frustration at the conflict of pressures to
which we all succumb.
As
we return to Bilaam, we rewind the film and zoom in: Bilaam, inviting the
second royal entourage to stay the night, is not being hospitable, nor is he
being a loyal servant of God. He knows that he is prohibited from performing
the mission, yet he hopes that perhaps he misunderstood. He hopes that God's
"no" is actually a "maybe."
God's anger at Bilaam,
then, is not prompted by Bilaam following God's instructions, but rather because Bilaam
continues to ask when the answer is already quite clear. Bilaam here acts out a
common pattern--even
when we know we should do one thing, we instead do another; our mouths say no,
our feet say yes.
Facing Ourselves
For
my students, I can understand their deep desire for a moment of freedom. Yet
when I ask them, "do you think it's right for you to go buy candy while the
rest of us wait for the bus?" they inevitably come to the same decision I had
originally given. Bilaam, like all of us, knows that the right thing to do is
not always convenient or profitable.
We
must say 'no' to that which
we know is wrong and say 'yes' to our commitments. For if we do not, we slip
into the loopholes that allow us to fall further and further from our values,
and our students will continue to show us where we fail. We do not need a
punishing blade or a talking donkey to remind us of how we have sinned. We need
only look at the state of the world around us.
Evan Wolkenstein is the Director of Experiential
Education and a Tanach teacher at the Jewish Community High School of the Bay
in San Francisco.