Parashat B’midbar
Through the Wilderness
The stage of
journeying through the wilderness is an essential part of the transformation
from slavery to freedom.
By Irwin Kula
The following article
is reprinted with permission from CLAL: The
National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership.
The Book of Numbers, Bemidbar, describes the Israelites'
forty-year journey through the desert on their way to the Promised Land. Why
devote an entire book to the desert experience?
Bemidbar represents an important stage in the journey of the
people from slavery to freedom. The wilderness, far beyond its geographic or
historic reality, enters the Jewish experience as a central metaphor for
understanding who we are and what we must do.
By devoting an entire book to the wilderness experience, the
Torah provides an important insight into the real achievement of freedom.
Leaving Egypt in a moment of pure triumph is far easier than wrestling with the
burdens of establishing a functioning community. Bemidbar shows us a people
dealing with the mundane frustrations of gathering food, pitching tents,
establishing new rules and customs, as well as defining its leadership.
Despite the problems and murmurings described in Bemidbar,
this slave people raises a new generation of freeborn children. Here is a
deeper understanding of the Exodus--the maturity of a people meeting the daily
challenges of life in freedom with responsibility.
The true goal of the Exodus was to take Egypt out of the
Israelites. The experience of the seemingly endless journey transformed a people--crushed,
frightened, subservient and dependent -- into a people with initiative,
self-respect, anger at oppression and even militancy. The Israelites at the
Jordan are a very different people from the one that left Egypt. They are ready
to fight their own battles. They are a community committed to one another and
to the covenant that binds them together.
Bemidbar reminds us that wherever we live, there is a better
place, a world more attractive, a promised land, but the way to that land is
through the wilderness. There is no way to get there except by joining together
and marching day after day.