Parashat B’midbar
Making Sense of the Census
The prohibition
against the direct counting of the Israelites cautions us to remember the human
faces behind abstract statistics.
By Rabbi Leslie Bergson
The following article
is reprinted with permission from Hillel: The
Foundation for Jewish Campus Life.
This first sedrah
(portion) of the fourth book of the Torah takes up the narrative of the sojourn
in the wilderness, and begins with a census of the Israelites by their tribes.
It goes on to detail the order in which the tribes would encamp around the
Tabernacle, and the order in which they would march when they moved. The sedrah
ends with a description of the duties of the Levites in the Tabernacle.
God commanded Moses to take a census of the Israelites just
before the building of the Tabernacle (Exodus 30:11-16) and we are told that it
has been accomplished (Exodus 38-25-6). That occurrence was only one month
before this census is commanded. Why does God need the people to be counted so
often?
Rashi comments, "Because they were dear to God, God
counts them all the time--when they went out of Egypt, God counted them; when
many of them fell for having worshipped the golden calf, God counted them to
ascertain how many were left, when the Shechina
(divine presence) was about to dwell among them, God again took their census,
for on the first day of Nisan the Tabernacle was erected, and shortly
afterward, on the first day of Iyar, God counted them."
Rashi's grandson Rashbam presents a more practical reason.
The first census was to allow the people to make the half-shekel contribution
to the Sanctuary. In this census, the people are preparing the military
campaign to take the land (which indeed they would have done at once if not for
the regrettable incident with the spies--stay tuned for Parshat Shelach in
three weeks) and the purpose of this census was to count the men over the age
of twenty for military service.
Ramban mentions these two reasons and adds that, this time,
the people are counted by their names, and the census gives each member of the
nation a chance to come before Moses and Aaron and be recognized as an
individual of personal worth.
Your Torah Navigator
1. Which of the three explanations do you find most
compelling?
2. In the census before the Tabernacle, the people were
counted as a nation. In this census, they are counted within their tribes. What
might be the reason for the two different methods of counting?
The Torah forbids the counting of Jews directly. Even today, when counting for
a minyan (quorum) (or a
Self-Assessment Survey) we count "not-one, not-two..." or use a
phrase with ten words, or count feet and divide by two. In 2 Samuel 24, King
David takes a direct-count census, and as punishment, the nation is struck by a
plague. The Talmud supposes that David thought the prohibition of direct
counting only applied in Moses' time. Another explanation is that David did
count the people correctly, but that he had no particular reason to conduct a
census at all, and was punished for that.
A Word
Perhaps the reluctance to count Israelites, even when there
is a good reason to do so, derives from the understanding that it is all too
easy to make human beings into statistics. In recent history, the Nazis tried
to dehumanize Jews by replacing their names with numbers. As Ramban points out,
one of the features of the census in Parsha Bamidbar is that each person is
counted, by name, before Moses and Aaron, and recognized as an individual. As
we read about current events, how many million homeless, how many hundreds
killed in drunk driving accidents, it is important for us to remember that each
one of those numbers represents a human being.
Rabbi Leslie Bergson is Jewish Chaplain
and Hillel Director, The Claremont Colleges.
Provided by Hillel’s
Joseph Meyerhoff Center for Jewish Learning, which creates innovative
educational resources based on Jewish texts and trains Hillel students,
professionals, and lay leaders to infuse Jewish content throughout their activities. © 2002 Hillel:
The Foundation for Jewish Campus Life.