Parashat B'shalah
Where the Wood Meets Water
We can return on a path of responsible and sustainable stewardship.
By Rabbi Shmuel Simenowitz
This
commentary is provided by special arrangement with Canfei Nesharim. Canfei
Nesharim has launched its sixth annual Tu b'Shevat Learning
Campaign to engage communities in learning about protecting the environment
during the Jewish holiday of Tu B'Shevat. Individuals can also plant a
tree in Canfei Nesharim's "virtual forest" to support new Torah and
environment programs. Canfei Nesharim maintains a full resource library of
articles, programs, and suggested actions on their website at www.canfeinesharim.org.
Arguably,
no other Torah portion is as intimately aligned with water as Parashat B'shalah. From the miraculous parting of
the Red Sea, to the sweetening of the bitter waters at Marah, to the rock at
Refidim giving forth water, B'shalah oozes at every juncture.
Moreover, the shabbat
upon which the parashah is read is
referred to as Shabbat Shira--the
Sabbath of Song--ostensibly referring to shirat
hayam, the song sung by Moses and The Children of Israel at the sea.
Perhaps a bolder, albeit wholly defensible translation of the phrase shirat
hayam is "the sea's song" as reflected by the Psalmist, "yir'am
hayam umlo'oh (Psalm 96)"--let the very sea and its fullness roar.
Water & the Patriarchs
The waters of
B'shalah flow from an earlier source. There has always been a nuanced,
water-based undercurrent artfully interwoven into the history of the Israelites
since the days of the patriarchs and before.
Recall the wells
of Abraham and Isaac, the watering holes where Eliezer encountered Rebecca
(Genesis 24:17) and where Jacob first encountered Rachel (Genesis 29:2), and
later the watering troughs where Jacob's sheep miraculously multiplied (Genesis
30:38).
Consider further if you will Joseph's water journey--
beginning in an empty pit, notably devoid of water (Genesis 37:24), and
culminating in Pharaoh's dreams of the Nile (Genesis 41:1) which eerily
foreshadow the increasingly prominent role that will be played by the Nile
throughout Exodus.
The Incident at Marah
The Jewish water experience clearly reaches a triumphant
crescendo in B'shalah. After the
magnificent and manifest miracle of the Red Sea, however, the incident at Marah
remains cryptic and elusive. To recap briefly, the Jews arrive thirsty at Marah
and cannot drink because the waters are bitter. "Vayorehu Hashem etz"--God
instructs Moses to take a certain wood and throw it in the water: the waters
are sweetened (Exodus 15:25).
The Midrash offers several opinions as to the nature of the
wood utilized by Moses to provoke such a response. Rabbi Joshua (a charcoal
maker by trade) posited that it was willow. Rabbi Natan said it was a type of
bitter ivy. Rabbi Elazar Hamoda'i surmised that it was an olive tree. Rabbi
Joshua ben Korcha hypothesized that it was a thistle bush. To all opinions, the
consensus seems to be that the wood was bitter (Tanhuma Exodus 24).
On the other hand, Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai explains the
phrase "Vayorehu Hashem etz"
as "God taught Moses Torah." According to this interpretation, the
"etz" in the verse refers to "etz hayim hee," meaning "it (the Torah) is a tree of life." In a
similar vein, the Toras Menachem brings a beautiful literal reading from
the Zohar suggesting that it was a piece of wood from the Etz Hayim--the original Tree of Life in the Garden of Eden.
The Contemporary Crisis
Our contemporary journey through post-industrial history
parallels in many ways the journeys of our forefathers. Water has become
increasingly scarce with a concomitant diminution in both quantity and quality.
Despite its seeming ubiquity, less than 3% of the world's water supply is
potable. Similarly, manufacturing has left its heavy imprint on the water
supply--an integral part and thus an unwitting victim of the manufacturing
process.
As the worldwide demand for raw materials increases at breakneck
speeds, aggressive logging and development at an unprecedented rate have taken
their toll on our forests, wreaking havoc both on wildlife habitat and
threatening the vast watershed and subterranean aquifers which depend on the
dense forest cover.
Numerous species of herbs and plant life whose healing
powers have been known to indigenous peoples for centuries and which might have
provided us with the answer to numerous medical and related
issues--"bitters to sweeten the bitter"--are disappearing at an
alarming rate from pristine rainforests, which are being clearcut both for the
valuable old growth timber and to make room for increased cattle grazing.
How to Heal
"Ma'asei avot
siman labanim"--the actions of our ancestors come to instruct us. So
what lessons can we take away from this story to illuminate our own paths?
The Toras Menachem sees the various opinions in the
Midrash as metaphors for differing ways of combating the bitterness or evil
within ourselves. The first approach is to dilute the bitter waters with fresh
water, which, according to all opinions, was not done here. The second way is
to transform the bitter into sweet by adding a strong agent which will
"overpower" the bitterness and cause the transformation. This
approach is represented by the Zohar's notion of wood from the Tree of Life.
Finally there is "self-realization" or making the
waters realize how bad it is to be bitter, thus convincing them to become sweet
of their own accord. This result is typified by the Tanhuma and the various
opinions who held that the wood was bitter.
According to the Toras
Menachem, combating bitter with bitter is the spiritual service of ba'alei teshuvah--those who realize they are distant from God, and change course
to return. The energy and creativity that they had put into their previous
pursuits can now be invested in passion for God, Torah, and the Jewish people.
"The Holy One's way is that God sweetens the bitter
with bitter (Nahmanides on Exodus 15:25)." The Tanhuma suggests this is
also the way of the righteous. Even though the modern environmental situation
has reached a point where the waters seem too bitter to drink, B'shalah reminds
us of the dictum of Rebbe Nachman of Breslov: "If you believe that you can
destroy, then believe that you can build."
The power that major industries and corporations have used
to cause environmental destruction can be harnessed to promote a cleaner,
healthier future. For example, a recent New York Times article describes how
the Clorox corporation sees their acquisition of the well-known eco-minded
Burt's Bees line of beauty products as a catalyst to begin an overall
"greening" of the household chemical giant.
The energy and tools needed for change are within our reach.
We just need the will to utilize them, and deep understanding of that which God
has taught us--"Vayorehu Hashem etz."
A distraught father whose son was beginning to stray from
the path of his forefathers once brought his son to the Alter Rebbe, Shneur
Zalman of Liadi. R' Shneur Zalman asked the boy what he enjoyed doing. The boy
responded that he liked riding horses.
"And what qualities do you look for in a horse?"
R' Shneur Zalman asked him.
"Speed," the boy replied.
"And what if you are on a fast horse which takes a
wrong turn in the road?" the sage continued.
"You can get very lost in a hurry," was the boy's
response.
"And what if you turn the horse around?" the
elderly sage pressed on.
"You can get back just as fast."
A slight smile crept across R' Shneur Zalman's face as the
boy nodded his head, indicating that he understood the Alter Rebbe's message.
If we take the lesson of the bitter waters of Marah to heart
we can turn around our horses currently galloping out of control towards
oblivion. With the will to return on a path of responsible and sustainable
stewardship, using the Etz Hayim, the
Torah, as our template, perhaps we too can come back just as fast, and be
carried by the sweet waters of our ancestors to a cleaner future.
Suggested
Action Items:
1. The Internet is replete with suggestions on how to
conserve water. Try starting here to access
water saving ideas.
2. Use recycled paper products where possible. Paper and
paperboard products constitute the largest portion of municipal solid waste.
The greatest energy expenditure in papermaking comes from the pulping process
used in virgin paper production.
3. Where possible, buy wood and lumber products certified
by the Forest Stewardship Council. Like an organic label for food, FSC
certification assures consumers that wood products come from responsibly
managed forests in which wildlife habitation and clean water are protected by
ensuring that logging is done in an environmentally conscious and sustainable fashion.
4. Find out what major corporations are beginning to
"go green" and support their efforts through conscious consumerism.
Rabbi Shmuel
Simenowitz is Executive Director of Project Ya'aleh V'Yavo, Inc. where he
designs cutting edge environmental programs for Jewish youth. The
programs, which take place in classrooms as well as on his farm in southern
Vermont, combine Torah and environmental sensibilities, highlighting personal
empowerment, sustainability, optimism, and fun. Rabbi Simenowitz divides his
time between his home in Western Mass and Sweet Whisper Farms, his maple farm
in Readsboro, VT, which was featured in the recent book "Jewish Fathers--A
Legacy of Love" as "Vermont's only shomer shabbos, organic,
horse-powered maple farm."