Parashat Hukkat
Miriam--Water
Under The Bridge?
Miriam’s death
should motivate us to recognize people today who provide nurture and support
that often goes unnoticed.
By Rabbi Bradley Shavit Artson
The following article is reprinted with permission from University of Judaism.
Careers of public figures take on a life of their own,
ebbing and flowing with shifts in public opinion and the latest values. One
Jewish figure whose popularity is at an all-time high is the prophet Miriam,
the sister of Moses and Aaron.
While featured prominently in the Torah, Miriam's claim to
fame always paled in the face of her more visible brothers. After all, Aaron
was the first Kohen Gadol (high priest), the link between the Jewish
people and their religion, and Moses was the intimate friend of God, transmitting
sacred teachings to the people.
Compared to those two leaders,
Miriam simply faded into the background. True, we celebrate her beautiful song
at the shores of the Red Sea, but even that poem is overshadowed by Moses'
far-lengthier song. Today, Miriam's fame rests less on any specific
accomplishment and more on the fact that she was a woman.
Three thousand years ago--and in
most parts of the world even today--being a woman was itself disqualification
from public recognition or accomplishment. With so few female heroes, Miriam
stands out precisely because we are now more sensitive to just how difficult it
is for a woman to gain public recognition. Today's parasha comments on the
death of this prophet, that "Miriam died there and was buried there, and
the community was without water."
Rashi (11th Century, France)
noticed the strange juxtaposition of Miriam's death and the shortage of water,
and assumed that there must be a connection between the two. "From this we
learn that all forty years, they had a well because of the merit of
Miriam." Miriam's Well entered the realm of Midrash as testimony to the
greatness of this unique leader.
As the Jews wandered through the
wilderness, lacking adequate water would have been fatal. However, the power of
Miriam's integrity, piety and caring was such that God provided a moving well
of water, one which followed the people throughout their wanderings until the
moment of her death. Without Miriam, there was no more water.
Miriam's place in Jewish legend
points to two lessons we can carry with us through our own personal
wildernesses. While male prophets emphasize the power of words, the centrality
of rules of conduct, of sanctity and of justice, Miriam's prophecy was one of
deed. Rather than stirring speeches or administration of justice, Miriam
focused on teaching her people how to sing in moments of joy, and she saw to
their sustenance during their period of exposure and fragility.
Miriam's example, paralleled by
countless women after her, is one of action--deeds of love and support. Without
Miriam's efforts, no one would have been able to listen to the words of Moses
or to study God's Torah. Acts of caring and love--that is the special gift that
women give humanity. Notice, also, that no one comments on her well, on how
important and valued her contribution is until after she has died.
The tragic reality is that for
most women, after-the-fact recognition is often the only kind that is given.
The women who work in the homes raising children, the women who work in the
schools teaching students, the women who work in hospitals tending the sick,
these and countless other women perform the difficult, tedious tasks that
sustain and make human life possible.
While medallions and press
releases accompany the splashier achievements of some men, many women quietly
provide wells of nurturing and support without public attention or
commendation. Only when they are no longer able to serve are their services
noticed, and then only because they are missed. Why didn't anyone notice
Miriam's well while she was still alive?
It may be too late to change
Miriam's status among her own generation, although many Jewish men and women
are now, belatedly, giving her the prominence that her compassion and nurturing
deserve. But it is not too late for our generation to re-examine its own values
and heroes today.
Do we sufficiently honor those
whose contribution is quiet support of others? Do we still relegate such vital
care to one specific group, or have we each undertaken to make ourselves not
only disciples of Aaron, not only children of Moses, but also personifications
of Miriam--using our hands and hearts, just as she did, to irrigate the lives
of our people and of all people?
Rabbi Bradley Shavit Artson is the Dean of the Ziegler
School of Rabbinic Studies at the University of Judaism in Los Angeles. He is the author of The Bedside Torah:
Wisdom, Dreams, & Visions (McGraw Hill).
For a free subscription to his weekly email Torah commentary, please
send an email request to bartson@uj.edu.