Parashat Hukkat
When to Talk and When to Act
Comparing Moshe to
Yiftah raises questions about when we should be people of speech and when we
should be people of action.
By Rabbi Shimon Felix
The following article
is reprinted with permission from The
Bronfman Youth Fellowships in Israel.
This week I want to do something a bit different. As I'm
sure many of you know, in addition to reading in the synagogue the weekly Torah
portion, there is a tradition to follow that reading with a short selection
from one of the books of the prophets. Typically, this section, called the 'haftarah' or 'leave-taking' (the idea
being that it is a kind of epilogue or coda to the Torah reading) is connected
in some thematic way to the Torah portion. This week I would like to talk about
the Torah reading together with the Haftarah.
In the Torah reading, near the end of the parsha, which,
according to the Rabbinic understanding takes place towards the end of the
forty-year trek through the desert, we are told that there was a water
shortage: "Now there was no water for the nation, so they gathered against
Moshe and against Aharon…saying…why did you bring the congregation of God into
this wilderness to die there, us, along with our cattle…?"
God appears to Moshe, and tells him to take his staff,
assemble the community, and speak to a rock, which will give forth water.
Famously, Moshe somehow gets it wrong, and commits what for him will be an
ultimate, tragic sin, for which he will be punished by being denied entry into
the Holy Land.
Moshe assembles the people, and says, "Listen here, you
rebels, from this stone shall we bring forth for you water?" Moshe then
strikes the stone with his staff, twice, and water flows out of it.
Subsequently, God informs him that by doing so he has sinned, grievously:
"You did not believe in me, to sanctify me before the eyes of the children
of Israel, therefore you shall not bring this congregation into the land that I
am giving them."
For centuries, the Rabbis have debated the precise nature of
Moshe's sin. Some feel that it was Moshe's anger--his branding the people
"rebels," and his nasty tone of voice and choice of language. Others
focus on the speaking to/hitting the rock question; although Moshe was
instructed by God to take his staff, he was clearly told to speak to the rock,
and, instead, he hit it, twice. Many commentaries see this as another sign of
anger, and/or of disregard for the precise demands made by God.
It may be that Moshe, who has consistently, over the period
of the Exodus from Egypt and the forty years of wandering in the desert, used
his staff to hit things, was now being instructed to symbolically take the
people of Israel, as they ready themselves to enter the land of Israel, to a
higher, more mature level, in which speech, rather than violent action, was to
be preferred. If so, his regressive behavior in hitting the rock communicated
precisely the wrong message to the Israelites.
Had he spoken to the rock, the Israelites could have the learned the
value of obedience to the word of God, rather than a fear of His wrath, as
being the desirable mode of interaction with Him, and that speech, rather than
violent action, is the preferred mode of human behavior.
After this episode, there are a series of diplomatic and
military interactions between the Jews and the first Canaanite peoples they
encounter as they approach the Land of Israel.
Moshe and the Israelites wage a successful campaign against the
Amorites, who attacked Israel after refusing Moshe's request to pass peacefully
through their territory, in which Israel captures Amorite territory.
It is this last episode, the conquest of the Amorite land,
which clearly seems to be the connection to the Haftarah that is read in
conjunction with parshat Hukkat--the story of Yiftah the Giladi in the book of
Judges. The story begins by telling us that Yiftah, Gilad's illegitimate son
(we are told that his mother was a prostitute) was thrown out of his parental
home by his younger half-brothers, who denied him a share in their father's
inheritance because he was "the son of another woman." Yiftah takes
up with a group of men described as "worthless fellows." Yiftah seems
to be a typical marginal youth; unfairly rejected by his family, he opts for a
life on the edge, surrounded by other marginal people.
But then, the people of Israel are attacked by the
Ammonites, who seek to conquer the Amorite territory that, 300 years earlier,
in our parsha, Moshe had captured in his defensive war against the Amorites.
Yiftah's old tormentors, the men of Gilad, approach him and ask him to lead
them in battle. It would seem that the personality-type that Yiftah was--an
adventurous roustabout, was exactly what was needed. The respectable burghers
of Gilad knew that they were not fighters, and turned to Yiftah to do that job
for them.
Yiftah agrees, and becomes their leader. He then does
something that is somewhat unexpected. We have been prepared by the narrative
for a Yiftah who is a man of action, who will be a captain for the beleaguered
and frightened people of Gilad. And what does this man of action do? He sends a
diplomatic mission to the king of Ammon asking for peace.
In the discussion that follows, Yiftah argues that the land
that Ammon is attacking was conquered legitimately by Israel from another
nation, the Amorites, some 300 hundred years earlier, in a defensive war, after
Israel was attacked by the Amorites. The Ammonites, whom Israel did not fight
at that time, have no legitimate reason to attack Israel over that land now.
All the diplomacy is to no avail; the Ammonites attack, and
Yiftah goes into battle. Before he does, he makes a vow to God, saying that, if
he is victorious, and returns from the battle, "whatever comes out of the
doors of my house to meet me, when I return in peace from the people of Ammon,
shall surely be the Lord's, and I will offer it up for a burnt offering."
He was assuming that it would be a goat, or sheep, or cow, which would first
come out to greet him upon his return.
Tragically, after Yiftah returns home, victorious, it is his
daughter, his only child, who comes out, singing and dancing, to greet him. The
end of the story is horribly tragic:
"When he saw her, he rent his clothes, and said, 'alas,
my daughter, thou hast brought me very low, and thou hast become the cause of
trouble to me, for I have opened my mouth to the Lord, and I can not go back.'
And she said to him, 'my father, if thou hast opened thy mouth to the Lord, do
to me that which has come out of thy mouth.' " She is given two months to
'weep for her virginity', and is then forced to live out her life, alone,
remaining unmarried.
Although Moshe's fight and Yiftah's fight over the same
piece of land, separated by some 300 years, is the obvious connection between
the parsha and the haftarah, I am struck by the connections between the Yiftah
story and the story of Moshe and the rock.
Moshe, back in Exodus, began his career as a man of action.
Like Yiftah, he was estranged from his family (albeit under very different
circumstances), and what we know of him is very like what we think we know of
Yiftah--the first act he does in the Torah is to smite and kill the Egyptian
oppressor of his Jewish brethren. Later, at the burning bush, when God calls on
Moshe to go to Pharaoh and lead the Jewish people out of Egypt, he demurs, claiming
that he is not a man of words, not a speaker. God insists, but does seem to
agree with Moshe's self-assessment and supplies him with his brother Aharon to
act as a spokesman. The staff, which accompanies Moshe, and through which he
accomplishes all the plagues and miracles, seems to underscore Moshe's
personality as a man of action, rather that words.
It would seem that in our parsha, as the forty years in the
desert come to an end and the Israelites ready themselves to enter the land of
Israel, God's telling Moshe to take the staff but TALK to the rock is a kind of
final test. Moshe is challenged to transcend his persona as a man of action, of
violence, and clearly opt for the role of the speaker, the person who achieves
not by hitting, but by talking. Moshe fails, and is denied the right to enter
the land, his goal for the last forty years and more, as a punishment.
It is worth noting that the same word "va'yach"--"and he
smote"--is used back at the beginning of his career, when he killed the
Egyptian, as well as here, in our parsha, when he hits the rock. It would seem
that the act of talking to the rock, and, in effect, rejecting the staff that
he held in his hands, was meant to be Moshe's final apotheosis, from the man of
action to the man of words. It is this that he failed to achieve.
Yiftah's story seems to contain a similar tension between
speech and action. Yiftah refuses to be typecast as a simple strong-man, and
tries diplomacy before military engagement. When the Ammonites refuse to listen
to reason, Yiftah is forced to be what everyone wants him to be; a tough guy,
the son of a prostitute, who hangs out with worthless bums, a man of action and
violence.
In a fascinating twist, his tragedy comes about not through
anything he does, but through something he says--his vow to offer the first
thing to come out of his door to God. It almost seems as if the story is
telling us that Yiftah was wrong to try to become a man of words, to "open
his mouth to God" and express a religious sentiment, and that his real
role, the role that he is now called upon to play, that needs to be played, and
in which he can succeed, is that of a man of action.
As Israel now faces a brutal, implacable enemy, with whom we
have tried to talk, unsuccessfully, for years, I pray that we, and our leaders,
will have the wisdom to know when to talk, and when to act.
Rabbi Shimon
Felix is the Israel Director of the Bronfman Youth Fellowships in Israel.
He lives with his family in Jerusalem, and has taught in a wide variety of educational
frameworks in Israel and abroad.