Parashat Hukkat
Parting Is Such Sweet Sorrow
Miriam, whose
death is recorded in Parashat Hukkat, embodied the honor and glory of the women
of Israel.
By Rabbi Ed Rosenthal
The following article
is reprinted with permission from Hillel: The
Foundation for Jewish Campus Life.
Numbers 22 of Parshat Hukkat begins and ends with the deaths
of Miriam and Aaron.
Verse 1: The entire community of the children of Israel came
into the wilderness of Tzin in the first month, where the people settled down
in Kadesh and Miriam died and was buried.
Verse 28: Moses divested Aaron of his (priestly) garments and invested his son
Eleazar with them. Aaron died there on the top of the mountain and Moses and
Eleazar descended from the mountain.
Following the death of Aaron in verse 29, the Torah tells us that "the
entire community saw that Aaron was dead and the entire house of Israel wept
for Aaron thirty days." Interestingly, there is no mention of any mourning
following the death of Miriam. In fact, what follows immediately upon her death
is the typical grumbling of the Israelites. The water that had been provided
over forty years to the Israelites was due to Miriam. When she died, the water
immediately dried up and the people's thirst led them once again to rebel
against Moses.
Your Numbers Navigator
1: What was it about Miriam that ensured the miracle of
water in the wilderness for the people?
2: When Aaron died, he was succeeded by Eleazar, and the
people mourned for thirty days. When Moses died, he was succeeded by Joshua,
and again, the people mourned for thirty days. Why do you think that no one
succeeded Miriam?
3: Why do you think the people complained, instead of
mourned after the death of Miriam?
4: Who fulfilled Miriam's responsibilities after her death?
Our tradition teaches that only the men of that generation died in the
wilderness before entering the Land of Israel, while the women merited entering
the Land.
Your Midrash Navigator
Numbers Rabbah 21:10
"In that generation the women built up the fences which
the men broke down."
The passage from Numbers Rabbah is too long to quote, but shows that the women
did not participate in the building of the Golden Calf or accept the Council of
the Spies not to enter Eretz Yisrael
(land of Israel). The following is the conclusion of the passage.
"Against this congregation the decree (not to enter the Land) was issued,
because they had said: 'We are not able to go up.' The women, however, were not
with them in their counsel."
Rabbi Samson Raphael Hirsch commented on this by saying:
"As a result, the women, as grandmothers and mothers, were able to go with
the new generation when it entered the Promised Land for its new future, and to
bring with them into that new future their personal recollections of their past
in Egypt and of the momentous events they had witnessed in the wilderness under
the protection and guidance of God.
“Thus they were given the opportunity to inspire their
grandchildren and great-grandchildren with the spirit of the God-revealing
experience they themselves had witnessed. The fact that these Jewish women were
so deeply and thoroughly imbued with the Jewish spirit may be ascribed in no
small part to Miriam, who set them a shining example as a prophetess."
A Word
While some might point to the lack of mourning following the
death of Miriam to be yet another example of chauvinism in the Torah, it is
perhaps more a reflection of the simple fact that we mourn what we have lost.
We mourned the loss of Moses because no matter how great a leader Joshua was,
he would never be another Moses. We mourned the loss of Aaron because no matter
how great a leader Eleazar was, he would never be another Aaron.
The greatness of Miriam was that she was the embodiment of
the honor and glory of the women of Israel. Moses, Aaron and Miriam were not misled
by falsehoods and lies or controlled by a desire for instant gratification.
Rather, they held fast to the way of life that makes us who we are. Our
ancestors knew that they had not lost Miriam, but that her essence is contained
within every Jewish woman.
Prepared by Rabbi Ed Rosenthal of Cornell
University Hillel.
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.