Parashat Hukkat
Facing Long-Standing Foes
Several
commentators identify the Canaanites with whom the Israelites fought as the
nation of Amalek, continuing the Israelites struggle against their age-old
enemy.
By Rabbi Avraham Fischer
The following article
is reprinted with permission from the Orthodox
Union.
Imperceptibly, the Torah has skimmed over nearly forty years
of wandering in the wilderness. The generation of the Exodus has expired, and
the generation of the wilderness has taken its place. Two beloved leaders of
the Exodus generation--Miriam and Aharon--were taken from them. A new reality
crystallizes: this will be the generation that will conquer and settle the Land
of Israel, and will establish a society based upon the Torah.
The wilderness generation will fight many wars. Their
parents had fought only once against Amalek in Refidim (Exodus 17:8-16). And
when they themselves are faced with the threat of war against Edom, they are
constrained to withdraw:
And Edom refused to allow Israel to cross his border, and
Israel turned away from him (Numbers 20:21).
But now, on the edge of the land of Edom, the new generation
of the Children of Israel are about to encounter their first war:
And the Canaanite, the king of Arad, who dwelt in the Negev/South, heard that
Israel was coming by the way of the Atarim, and he attacked Israel, and he took
some of them captive. And Israel vowed a vow to Hashem, and said: "If You
will surely deliver this people into my hand, then I will consecrate their
cities" (root ch-r-m). And
Hashem listened to the voice of Israel, and He delivered the Canaanite, and he
(Israel) consecrated them and their cities (root ch-r-m). And he (Israel) called the name of the place Chormah
(Numbers 21:1-3).
This incident echoes earlier events. "The way of the Atarim," according
to the Targumim (Aramaic
translations), Rashi, Ibn-Ezra (12th
century Spain), and others, is the way of the tarim, referring to the scouts of Chapter 13 above. The report reaches "the Canaanite, the
king of Arad" that the Children of Israel are approaching their Promised
Land, intending to follow the same route used by their scouts a generation
earlier. Certainly, the inhabitants of the land would remember this, and,
fearing an invasion, they launch a preemptive strike.
As to the identity of "the Canaanite, the king of Arad," Rashi notes
a problem: Canaan is a descendant of Cham (Genesis 10:6), but from the report
of the scouts (Numbers 13:29) we know that those "who dwelt in the
Negev/South" refers to Amalek, a descendant of Esav/Edom (Genesis 36:12)!
In addition, the expression used here, "and he attacked (vayilachem b') Israel," is
reminiscent of the earlier battle against Amalek:
And Amalek came, and he attacked (vayilachem im) Israel at Refidim (Exodus 17:8).
Therefore, Rashi, quoting a number of midrashic sources,
explains that the nation "who dwelt in the Negev/South" was indeed
Amalek. However, they disguised themselves by adopting the language of Canaan,
expecting to be immune to Israel's prayers when they would ask Hashem to deliver
them from the "Canaanites." Israel saw their attackers dressed as
Amalekites but speaking Canaanite, so they outwitted them by praying that
Hashem "deliver this people into my hand" without specifying which
nation.
How are we to understand this midrash? How do the Children of Israel meet the
challenge of their recurring encounter with Amalek? A close examination of
Rashi's original source (Yalkut Shimoni 764) reveals profound insights into
what becomes Israel's first battle for Eretz
Yisrael (land of Israel).
Israel was forbidden to provoke the descendants of Esav/Edom: Do not provoke
them, for I will not give you of their land . . . (Deuteronomy 2:5), but when
Amalek attacked again and again, Hashem declared that Israel treat them like
other nations of the land:
But you shall utterly destroy (ha-charem ta-charimem) them (Deuteronomy 20:17).
The root word ch-r-m
in this pasuk (verse) refers to
killing all the inhabitants. In the incident of "the Canaanite," ch-r-m means "consecrating;"
the Children of Israel vow to consecrate the material items to Hashem, rather
than take the spoils of war for themselves.
[Since Rashi states that "the Canaanite" is really Amalek, one might
raise the point that nothing should have been spared, in order to fulfill the
command to "blot out the remembrance of Amalek" (Deuteronomy 25:19;
Samuel I 15:2-3). However, as the Rambam teaches ("Laws of Kings and Their
Wars" 1:1,2), this command will not take effect until after the conquest
and secure settlement of the land and the appointment of a king.]
The development of Israel has been demonically paralleled by the growing
sophistication of Amalek's strategies. At Refidim, Amalek and Israel engaged
each other in battle (vayilachem im); now, Amalek is able to enter into the
Israelite camp and attack them (vayilachem b'); (see Malbim on Joshua 10:29).
Before, they attacked without planning, but now Amalek plans its attack.
Amalek/Esav knows full well where his strength lies, and where Israel/Yaakov's
strength lies: The voice is the voice of Yaakov, and the hands are the hands of
Esav (Genesis: 27:22). This time, Amalek wants to forestall Israel's verbal
power. If Amalek, grandson of Esav, desires to use his power, which is in his
hands, against the descendants of Yaakov, whose power is in their voice, then
he must use his voice, and disguise his language.
But Amalek, who is all surface and no substance, is incapable of altering his
outward appearance, whereas Israel defeats him by combining prayer and vowing
with military might:
And Israel vowed a vow to Hashem, and said: If You will surely deliver this
people into my hand, then I will consecrate their cities. And Hashem listened
to the voice of Israel, and He delivered the Canaanite.
Israel is thus able to overcome Amalek/Esav in Esav's area of strength.
Haamek Davar (R. Naftali Tzvi Yehudah
Berlin, 1817-1893) says that this incident was designed by Hashem to prepare
the Children of Israel for the wars of conquest of Eretz Yisrael, and teach
them the natural means of battle. Consequently, they learn that, even in the
realm of war, the realm of "the hands of Esav," Israel can prevail
when they appeal to Hashem using "the voice of Yaakov."