Parashat Korah
Selfish Revolution
Korah and his
followers masked their quest for personal power and gain as a desire for an
egalitarian, democratic society.
By Rabbi Shimon Felix
The following article
is reprinted with permission from The
Bronfman Youth Fellowships in Israel.
This week we read the story of Korah, who is traditionally
seen as an arch-villain, the archetypal rebel against Moshe and Aharon--the
'establishment' of the Jewish people. When we look at it carefully, however,
Korah's complaint against the hegemony of Moshe and his brother, who between
them and other members of their family run the entire show in the desert--has a
compelling ring to it: "You've taken too much! For the entire community,
all of them, are holy, and God is in their midst. Why should you exalt
yourselves over the congregation of God?"
The complaint, to our ears at least, has a lot going for it.
What is wrong with Korah's desire for a more equitable division of power, which
would involve and enfranchise "the entire community?" Would that not
be a good thing? Does it not flow naturally from the democratizing tendencies
we saw manifested a few weeks ago when Moshe, under attack from the people,
delegated power to 70 elders, in an attempt to take some of the pressure off of
himself, and involve others in the effort of governing and leading the nation?
Korah's position is also in synch with the suggestion made
back at Mount Sinai to Moshe by his father-in-law Yitro--that he not judge the
people by himself, but rather that he should establish a court system, whereby
thousands of judges share the load with him.
Is not Korah, who was himself a Levite and therefore part of the power
elite, asking for the most basic of democratic principles--a fully
participatory democracy, in which everyone is an equal partner? And if he is,
why is he punished so horribly, by having the earth swallow up him and his
followers?
I think the answer to these questions is apparent both in
the Biblical text and in the Rabbinic literature that embellishes it. Let's
take a look at Moshe's response to Korah's challenge. Although clearly troubled
by Korah's words (the Torah tells us that his first response was to "fall
on his face"), Moshe seems willing to accept the possibility that he is
not God's only chosen leader, and that, perhaps, the entire nation IS equally
holy.
He therefore suggests a test--let Korah and his followers
bring incense offerings to God. If they are accepted, then his claim will be
substantiated--it will have been made clear that we are all, in fact, equally holy,
equally chosen, and that we therefore should, as Korah suggests, all stand
equally before God.
However, in addition to immediately agreeing to put Korah's
claim to the test, Moshe also expresses his uneasiness, and his mistrust of
Korah. This is what he says: "Is it but a small thing to you that the God
of Israel has separated you from the community of Israel to bring you near to
him, to do the work in the Tabernacle of God and to stand before the
congregation to serve them? He has brought you and all your brothers the sons
of Levi near, and you also ask for priesthood?"
Moshe's words are interesting. At first glance, he seems to
not get it; Korah presented himself as a champion of equality before
God--"the entire community, all of them, are holy"--and Moshe is
trying to placate him by reminding him that he is in fact a big shot, part of
the establishment, a Levite. It would seem that Moshe saw through Korah's claim
that he was representing "the entire community" and understood that
he was simply out to gain more power for himself; "you also ask for
priesthood?" Moshe knows that this is what is really hiding behind Korah's
egalitarian spiel: the desire for more personal power.
The Rabbis pick up on Moshe's understanding of Korah's true
motivation, and traditionally discount the seriousness of Korah's commitment to
the "community" and the "congregation," and see these
claims as simply ploys in his attempt to consolidate more power for himself.
This is, of course, a dynamic that, tragically, has played itself out over and
over again in any number of 20th century "People's Republics."
After telling Korah what he really thinks of him, Moshe then
sends for Datan and Aviram, the non-Levites, regular Israelite
"rank-and-file" supporters of Korah's rebellion. We will never know
what Moshe intended to say to them, for they refuse to meet with him, but they
damn themselves with their own words: "We will not go up! Is it not enough
that you have brought us from a land flowing with milk and honey to cause us to
die in the wilderness, that you should rule over and continue to rule over us?
You haven't even taken us to a land flowing with milk and honey to give us an
inheritance of field and vineyard…we will not go up!" It seems clear that
personal gain--"field and vineyard"--is what they were after.
At this point Moshe loses it: "And Moshe got very angry
and he said to God 'do not turn to their offering, not even one donkey of
theirs have I taken, I haven't done anything bad to any one of them.'"
Pretty strange response, eh? And what's up with the donkey?
I think we should compare Moshe's response here with the words of Datan and
Aviram and with what Moshe says about Korah. They are depicted as wanting,
taking, desiring things for themselves--"you also ask for priesthood?"
"…you haven't give[n] us an inheritance of field and vineyard…"
Moshe's words make clear the profound gap between them and
him--"not even one donkey of theirs have I taken…"--My relationship
with power, leadership, government, has never been about improving my own
situation, it has not been about my taking things. (Interestingly, the parsha
begins with the words "Vayikah Korah"--"and
Korah took," which would seem to summarize his basic mind set.) Therefore,
Moshe says to God, do not turn to them and their offering, do not choose them,
because their understanding of leadership is one that is rooted in
self-aggrandizement, in material gain, and is therefore unacceptable.
Tellingly, the Hebrew word for donkey is hamor, similar to the Hebrew word for
the physical, the material--homer. If
we also remember the reluctance that Moshe showed to accept a leadership role,
back at the burning bush, while the Jews were still enslaved in Egypt, the
differences between what motivates Moshe to lead as opposed to Korah could not
be clearer.
I would argue that Moshe's unmasking of the true motivations
of Korah and his followers leaves open the possibility of a real "people's
revolution," which seeks a truly egalitarian society. We are however left
with the suspicion that those who claim that that is what they are after need
to be looked at very carefully, as those high ideals and exalted aims have
often (invariably?) masked a raw desire for personal power and gain. Moshe's
model of leadership stands in stark distinction to that of Korah and his
followers, stemming as it does from a desire to help those who need it, rather
than from personal considerations of profit, loss, and position.
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.