Parashat Korah
Different Leaders for Different Times
While Korah’s
rebellion was inappropriate in the context of newly freed slaves in the
wilderness, his challenges speak to us powerfully today.
By David Elcott
The following article
is reprinted with permission from CLAL: The
National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership.
Turn it over and over, our tradition says, and all can be
found in Torah, even principles of democracy hidden in the language of
revolution. Korah, a relative of Moses and Aaron, leads a rebellion in the
desert in which he and his cohorts are killed and their treason condemned by
God.
The desert is a fearful place and the Israelites are a
frightened, inchoate mass of refugees. To demand the overthrow of Moses and
Aaron as they attempt to bring the children of Israel from slavery to freedom
would have undermined the liberation and thrown the covenanted people into
anarchy. Korah's rebellion was an act of personal aggrandizement roundly
condemned by the tradition. But his words, his critique of Moses, remain as verses
in the Torah that we continue to read year after year.
Korah said to Moses and Aaron: "You have gone too far!
This whole community is sacred (kadosh),
all of them, and the Lord is in their midst. Why then do you raise yourselves
above the congregation?" The words may be heresy for an embattled people
in the desert, but ring truer at the latter part of the twentieth century.
The rabbis tell us to judge a leader within the context of
the age in which he or she lives. Moses succeeded in the desert, but would have
failed in Eretz Yisrael (the land of
Israel). King David was a hero in founding a state, but could not insure its
survival. The rabbis provided a remarkable structure for life in Diaspora, but
cannot structure Jewish life in Israel.
While Korah would have destroyed the Israelites in the
desert, his words are a charge to the Jewish people today. The will of God can
be located in the democratic decisions of the Jewish people if we actualize our
potential for sacredness and allow God to reside in our midst.