Parashat Mattot
Compassionate
Conquest
The war against
Midian teaches that when Israel does fight wars, they must fight with
compassion and a minimum of casualties.
By Rabbi Avraham Fischer
The following article is reprinted with permission from
the Orthodox Union.
In Moshe's final days he is commanded to attack the
Midianites. This was the nation that had tempted the people of Israel to
horrible sins of immorality and idolatry, such that Hashem struck them with a
plague that took the lives of 24,000 Israelites.
And Hashem spoke to Moshe, saying, "Carry out the
vengeance of the Children of Israel against the Midianites; afterward you shall
be gathered to your people."
And Moshe spoke to the people, saying, "Detach men for
the army from you, and they shall be against Midian to bring Hashem's vengeance
against Midian. A thousand from each tribe, for all the tribes of Israel shall
you send to the army."
Then, out of the thousands of Israel, 1,000 from each tribe
were handed over, 12,000 men deployed for the army. And Moshe sent them forth,
1,000 from each tribe to the army, they and Pinhas the son of Elazar the priest
to the army, and the holy vessels and the trumpets for blowing in his hand. And
they warred against Midian as Hashem had commanded Moshe and they killed every
male (B'midbar 31:1-7).
This war is both "the vengeance of the Children of Israel" and
"Hashem's vengeance." Clearly, Midian is to be punished for leading
Israel to sin against Hashem, and for arousing Hashem's anger against His
beloved people of Israel.
This order to Moshe had been mentioned earlier:
And Hashem spoke to Moshe, saying, "Oppose the
Midianites and attack them, for they opposed you with their wiles with which
they beguiled you in the matter of Pe'or and in the matter of Cozbi, daughter
of a prince of Midian, their sister, who was slain on the day of the plague on
account of Pe'or (B'midbar 25:16-17).
However, specific instructions for the war are now given:
And they warred against Midian as Hashem had commanded Moshe
(31:7).
What were these directives of war? Rambam, in the Laws of Kings and Their Wars
(6:7), says that Moshe was taught a law for all wars:
When they besiege a city to capture it they must not
surround it from all four sides, but from three sides, and they must leave a
place for a deserter or anyone who wishes to save his life, as it says:
"And they warred against Midian as Hashem had commanded Moshe."
Through the oral tradition the [Sages] learned that it was in this [matter]
that He commanded him.
Rambam's source for this law is the Sifri (the Halakhic
(legal) Midrash on Bamidbar and Devarim) Matot 157 (see also Yalkut Shimoni).
It is interesting to note that Rambam does not count this law as a separate mitzvah
(commandment) in his Book of the Commandments.
Ramban (Nachmanides), however, does list this as a mitzvah (Commentary
on Rambam's Book of the Commandments, Commandments Which the Master Forgot,
Positive Commandment # 5):
We are commanded that when we besiege a city we are to leave
one of the sides without siege, so that if they wish to escape there will be a
way for them to flee, because from this will [we] learn to behave with
compassion even towards our enemies in a time of war. There is another benefit,
that we will open an opening for them so that they will flee rather than
strengthen themselves against us.
Meshech Chochmah (R. Meir Simcha of Dvinsk 1843-1926), in his comments
on our verse, explains their argument: Ramban understands that the main
motivation for this mitzvah is "because from this will [we] learn to
behave with compassion even towards our enemies in a time of war."
This is to say that, just as we are commanded to offer peace
to our enemies (as we find in Positive Commandment #190 and in the Laws of
Kings and Their Wars 6:1-5), so are we commanded to spare them and leave them a
way of escape. Thus, the Torah formulates another commandment in the spirit of
compassion.
Rambam, on the other hand, regards this law as a military tactic: If the enemy
is completely surrounded, they will be driven to fight to the last man rather
than fall into captivity, and their very desperation might lead them to
prevail, in the words of R. Meir Simcha, "As it is known throughout
history, that oftentimes from great despair there comes great triumph."
However, if the enemy sees a chance to escape, he will not risk his life, and
Israel will have a better chance of a rapid (and, it should be added, less
bloody) victory. Thus the Torah, while obligating this type of tactic, does not
formulate it as a separate commandment.
Meshech Chochmah also cites the following verse from Kings II (15:16):
Then Menachem from Tirtzah attacked Tifsach and all that were in it and all its
borders because he did not open, and he attacked; he split open all its
pregnant women.
Although he does not explain the connection, he seems to be
following not Rashi, but the commentary of Malbim (R. Meir Leib ben Yechiel
Michael, 1809-1877), that wicked King Menachem disobeyed the law that requires
Israel to leave open one side of a city under attack. Meshech Chochmah might
also imply that it was this "total warfare" that led the inhabitants
of Tifsach (a city on the Euphrates that had once been the frontier of King
Shlomo's kingdom; see Kings I 5:4) to fight ceaselessly until only the
barbarous mutilation of their pregnant women brought an end to the battle.
The war against Midian teaches that there is no forgiveness for those enemies
of Israel who drive a wedge between them and their Father in Heaven. It also
teaches Israel not to glory in war, but to prefer peace. And when Israel must
fight, it must pursue a course of war that will lead to the fewest casualties
on both sides.
War, however just, challenges us to affirm our commitment to the values of
Torah.