CHUMASH CANDESCENCE
PARASHOT MATOT  AND
MASEI
NUMBERS 30:02-36:13
RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL
Via Shamash Org on-line class service
Jewish Renewal www.jewishrenewal.info
Jewish Spiritual Renewal
Jewish Spirituality
Eco Judaism
Hilton Head Island, SC, Bluffton, SC, Savannah, GA
"Gimme  Shelter"
SYNOPTIC ABSTRACT:
This double portion ends  the Book of Numbers. Borders of Israel are given
as well as rules to prevent  blood feuds by the establishment of
safe-haven towns. If we can have cities  of refuge 3,400 years ago,
perhaps today we can have cities for refugees.  This may help us end our modern
blood feud in the Middle East. To learn more  about this week's Torah
portion, you are invited to read on.
During  this Shabbat we again will read from two Torah portions. These two
portions  are the last two sections of the Book of Numbers. During the
following week  we will begin the fifth and final book of the Chumash
(the Five Books of  Moses). This last  book is Deuteronomy.
Parasha Matot  begins with the rules of vows and oaths. Matot means
"tribes" as these rules  were given to the heads of the 12 tribes. A man
must keep his word but a  woman's word can be annulled by her father or
husband. Then the Israelites  battle against Midian. It is a blood bath.
All the Midianite men are killed.  Yet Moses rebukes his generals for
allowing the women Midianites to live. The  Israelites then kill all the
non-virgin women and all the male children. Laws  about purifying the
spoils of war are listed and from this the Talmudic  rabbis learn the
rules for koshering cooking utensils. 
Numbers  31:21-24 refers to methods by which the utensils and garments
taken in the  Midianite war could be used by the Jews. The Talmudic
rabbis, by pilpul  extension, say these same laws apply to any vessel
acquired from any  non-Jew.
 If they are new utensils a simple emersion
into  the mikvah is sufficient. If they were used in cooking, or in
today's  parlance, either were kosher and had non-kosher food on them making  them
unkosher and now need to be made kosher, more needs to be done.  
Since these utensils now have "absorbed the taste" of  non-kosher food or may
still have milk on the meat dishes or vice versa, they  must be "purged"
through fire. Rashi notes that these laws should have been  transmitted by
Moses as supposedly they are another commandment from God. But  the Torah
says "Elazar, the Kohen" taught these rules. The rabbis decide that  Moses
was upset and angry (see verse 31:14). Moses was too preoccupied to  hear
God speak. Therefore Elazar heard God giving these new  "kitchen-religion"
laws and transmitted them to the Israelites.
The  parasha continues by dividing the spoils of war. Reuben and Gad wish
to live  outside of Israel in what is now Jordan. Moses compromises with
this idea as  long as they help the other tribes conquer the land first.
It is from the  wording of this compromise, that the Talmudic rabbis learn
the rules of  business contracts.
Parasha Masei begins with a summary of the Israelites  wandering in the
desert for 40 years. The Hebrew word masei means "journeys."  Forty-two
locations are listed. In a traditional synagogue these 49 verses  are
chanted quickly and without pause. There were 14 moves during the  first
year. There were 8 during the last year. During the middle 38 years  the
Israelites moved only 20 times, which is an average of two years  between
each journey. Moses gives them the rules for conquering Canaan.  The
boundaries of Eretz Israel are delineated. Lots are drawn for  tribal
territories and tribal leaders are announced.
 Special cities are set aside and maintained for the  Levites. Special cities of refuge (Ir
Miklat) are set aside for unintentional  murderers. Laws distinguishing
between the different types of shedding of  human blood are given.
Inheritance rules in relation to tribal intermarriage  are listed. 
The cousins of the daughters of Zelophehad appeal Moses's  decision to
allow them to inherit their father's estate because they have  no
brothers. The cousins are afraid that if they marry outside of  their
tribe, the estate would belong to their new husbands of a  different
tribe. Moses amends his ruling from Parasha Pinchas..  He
declares that these daughters can only keep their inheritance if  they
marry cousins within their tribe. The Book of Numbers  concludes.
Numbers 35:09-15 tells how six cities are to be set aside in  Israel so
one could escape to there if one kills another by accident. This  person
could live in this special city and be safe from the wrath and  vengeance
of the dead person's family. The Torah's authors did not want to  see
blood feuds. This rule applied to both Israelites and foreigners.  The
unintentional murderer lived in this city under what we would call  today
house arrest until the Kohan Gadol, the high priest, died. At that  time
he could leave and remain unharmed within the general  population.
In Talmud Tractate Makkot we are told that the Kohan Gadol's  family were
worried that these unintentional murderers would pray for the  high
priest's death so that they could leave the city of refuge. It  became
customary for the mother of the Kohan Gadol to visit these six  cities.
She would distribute food and clothing and hope that these gifts  would
deter the inmates from praying for her son's demise. 
The  Talmudic rabbis taught that these cities were not jails or detention camps. They  were
places where the reckless and careless could learn not to repeat  their
life-taking actions. They were under the constant influence of  their
neighbors, the Levites, who also lived in special cities. The  Levites
would visit these cities of refuge and teach. The Talmud states that  when
these unintentional murderers saw the love and care that the  high
priest's very own mother showed to them, as well as the Levites  kind
actions, they developed into kinder, gentler, and more careful  people.
Numbers 34:01-12 outlines the borders of Israel. The Torah uses a  general
term to describe the "southernmost point" as "the wilderness of Zin."  It
then describes the southern border from "the edge of the Salt Sea to  the
east." It then tells of places where the border will "pass" and  "go
around." It mentions the "stream of Egypt." Most of these locations,  like
the places mentioned in the wanderings in the beginning of Parasha  Masei,
are unknown to us today. 
The  "great sea" and "Kinneret sea" are
mentioned, and we know these today as the  Mediterranean and the Sea of the Galilee.
The Salt Sea is what we call the  Dead Sea today. Mount Hor is mentioned
as the northern border but we are not  sure today which mountain this is.
We do know that the borders listed take us  into modern Egypt, Syria, and
Jordan. Borders are also given in Genesis 15:18  and Deuteronomy 1:07.
These sets of borders are different from the ones set  in Numbers. The
eastern border in these sets is listed as "the Euphrates  River" in what
is now in Turkey or Iraq.
The rabbis of the Talmud in  Tractate Gittin 8A and Sotah 14A as well as
later sages such as the Totafot,  Sforno, Rashi, Rashbam, Vilna Gaon,
Aderet Eliyahu, Hersh Goldwurm, B'chor  Shor, Gur Aryeh, and the Ramban
write and argue over what these borders were.  They can reach no
conclusion that all will accept. Certainly, there are no  suggestions or
hints to Jerusalem. as a capital city.
 What we do know from history is that
the land of  Canaan as part of the Egyptian dominion had different
boundaries than the  land that Joshua conquered, the Kingdom of David, the
empire-sized Kingdom of  Solomon, the divided lands of the Northern and
Southern Kingdoms, as well as  the land when under Babylonian, Persian,
Greek, and Roman  control.
"Oh, a storm is threat'ning my very life today.
If  I  don't get some shelter, oh yeah I'm gonna fade away.
War, children, it's just  a shot away. It's just a shot away."
These lyrics were sung by the  Rolling Stones in their hit "Gimme
Shelter." We are faced today with another  "last chance" for peace in the Middle
East. When I first taught this  parasha to my Torah class in 2000,  no good news had been heard from  the
Camp David peace talks between Chairman Arafat and Prime Minister  Barak.
Barak had proposed dramatic concessions. He had agreed to  Muslim
sovereignty over the mosques and holy places in Jerusalem with  exclusive
Muslim access to them. The Palestinian flag would fly over these  sites
in Israel. He said Israel would allow the Palestinians ultimate  control
over the strategic Jordan valley. Barak stated he would dismantle  dozens
of Jewish settlements on Arab land. Barak also agreed to  expanded
Palestinian municipal authority in East Jerusalem. Thousands of  Muslims
would be guaranteed jobs in Israel, and billions of dollars would  be
spent to resettle Palestinians in refugee camps in Lebanon and Jordan.  Arafat
wants part of Jerusalem as his capital.
Israel wanted to keep  East Jerusalem. It has agreed to grant municipal
powers to the Arabs there.  Barak did suggest he would hand over some Arab
neighborhoods around Jerusalem  to full Palestinian control. Arafat wanted
control of all of East Jerusalem.  He said he would allow Israelis access
to Jewish holy sites.
The  Palestinians wanted Israel's borders to return to before the Six-Day
War of  1967. Israel wants to annex formally parts of the West Bank and
Gaza. Three  million Arabs live on those lands. Some 170,000 Jews live
with them in about  145 settlements. Israel has offered Arafat 80 percent
of  the West Bank  and Gaza and says it wishes to annex or even rent the other 20 
percent where  these Israeli settlements are located. Barak said that Arafat can
have an  independent state on this 80 percent. Arafat calls the Jewish
settlers  "illegal" and does not want Israeli citizens living in his country. He
has  said the Jews can remain there as loyal citizens of his new Palestinian  state.
Four million Palestinian refugees live is squalor in Syria,  Jordan,
Lebanon, Gaza, and the West Bank. Arafat wanted UN resolution  194
enforced. This would allow them to return to their homes and land  that
are now in Israeli possession within the prewar borders. Compensation  was
to be paid for those who do not wish to return and live under  Israeli
sovereignty. Arafat insisted that Israel was responsible for  displacing
these refugees in the 1947-1948 war of Israeli Independence.  The
Palestinians call this war the "Naqba" or "Great Catastrophe."  Israel
refuses to accept responsibility for the refugee problem but says  it
would put money into a fund to compensate the refugees for land that  they
lost.
In Camp David's Laurel Cabin the two sides of 21 American,  Israeli, and
Palestinian negotiators were arguing over the control of  the City of
David. Barak slept in Dogwood Cabin, where 22 years ago Egypt's  Anwar
Sadat stayed. Arafat stayed in the Birch Cabin, which Menachem  Begin
occupied. Barak left Israel with three right-wing partners in  his
coalition government defecting at the time of his departure. Some of  the
Shas rabbis were quoting the boundaries of Israel as described in  this
week's parasha. Rallying behind Barak were 28 retired Israeli  generals
who said "Go in peace Ehud Barak...and bring about an end to the  historic
conflict between us and the Palestinians." At the same time Ephraim  Sneh,
the new deputy defense minister, ordered Israeli positions in the  West
Bank fortified and sandbagged in preparation for fire fights with  the
Arabs.
So  much has happened since then. September 11th, the death of Arafat, total  unilateral Israeli pullout in Gaza, a month long war lost by the Israelis in  Lebanon, the Gaza incursion, and still the suicide bombers come into Israel.  President Bush made his first trip to Israel in his last year of his 8 year  presidency. Obama made his early.
What can our TaNaK, our Holy  Scriptures, teach us about this
situation? In the Book of Judges in Chapter  11 we read of Yiftach who
was a leader of Israel. The Talmudic rabbis  called him "as great as Samuel."
In haste he made a vow to sacrifice to God the first  thing that he saw upon
his return from a victorious battle. Unfortunately,  upon his return he
first saw his daughter. 
We  read in this week's Parasha Matot about vows
and how to annul them. All  Yiftach had to do was go to Pinchas and have
his vow annulled through the  vehicle of "hatarat nederim" (undoing of
vows). The Midrash says that  Pinchas, the high priest, was waiting for
Yiftach to come to him. Yiftach,  the chief political and military
leader, was waiting for Pinchas to come to  him. Each was trying to
protect his honor. In doing so, the life of Yiftach's  beloved daughter
was lost.
Both Yiftach and Pinchas were punished by  God for this. Yiftach died from
a disease where his limbs fell off  one-by-one. He was buried in "the
cities of Gilead," a limb here and a limb  there. Pinchas no longer could
receive the Ruach ha Kodesh (the Holy Spirit).  
The  Talmud warns that many times people do things because their kavod (honor) was  slighted.
They will do these things, the rabbis teach, even though doing so  is
clearly a detriment not only to them, but to their families. People  will
put their egos and honor irrationally before their own welfare and  the
welfare of their children. The rabbis warn that one would literally  let
his children die over loss of kavod.
We as rational modern Jews  cannot continue to read the Torah as if it
were an exact deed to the land of  Israel. The ancient sages could not
decide on where the borders were from the  Torah's text, and we certainly
know Israel is not in modern Egypt, Syria,  Turkey, Iraq, or Jordan, as
some commentators have suggested. For the sake of  Torah itself we need
to wrestle with its problems and not stand firm on  issues because of
irrational kavod . 
The  Torah wants us to follow it on paths that lead us
to peace. There will be  parts, like the slaughter of the Midianites, that
we cannot accept and that  actually go against the Torah's own laws of
warfare that we will read of  in  chapter 20 of Deuteronomy.
The beauty of Torah is that we are  challenged by one part to reinterpret
another part.
 If we believe that we were given a deed of Israel  with
boundaries defined, and we are also mandated to seek peace, then we  have
the choice to decide to trade land for peace. We can decide to  emphasize
the humanistic parts of Torah and not the militaristic or  fundamentalist
portions. The Torah is ours. As we learned a few weeks ago, it  is no
longer in the hands of Heaven.
The Torah found it necessary to  protect accidental killers from a blood
feud with protection in six cities of  refuge. The Torah clearly did not
want to see more blood spilled on the soil  of Israel. These accidental
murderers did not need to stay in these towns for  the rest of their
lives. They only stayed until the Kohan Gadol died and a  new one became
invested. The Torah allowed the grieving relatives a period of  time to
think of revenge and to actually carry it out if the accidental  murderer
left his city of refuge. But the Torah also placed a time limit  on
revenge and brooding about blood feuds. If we could set aside  and
maintain six cities of refuge 3,400 years ago, could we not set  aside
some of East Jerusalem for a city as a capital for today's  refugees?
The status of Jerusalem is a sticking point in the peace  process even today. The two
sides have agreed on economic issues, religious  site issues, and refugee
issues. Jerusalem has been expanded to  include its West Bank suburbs, where
Arabs are living now.  If  Israel  gave this area to them for
their capital, the Palestinians would  have a capital in East Jerusalem
and the Israelis would have lost nothing.  
The  Israel Knesset Parliament
building is not in the Old City at the Wailing Wall  (Kotel) and the
Palestinian government building does not need to be in the  Old City at
the Dome of the Rock. The Palestinian  can have a piece of  East
Jerusalem, which the Arabs call Al-quds, as its capital. Beit  Hanina and
Abu Dis are adjoining suburbs of East Jerusalem, which are  Arab
neighborhoods. The Palestinian authority has already begun to operate  in
Beit Hanina unofficially. These are already called East  Jerusalem. They can be
ceded to the Palestinians, and could restore kavod to  them. 
It is my opinion, that the real struggle in the Middle East will be over water,
not  over the neighborhoods of East Jerusalem.
When we read this Shabbat's  parashot we can come away remembering to do
genocide to our enemies, keep  hateful vows for prideful reasons, think of
the immutable God-given  boundaries of Greater Israel, and sit outside the
gates of those that harmed  us waiting to seek vengeance when they leave
through them. Or we can learn to  fight strongly but fairly, release
ourselves from prideful vows, understand  that Israel's borders have never
been unchanging in 3,400 years, and give up  feelings of vengeance and
hatred for those with whom we have been fighting.  
When the poet wrote in Psalm 137: "If I forget thee, O Jerusalem, let  my
right hand forget her cunning," it was written during captivity, "by  the
rivers of Babylon." This is not a vow for Jews never to give up some  of
the city, that Jews never lived in anyway, for peace. The Song of  Ascents
of King David in Psalm 122 records the Jewish belief about our Holy  City
more accurately. 
"Pray for the peace of Jerusalem.
May they  prosper that love thee.
Peace be within thy walls,
and prosperity within  thy palaces,
for my brethren and companions' sakes,
I will say:'Peace be  within thee.' 
For the sake of the house of the Lord our God,
I will seek  thy good."
David's brethren were clearly his fellow Jews. His companions  were those
with whom he shared meals (com=with, panis=bread). There is no  halakah
forbidding us to share bread with our Palestinian fellows in peace.  Once
we eat with them we can share with them the peace and prosperity  of
Jerusalem and of the Middle East.
To quote the Rolling Stones again  from "Gimme Shelter":
"I tell you,
Love, sister, it's just a kiss away,  it's just a kiss away,
It's just a kiss away. It's just a kiss  away."
I pray that so is Shalom. Amen.
Shabbat  Shalom,
RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL
Via Shamash Org on-line class service
Jewish Renewal www.jewishrenewal.info
Jewish Spiritual Renewal
Jewish Spirituality
Eco Judaism
Hilton Head Island, SC, Bluffton, SC, Savannah, GA
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