Tag Archives: Otherness

Balak, Numbers 22:2-25:9

Link to Parsha: http://www.hebcal.com/sedrot/balak

The Other

By Leanne Stillerman

At the opening of parshat Balak, Bnei Yisrael are encamped at the plains of Moab in the desert. They have recently emerged victorious against the Emorite people, after being refused peaceful passage through the Emorite lands. Their formidable victory against the Emorites and their seemingly inexplicable exodus from Egypt have inspired fear in the now neighbouring Moabite people, who join with their king, Balak, in enlisting the help of Bilaam, a seer from Mesopotamia with reported powers to bless and curse. The people of Moab approach Bilaam in the hope that he will curse Bnei Yisrael, and that this curse will weaken the nation and assist the Moabites in chasing them from their lands.

The text suggests that the people of Moab’s plan to curse is motivated by no less than terror of dispossession by a nation they perceive as mightier and more numerous than themselves. The text uses the phrase “vayagor Moab” (Bamidbar 22:3), which, in its plain meaning, is translated as “And Moab became terrified”. The Midrash Rabba comments on the root of the word “vayagor”, and suggests that the people already saw themselves as “gerim” – strangers – in their own land; they already visualized their own expulsion at the hands of Israel.

The text conveys the way in which the Moabites perceive B’nei Yisrael as an almost supernatural force, which they cannot hope to confront without external help. The metaphors used by the Moabites reflect a sense of the people of Israel as an almost non-human mass; the Moabites exclaim: “Now this horde will lick clean all that is about us as an ox licks up the grass of the field,” and Balak refers to them as having “covered the eye of the earth”, a phrase used to describe swarms of locusts. Whether seen as a herd of oxen or a swarm of locusts, it is clear that the perceptions of the people hover between super-human and sub-human. It is here that our text provides us with a classic xenophobic narrative, reflecting a fear of dispossession and a characterization of the “other” as less than human, a narrative which has repeated itself throughout human history.

The text describes the way in which Bilaam continues to attempt to curse the people through techniques of divination, despite signs which suggest that his attempts will be blocked. The first night when Bilaam is visited by Balak’s messengers, God visits him in a dream and tells him” “you will not curse this people, for they are blessed.” However, Bilaam does not convey this message to the messengers. Instead, he simply tells them to return to Moab, because “God will not let me go with you”. Bilaam does not play the role of a true prophet, conveying the divine message, and fails to suggest that God opposes this mission altogether. Had Bilaam conveyed the message, he might have facilitated an authentic dialogue, and assisted the Moabites in perceiving the people of Israel more accurately. Instead, the narrative suggests that Bilaam resists an awareness of what is, attempting to manipulate and alter reality.

It is only at the end of the narrative, when Balak takes Bilaam to the final vantage point from which he hopes Bilaam will curse the people, that Bilaam sees “that it is good in the eyes of God to bless Israel”. At this point, the text tells us, Bilaam does not go out to seek divinations, as he had on previous occasions. Instead, he looks out towards the wilderness, and then lifts his eyes and sees the people encamped according to their tribes. It is only at this point that Bilaam encounters “ruach Elokim” – the spirit of God. On the previous two occasions, God placed a blessing in his mouth, which he forcibly delivered. This time, the blessing flows freely from Bilaam through his encounter with God. Bilaam has finally surrendered his attempts to manipulate reality according to his perceptions, and turns to a genuine perception of what is, which leads to the famous blessing, “mah tovu ohalecha Ya’acov, mishkenotecha Yisrael”. Perhaps, in part, this narrative challenges us to drop our preconceptions of reality and the “other”, and genuinely listen and see the signs around us.

Stillerman, Leanne. "Balak 5770." Limmud on One Leg. (Viewed on July 5, 2014). http://limmud.org/publications/limmudononeleg/5770/balak/


Our Eternal Battle with the Ideology of Pe’or

By Rabbi Yehuda Amital (summarised by Joey Shabot)

The last section of our parasha tells the story of Am Yisrael succumbing to the sin of worshipping the diety of the Moav.

Two verses describe this idol-worship: “And they called the people to the sacrifices of their gods and the people ate and bowed down to their gods. And Yisrael joined itself to Ba’al Pe’or, and the anger of Hashem was kindled against Yisrael” (Numbers 25:2-3).

Apparently, these verses describe two distinct groups of idol worshippers. We know from other places in Torah that the main deity of Moav was not Pe’or, but rather Kemosh. Kemosh was worshipped through sacrifices and genuflection, as described in the first verse. Pe’or, however, was worshipped in a very different manner: not through sacrifices but rather through undressing in front of and defecating on the idol figure.

It is significant that the latter verse, discussing the worship of Pe’or, tells us of Hashem’s anger. Furthermore, whenever the Torah refers to the sin with the women of Moav, it refers to it as “the matter of Pe’or” (Numbers 25:18, 31:16), a clear indication that Pe’or represented the essence of the sin. The number of people who died as a result of this sin was 24,000. Even the sin of the Golden Calf resulted in no more than 3,000 deaths! What precisely was so bad about Pe’or per se, and why does Pe’or receive such prominence as the central sin in this story?

The key to this question lies in the answer to another, more straightforward problem: what was it that made Benei Yisrael, just praised by Bil’am for not adopting perverse and foreign elements (23:9, 21, 23) succumb to this particularly bizarre form of idol worship?

Let us think for a moment beyond the specific manner in which Pe’or was worshipped, and consider the ideology behind it. Pe’or represents an ideology still fashionable today, containing two elements: man living and behaving as he would in his most natural state, and as a result, losing the feeling of common shame (busha) that would otherwise characterize man as distinct from the animals.

According to this ideology, there is no reason for man to feel shame. What is natural is good! Why should fulfilling his most basic and natural physical functions be any cause for hiding? In fact, one would expect the opposite from a God-fearing nation – that man, in celebration of a perfect creation (his wondrous body, and a perfect natural world around him), should do nothing less than embrace nature just as it is, proudly flaunting it as God made it, without adding or taking away. And therefore, it would be perfectly appropriate for these ideas to find expression in nothing less than the very worship of the divine, in the culture of such a nation. Viewed from such a perspective, the manner of Pe’or-worship is indeed articulate poetry, expressing a developed philosophical stance – a stance, however, that Judaism strenuously rejects.

The Torah opens with the theme of the tension between pure nature and shame. The effect of eating from the tree of knowledge, it will be remembered, was to “know the difference between good and bad” (Genesis 2:17). Immediately after tasting from this tree and thus now having the ability to distinguish, Adam and Chava’s first action is to cover their nakedness, fashioning makeshift clothing from the first material in sight (3:7). Adam clearly articulates his first reaction to realizing that he was not dressed: “I was afraid because I was naked…” (3:10). Later, it is Hashem Himself who clothes Adam and Chava (3:21).

The Kabbalists express this idea as central to the whole of creation. Jumble the letters of the first word of the Torah, “Bereishit,” and you can get “Yere boshet” – mindful of shame, which represents the antithesis of unharnessed nature and the antithesis of Ba’al Pe’or. It is man’s job not to be merely part of nature, but to transcend it and perfect it.

Between the days of Ba’al Pe’or and our times, there have been yet others who questioned the theological assertion that man must to a certain degree alter God’s creation. In the well-known midrash (Tanchuma, parashat Tazria), Turnus Rufus, a Roman ruler, questions R. Akiva: “Whose actions are more becoming, God’s or man’s?” R. Akiva, preempting him, asserts that man’s actions are more becoming, and as evidence he illustrates that wheat is useless until man bakes bread with it, and flax is useless until man weaves it. Here, the Roman is really questioning the Jews’ audacity in circumcising their males – how do we dare alter what God made? Indeed, R. Akiva provides an articulate response. His point resounds through the mitzvot, starting from circumcision and extending to such mitzvot as orlat ilan (waiting three years before enjoying the fruit of a tree) and the concept of tzniut (modesty). The same God who created the world also commanded human beings that the world’s natural state is not always perfect or good, and that it is left to man to perfect the world.

The rejection of Pe’or’s “natural” ideology finds expression not only in the Torah’s opening and various mitzvot, but also at its very end. In describing Moshe Rabbeinu’s burial place, the Torah reads “in the valley in the land of Moav against (mul) Beit Pe’or” (Devarim 34:6). Immediately, one cannot help but wonder if the Torah could not find a more complementary manner in which to describe the location, and if it could not have closed with prettier imagery than Pe’or? The Torah’s purpose in summoning associations of the incident described in our parasha, as well as the strategic placement of the grave of Moshe, who can be seen as the embodiment of Torah, becomes obvious in light of the above. The Torah’s challenge to Pe’or’s ideology, and the CONFRONTATION it presents, is clearly symbolized here by the pure contrast: Moshe and his Torah, vs. Pe’or and its temple. Moshe remains eternally poised against Pe’or.

One of the tenets of our Torah is that not everything that is natural is wholesome. And in effect, all of Torah is sandwiched, from Bereishit to Ve-zot Ha-berakha, between reminders of this value.

Amital, Yehuda. "Our Eternal Battle with the Ideology of Pe'or." The Israel Koschitzky Virtual Beit Midrash.  (Viewed on July 5, 2014). http://vbm-torah.org/archive/sichot/bamidbar/40-62balak.htm

A Tichel, a Mechitza, and My People

As a Reform Jew, I was nervous before attending my first service at an Orthodox synagogue. I had to travel to Cape Town, South Africa, for business. The city is home to a sizeable Jewish community with a long and interesting history. There is a Reform community in Cape Town, but they had no events planned during the brief time I would be visiting. Arriving on a Sunday afternoon, with limited time to explore the city, I decided to attend Ma’ariv service at one of the oldest and most beautiful Orthodox synagogues in South Africa.

Continue reading A Tichel, a Mechitza, and My People

Noach, Genesis 6:9-11:32

Link to Parsha: http://www.hebcal.com/sedrot/noach

Leave The Ark

By Dani Passow

Following the tragic and near-utter destruction of humankind during the deluge, Noach, the patriarch of the lone family to survive the flood, offers a sacrifice to God. The Torah records that God finds the smell of the sacrifice pleasing, but follows with a perplexing line: “God smelled the pleasing aroma, and God said in His heart: ‘I will not continue to curse the earth because of man, since the imagination of man’s heart is evil from his youth; nor will I again smite every living being, as I have done.’” Why would God respond to Noach’s sacrifice by stating that man’s heart is evil? Wouldn’t this statement about the innate nature of humankind have been more appropriate as a response to the corruption that precipitated the flood?

To better understand God’s reaction to the sacrifice, we need to explore Noach’s prior behavior. When God first tells Noach to build the ark, the design instructions include the command, “You shall make a window (tzohar) for the ark.” The existence of the tzohar begs Noach to bear witness to the suffering taking place outside of the ark. But Noach doesn’t seem to hear this message. Instead of being aware of the events unfolding outside of the ark, he goes out of his way to remain oblivious. We read that as the storm settles, “Noach removed the covering of the ark;” however, at no point was Noach instructed to place a cover over the ark. It seems that rather than stare the suffering of others in the face, Noach hides from it and uses the ark as a cocoon to shelter himself from the horrors being suffered by the rest of humanity.

Noach’s act of closing himself off from the world is understandable. After the waters have subsided, Noach is so afraid of seeing the devastation that lies beyond the threshold of his wooden bubble that he needs to be commanded by God to leave the ark. Perhaps from the small view he sees when uncovering the ark, Noach is traumatized into paralysis, physically unable to leave his protected world and encounter the destruction outside. Having anticipated this anguish, Noach may have felt the need to remain isolated during the flood, and thus covered the tzohar in order to have the strength to carry out his God-given mission of securing the continued existence of life on earth.

But such action is only a compromise; ideally Noach would have let the tzohar remain uncovered and witnessed the true extent of the suffering. Had he done so, he likely would have been so devastated by what he saw that bringing a sacrifice in gratitude for his own salvation would have seemed inappropriate. Indeed, God’s statement to Noach upon receiving the sacrifice indicates that Noach has distanced himself too greatly from the rest of humanity. How, in the face of so much death and destruction, God implies, do you, Noach, have the gall to bring a sacrifice? The moment of global mourning, Gods seems to be saying, should trump a personal religious expression of thanksgiving.

In our everyday lives, what Noach-like compromises do we make? In what ways do we walk around in our own personal arks choosing to protect the emotional and material well-being of ourselves and our families at the expense of engaging with the suffering and needs of others? What efforts can we make to ensure that nurturing our own spirituality doesn’t overshadow our obligation to be aware of the dire need in the world—the dark reality that 1.4 billion people live on less than $1.25 a day and that 925 million people are undernourished? Living in a globalized world where technology affords us the ability to see the real-time distress of so many around us, have we internalized God’s message of the tzohar and used these tools to pay attention to the plight of those facing challenges around the globe? When, like Noach, we worry that we will be traumatized by trying to address the suffering of others and therefore seek to fortify ourselves for the work ahead of us, do we go too far and retreat too deeply into the mode of self-care, or are we able to strike the proper balance?

We learn from Noach that we are challenged by God to expect to be traumatized in our efforts to heal the world. Truly paying attention to suffering is risky. It may sap our emotional energy, require us to make radical lifestyle changes, and even raise deeply troubling theological questions about justice. It is therefore normal to wish to shelter ourselves from time to time so as not to be overwhelmed; but God is constantly calling, “Leave the Ark!

Passow, Dani. "Noach." Dvar Tzedek. American Jewish World Service. (Viewed on October 6, 2013). http://ajws.org/what_we_do/education/publications/dvar_tzedek/5774/noach.html

The Tower of Babel

By Erin Brouse

Following the account of the flood and God’s destruction of the world, the narrative of the Tower of Babel is found in this week’s parsha.  In the story, everyone is said to have spoken the same language.  As people migrated from the east, they settled in the land of Shinar.  The people there sought to make bricks and build a city and a tower with its top in the sky, to make a name for themselves, so that they not be scattered over the world.  God came down to look at the city and tower, and remarked that as one people with one language, nothing that they sought would be out of their reach.  He punished them by confounding their speech so that they could not understand each other and scattered them over the face of the earth.

The development of “otherness,” of consciousness, of difference, is a central theme in this parsha, following the theme developed in parsha B’reishit.  In the garden, we first learn that God created human beings in his image, “man and woman he created them,” an androgynous whole.   God then decides that Adam needs a partner so he is not alone, and Eve is created from his flesh.  Through relationship with another, partnership, Adam becomes whole: he becomes conscious of himself.  Similarly, consciousness of the world, of good and evil, comes after Adam and Eve eat from the Tree of Knowledge.  They become aware of the world around them.  Their relationship with each other and with God is forever changed as a result.  In Noach, with the story of the Tower of Babel, linguistic difference, the confounding of language, represents the birth of nations.  We move beyond self-consciousness, beyond the awareness of otherness in our intimate relationships, to the consciousness and identification that accompanies a language group.   We become “other” in the largest sense.

What is most interesting about this punishment from God is that it is linguistic homogeneity that is here rejected.  God punishes the people of Babel for their efforts to remain a homogeneous group, for their imperialistic desire to prevent difference.  Difference was God’s ultimate aim, and the hubris that motivated the construction of the Tower and the ambition to “make a name for themselves” was contrary to God’s plan.   Diversity, “otherness,” was required to provide humankind with the conditions it needed to prosper and thrive.   Just as the otherness Eve provided Adam to fulfill our intimate needs as individuals, otherness on a larger scale allows us to feel the bonds of community. The development of community relies on the existence of other communities to which we distinguish ourselves.  We become part of this group, and not that group.

Just as our communities are made-up of individuals, different from each other but united by common language, so too the communities of the world are linked by a common humanity.  Their existence is what allows the other to thrive.   Without them, we cannot feel the important human connection that community brings, and we are deprived of the opportunity to think beyond ourselves and our parochial interests.  We need otherness to realise ourselves.