Parshat Beha'alotkha REAWAKENING SPIRITUAL CONSCIOUSNESS: OUR TOP PRIORITY In this week's parsha, God tells Moshe (Moses) that a
person (ish) who is impure because of contact with a dead body (tameh lanefesh) or too far
away from Jerusalem (derekh rekhoka) is given a second chance to eat the paschal lamb.
(Numbers 9:10-11) The phrase vederekh rehoka, speaks of a physical impediment--one who is simply too far away to partake of the paschal lamb on time. Indeed, throughout Jewish history we have faced both
spiritual and physical challenges. What is most interesting is that in the Torah the
spiritual challenge is mentioned first. This is because it is often the case that
the Jewish community is more threatened spiritually than physically. Throughout Jewish history whenever anti-semitism prevailed non- Jews did not marry Jews. In America we are so free that non-Jews are marrying us in droves. The late Prof. Eliezer Berkovits was correct when he said that from a sociological perspective, a Jew is one whose grandchildren are Jewish. The painful reality is that large numbers of the
grandchildren of today's American Jews will not be Jewish. Most interesting is that even the phrase vederekh rehoka, which on the surface is translated as a physical stumbling block, can be understood as a spiritual crisis. On top of the last letter of rehoka (the heh), is a dot. Many commentators understand this mark to denote that, in order to understand this phrase, the heh should be ignored. As a consequence, the term rahok, which is masculine, cannot refer to derekh which is feminine. It rather refers to the word ish, found earlier in the sentence. (Jerusalem Talmud Psakhim 9:2) The phrase therefore may refer to Jews who are physically close to Jerusalem yet spiritually far, far away. The message is clear. What is needed is a refocusing of our priorities from physical to spiritual salvation. The Torah teaches that the Jewish community must continue to confront anti-Semitism everywhere. But while combating anti-Semitism is an important objective in and of itself, the effort must be part of a far larger goal--the stirring and reawakening of Jewish consciousness throughout the world. Shabbat Shalom © 5759/1999. All
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