Parshas Haazinu
Location is Not Everything1
For Hashem’s portion is His people; Yaakov is the measure of His
inheritance.
Nations, we suppose, are products of people living alongside each other long
enough to develop bonds of language, history and culture. Location is said
to be important in other applications, but it is all the more so in regard
to the formation of large identity-groups that persist for generations. This
is because location is more than the backdrop against which developments
bring people together. Geographical proximity is an active agent in creating
shared identity. The nature of the land – its resources, its terrain, its
location in relationship to other peoples – leaves a deep imprint upon the
common identity, as river people, desert people, and mountain people each
dealt with the challenges of their environs in different ways. Agrarian
societies grouped together people who shared the rough soil under the
fingernails; other societies to this day see that soil as part of their
legacy, if only in a figurative sense.
No factor was as important in creating the sense of us-versus-them than the
sharing of territory, and protecting it against the usurper. Even ancient
religion – whose modern forms have succeeded equally well in pitting nation
against nation, and culture against culture – was imprinted deeply by
territory. Those peoples addressed the different challenges they faced by
identifying deities who presided over the solutions to their problems, and
paying homage to them.
One nation broke this mold. Klal Yisrael became a nation in a territorial
vacuum. It was born in foreign lands, and nurtured in a wilderness. It was
only allowed to take possession of its land after it had matured, blossomed
and developed. Klal Yisrael was allowed its place on earth after it had
achieved all that other nations accomplished because of their land. Klal
Yisrael was to impose itself upon its land, to further its
already-articulated mission, rather than have the land form it. (Indeed,
many of the other tasks of building up the land were left to caretaker
peoples, who would occupy the land and ready it for the entrance of the
Jewish people at the time Hashem saw as appropriate.)
Why? Because “Hashem’s portion is His people.” Klal Yisrael and HKBH are
linked and bonded as geography is wedded to other peoples. Yisrael is His
portion, as it were – and He is ours. What shared space is to others, focus
upon Hashem must be to us. The sole factors that are to shape our culture
are the mission statements of our people as articulated in the Torah. Our
instructions are to take a bundle of social, economic, and moral values –
all flowing directly from the Torah – into the land, and apply them there.
The importance of landlessness is reflected in the name Hashem assigns us in
this pasuk. We are not called Yisrael here, but Yaakov. “Yaakov is the
measure of His inheritance.” Yaakov lived his life “grabbing on the heel” of
another. He did not have his own land, and depended on others for sustenance
and even survival. He brought to the challenges of life neither power nor
special skill – other than the one that mattered most: complete confidence
in Hashem.
For close to two millennia, his children followed Yaakov’s lead. They were
left unskilled, untrained, and destitute. With no place of their own, they
had neither power nor basic security. Because of this, they were spurned and
derided by the nations with which they interacted – even though their abject
poverty and all it brought with it was engineered by those same nations.
In spite of this, or perhaps because of it, Klal Yisrael became Hashem’s
portion. While other nations had no need for Him, or served Him bizarrely or
superficially, Am Yisrael remained focused on its mission of taking G-d’s
presence seriously.
We had nothing. Because of this, we had everything.
1. Based on the Hirsch Chumash, Devarim 32:9