Parshas Vayakhel
Home Is Where the Soul Is
The great drama of the birth of the Jewish people unfolds in the hallowed
pages of the Torah in five acts, corresponding to the five books of the
Pentateuch. The Book of Exodus, the last portion of which we will be
reading this week, begins with the enslavement of the Jewish people. It
tells of their suffering, their heartbreak, their anguished outcries that
tore the heavens asunder. As we read on, Moses, the messenger of Hashem,
humbles and humiliates the Egyptians with miracles and plagues. Then, in
the spectacular climax of the book, we see the Jewish people emerge from
slavery to a rendezvous with destiny at Mount Sinai, where they receive
the Torah directly from Hashem, forming a bond to last forever.
And then we come to the conclusion. What do the last chapters tell us
about? What exhilarating finale appears on the last pages of Exodus?
Surprisingly, it is a minutely detailed architectural description of the
Mishkan, the Tabernacle that served as the earthly Abode for the Divine
Presence until the construction of the Holy Temple. How do these chapters
serve as the conclusion to the Exodus story?
Let us reflect for a moment. What is the essence of the Exodus story? It
is the spiritual adventure of the Jewish people, rising from the nadir of
existence, from abject bondage in an alien land and to the glorious
heights of exalted nationhood in their own homeland. But what constitutes
a homeland? Is it simply the place where we work, eat and sleep, the place
where we own a little piece of the soil? It must be something more.
Millions of soldiers have perished in wars to protect their homelands. Why
were their homelands more precious to them than life itself?
The answers go to the essence of our very identity. We are more than flesh
and bones, more than hearts and minds. We are aggregates of our beliefs,
our values, our attitudes, all the cultural habits engendered and nurtured
by our environment. We are a reflection of the land and the culture in
which we live, and our culture is, in turn, a reflection of us. Our
environment thus becomes an extension of ourselves, the fountainhead of
our identity, and without it we are lost and incomplete. It makes sense,
therefore, that people feel so deeply threatened by an attack on their
homeland that they are prepared lay down their lives to defend it.
When the Jewish people left Egypt for a homeland of their own, they were
not simply exchanging one terrain for another. They were leaving behind a
corrupt society steeped in idolatry, magic and superstition and preparing
to build a sanctified society predicated on a special relationship with
the Master of the Universe. This was the overriding feature of the new
Jewish society, the value that would make the Holy Land a true home for
the Jewish people.
Therefore, the construction of the Mishkan, giving the Divine Presence a
permanent Abode among the Jewish people, was the ultimate realization of a
Jewish homeland. In this sense, even when they were in the Desert for
forty years, moving from encampment to encampment, they were always at
home, because the Mishkan was in their midst. The finale of the Exodus
story is indeed the entry of the Jewish people into their new homeland,
but that entry occurred well before they crossed the Jordan River. As soon
as they built the Mishkan, as described in this week’s Torah portion, the
Jewish people were finally at home.
A mother took her young son on a trip around the world. Together, they
traveled by airplane, ship, train, bus, automobile and even camelback.
They climbed the highest mountains, sailed the bluest seas, explored most
remote corners of the earth.
After a year, they returned, exhausted but happy, to the warm embrace of
their family.
“Come here, young man,” said the youthful traveler’s grandmother.
“Tell me, where were you this past year?”
“Don’t you know, grandmother?” asked the boy. “I was with my mother all
the time!”
In our own lives, we almost invariably focus on the appearance of our
homes, because we see them as extensions and expressions of ourselves. And
rightfully so. But our homes reflect not only our tastes in architecture,
furniture and art. Our values, our ideals, our level of spirituality are
all more integral to the nature of our homes than anything Aelse. They
truly make our homes shine with a spiritual light that can enrich our
families and all those who enjoy our hospitality.
Text Copyright © 2008 by Rabbi Naftali Reich and Torah.org.
Rabbi Reich is on the faculty of the Ohr Somayach Tanenbaum Education Center.