Parshas Behar
The Perpetuity Of Purpose
After the Jews crossed over the Yarden, the land was divided between the
tribes and further subdivided between the families. Those parcels of land
were called ancestral properties. It was intended that these properties
remain in the possession of their original families; however, a family
could sell their properties due to dire economic circumstances. The second
to last Parsha in Vayikra presents the laws of Yovel (Jubile) and the
return of ancestral properties to their original owners.
The sale of ancestral properties was not a complete transference of
ownership from the family of origin to the buyer. Almost all ancestral
properties reverted back to their families of origin at the Yovel (50th
year) year; therefore, a more accurate description of what the Torah means
by the sale of such property would be a long-term lease. Additionally, the
sale was only guaranteed for two years. Following the first two years of
the sale the original family(the sellers) could at any time buy back the
property for its original selling price.
The laws of Yovel were intended to recalibrate the overall economy of
Israel. Those who had made money from their land purchases and
developments during the previous 50 years would of course keep their
profits but at the Yovel year the original properties and their
developments would revert back to the ownership of the original family. On
the one hand it might seem unfair, on the other hand, every investor and
developer went into a land purchase knowing that their purchase/lease was
capped at fifty years.
The law of the return of properties at the Yovel made it absolutely clear
that all things, including ownership of land and the successes of
investments, were determined by G-d and G-d alone. As the Parsha states,
(25:23) "...The land belongs to Me. You are merely dwellers and sojourners
with Me."
Allow me to explain.
At the time of the Exodus all the Jews were wealthy. No one was destitute
and no one had financial needs. Fulfilling G-d's request, they had taken
with them the wealth of Egypt. Added to that was the wealth of the drowned
Egyptian army that had been collected on the shores of the Yam Suf.
During their time in the desert G-d took care of all their needs "like a
mother nurses her child." When they entered the land of Israel they were
each given a portion of land from which they were able to support their
families and their future descendents. In essence, G-d designed it that
the Jews would never have to be dependent on any one else or any other
nation for their economic well-being.
The underlying message was, "You are my servants, not the servants of
servants." You are to be subject only to Me. You are not to be enslaved to
the daily grind of eking out an existence from unforgiving ground and
relentless pressures. However, this exclusive relationship with G-d
presumed a level of Emunah (filth) and Bitachon (trust) that reflected the
lessons of the Exodus and the desert experience. It presumed a belief in
the totality of G-d's benevolence as the source of all wealth no different
than He had been at the time the Jews exited Egypt and entered the
Promised Land. It presumed a trust of G-d that He would continue to be the
source of all wealth and economic independence,
always and forever.
The truly foolish reality of Jewish history is that regardless of where we
lived, whether in Israel or in the Diaspora, the message remained the
same. Our dependency on G-d remained absolute and complete. Regardless of
the good times or the bad times, whether it was the golden era of Spanish
Jewry and the extraordinary success of the modern day American community,
or the centuries of persecution and destitution that has been until
recently the normative Jewish experience, our dependency on G-d was and
remains absolute and complete. The only variable is the degree of our
forced enslavement to the demands of society and economy. The greater our
Emunah (faith) and Bitachon (trust) the less our enslavement. The less our
belief and trust in the totality of our dependency on G-d the more our
enslavement to the demands of society and economy.
Continuing with the theme of Vayikra, Kedusha (sanctity) and the
designation of purpose and value as defined by our service to G-d, the
Torah details the laws of ancestral portions and the return of those
properties at Yovel to their families of origin. It makes sense to
conclude that the portion every family received was unique to them and
their service to G-d. As such, the recalibration of the economy with the
return of the ancestral properties to their families of origin served to
reconnect each family unit to the concept of mandated purpose, value, and
the totality of their dependence on G-d.
In Parshas B'Haloscha, the commentaries argue as to whether or not Yisro
returned to Midian or continued on with the nation in occupying the land
of Israel. In past issues I explained that Yisro's dilemma was predicated
on the fact that as a convert he would not receive an ancestral portion of
the land. Eventually, his children would marry into the nation and inherit
a portion, but not himself. Therefore, Yisro may have concluded that the
land of israel was not essential to his personal mission as an servant of
G-d; otherwise he too would have received a portion. Because he was not
going to receive a portion he felt that he could return to Midian to
accomplish his personal mission - spreading the word of G-d to the other
nations.
The Jews of the Exodus were different. From the very beginning at the Bris
Bain Habsarim (covenant between the halves) G-d promised Avraham that his
children would inherit the land and leave their time of enslavement with
great wealth. Clearly, G-d intended that the Jews should live in Israel
without the ongoing economic worries that plague us today. On a more
profound level, it was clear that G-d intended that each tribes should
live in a specific location and that each family should have their
exclusive place, their Makom Kavuah, their ancestral portion within their
tribe's borders.
For the Jews to achieve their mission they must live in Israel. For any
one family to achieve their personal mission they must be connected to
their ancestral properties. In fact, the concept of divinely allocated
ancestral properties goes even further. It suggests that every person must
approach his or her personal service to G-d from a multileveled
perspective. On the one hand he must view his own unique talents,
strengths, and challenges (weaknesses) in ascertaining his unique purpose
and mission. He must also consider the family into which he was born to
further understand and expand his identity and mission. He must then
consider the tribe to which he belongs as well as the general designation
and value of his position as a member of the Jewish people.
The message becomes clearer and clearer. "Love your neighbor as you love
yourself” translates into value your neighbor as you value yourself. Start
with valuing yourself. Do the work of ascertaining your own unique
creation and purpose as defined by the person you are, the family and
tribe into which you were born, and the choseness of being a Jew. Know
that G-d intended whatever is the sum total of that equation. Likewise,
every other "neighbor" (Jew) that you will meet will be equally chosen and
valuable. Be certain to value him or her as they deserve to be valued and
treat them accordingly. From that familiar point of reference we must then
extrapolate the value of every human being. More so, recognize and accept
that G-d grants Jew and non-Jew the means for attaining their purpose
(their unique mission) no different than G-d provides you with the means
of attaining your purpose. (Birchas Kohanim - the blessings of the
Kohanim - see Rabbi Samson Raphael Hirsch))
Therefore; make sure that your interaction with everyone advances their
personal cause rather than hinders it. Recognize and accept that the
confluence of destinies that brought you in contact with each other, for
however long or short a time, was intended by the Creator for each of
yours advancement. Sometimes the encounter will force you to overcome
negative traits within yourself and better yourself in the process. Other
times it will reinforce positive traits of kindness, generosity, and
humility and strengthen your better self in preparation for greater
opportunities and challenges. At the same time, the other person is also
being granted the opportunity of growing through overcoming the negative
and strengthening the positive. Nothing is by chance, everything is by
design, and the opportunities of serving G-d and each other are constant
and ever present.
What does G-d want from us? Clearly, He wishes us to come to terms with
the tools He has given us and do our best in accomplishing our mission.
That is why G-d provided so many hints and sign posts along the road of
our lives to help us succeed and not fail.
Also, G-d does not give up on us. Rav Dessler has a magnificent essay on
not giving up on ourselves where he states that the further we are from
recognizing G-d the greater His Chesed (kindness). Not to suggest that the
sinner benefits from his sinning; just the opposite. The sinner must and
will suffer the consequences of his actions; however, G-d will never give
up on that sinner. G-d will continue to provide opportunity after
opportunity for the advancement of that person toward the successful
fulfillment of his or her mission.
What happened when a person or family failed to accomplish their mission
due to financial hardships of their own doing or otherwise? Clearly,
everything happens within the design of the Creator and the individual and
family must have needed to undergo the financial difficulties in order to
accomplish their mission. Because G-d is invested in success rather than
failure we can assume that at some point the intended lesson of being
destitute was learned by the family and individual or else G-d would have
employed some other approach. Therefore, at some point G-d granted the
family the opportunity of regaining its original wealth. That opportunity
came every 50 years with the laws of Yovel.
Imagine a family that had to sell its ancestral portion due to economic
hardships. Although the sale provides a degree of relief the family never
regains the opportunity of redeeming their original land. Fifty years pass
during which the ensuing one, two, or three generations learn the tools
and skills intended by G-d to advance their mission. During that time the
ancestral lands were successfully developed into income producing
properties that earned for their interim owners wealth and financial
independence. With the advent of Yovel the original owners of the land,
the family of origin, stand to experience an economic windfall when their
ancestral properties are returned to them fully developed and financially
viable. At that time they can either arrange some kind of a managerial
deal with the interim owners so that they both reap the benefits of the 50
years of investment or they can undertake the management of the properties
themselves. Either way, the family discovers that the 50 years of relative
difficulty have ended and G-d has once again granted them the gift of
potential economic independence. In essence, G-d has repeated history and
given the family a second chance for living in Israel under similar
conditions as their ancestors lived when they first crossed over the
Yarden river! Once again the family is in the position to accomplish its
intended mission without economic worries and difficulties.
This concept of correction and second chance is evident from Rashi 25:18.
The verse says, "Do My decrees and My ordinances (the laws of Shemitah)...
and you will live securely in the land." Rashi comments, "Because of the
sin of not keeping the Shemitah (seven year cycle) the Jews were exiled
from the land... The 70 years of exile in Babylon were in exchange of the
70 Shemitahs that the Jews did not keep." The laws of Shemitah and exile
teach us that our wealth and economic independence is a gift from G-d.
Without His ongoing benevolence and largess we would not have the economic
safety and independence we enjoy. So long as we recognize upon Whom we
depend and keep His Mitzvos we are gifted with that independence as well
as the tool called Israle. If we do not remember our absolute dependency
on G-d and do not use Israle to accomplish our individual, familial, and
national objectives G-d takes back His gift of economic and national
independence.
The objective of the Jewish nation is to spread the reality of the Creator
to the rest of the nations. The easiest way to do so is by all of us
living in Israel and living in the way G-d intended with economic
independence and security. However, when we ignored the 70 years of
Shemitah and lost sight of: who we were as a nation, what our mission was
as a nation, and upon Whom we were dependent for the gift of economic
independence and Israel, G-d sent us into exile. His reason for doing so
was to continue our national mission of teaching His reality to the other
nations. However, we would have to do so without the ease and benefit of
economic and national independence. Instead, we would still have to
accomplish our mission while subject to the persecution and economic
pressures of another nation. Once the 70 years of Shemitah had been made
up and we had learned the lesson of our absolute and total dependency on G-
d (the story of Purim) G-d gave us back Israel, the Temple, and a second
chance. Finally, as we near the end of Vayikra, the book devoted to
presenting the ideal life style of the Jew (a lifestyle of sanctity,
designation, purpose, and value), the Torah once again emphasizes the
setting of family to accomplish this ideal. It is the family that sells
its ancestral lands and it is the family that will eventually regain its
wealth and independence with the return of the properties at Yovel.
The verse states (25:23) "And the land should not be sold in Tzmitzus
(perpetuity) because the land belongs to Me (and not you)." The original
division of the land between the 12 tribes and further subdivision between
the families was intended by G-d for reasons far beyond economic and
financial fairness. Each parcel and section is intimately linked to the
identity and mission of the person, family, and nation. G-d tells us in no
uncertain terms, "Keep those divisions! Follow My prescription for success
and independence! Protect and maintain the sanctity of the land, the
sanctity of the family, and the sanctity of the individual. If you do so,
(25:24) "...redemption will come to the land!"
Text Copyright © 2005 by Rabbi Aron Tendler and Torah.org
The author is the Rabbi of Shaarey Zedek Congregation, Valley
Village, CA, and Assistant Principal of YULA.