Parshas Shlach
Being Taught From The Get-Go: Eretz Yisrael Has Supernatural Requirements
These divrei Torah were adapted from the hashkafa portion of Rabbi
Yissocher Frand's Commuter Chavrusah Tapes on the weekly portion: Tape #
685, Art Museums. Good Shabbos!
Virtually all Torah commentaries – going back to the early Rishonim –
grapple with the issue of defining the sin of the meraglim [spies]. After
all, the meraglim were sent on a mission to spy out the Land of Israel and
to come back with a report. That is precisely what they did. Moshe asked
them to report on whether the inhabitants were strong or weak and they
reported back that they did not like what they saw – the inhabitants were
fearfully strong.
They were punished for this report and we were punished and are being
punished to this very day! The question is, what exactly did they do wrong?
The approach of the Baal haAkeida is that their sin was adding editorial
comment to the factual report. The editorial comment that they made was
adding the words "Efes,ki az ha'Am" (But all this is for naught, because
the nation there is too strong) [Bamidbar 13:28]. This addition deviated
from the facts. It constituted personal assessment and editorial comment.
The Akeida gives an analogy. Someone sends a friend to go to the tailor's
shop and check out a specific garment. He is supposed to investigate the
materials, the craftsmanship, dimensions, size, and price. The friend did
as he was told – he checked out the quality of the garment, he measured its
size, he noted down the price. He came back and reported everything he
learned about the garment, but then he added "It is not the right color for
you and it is too expensive!"
This friend went beyond his designated mission. Whether or not the garment
is the right color and whether it is too expensive is a matter of opinion
and should depend on the opinion of the buyer, not of his agent!
The Shalo"h rejects the approach of the Akeidah. The Shalo"h says that it
is incorrect to blame the spies for giving "editorial opinion". After all,
Moshe did ask them to determine if the nation was strong or weak. This
requires subjective judgment. Such a request invites editorial comment, so
to speak, by the meraglim.
The Shalo"h takes a totally opposite approach. Moshe Rabbeinu indeed
wanted their opinion, however he did not only want their military opinion,
but he wanted their opinion based on a Torah philosophy (hashkafas
haTorah). Moshe knew full well that they would find a land in which
there were strongly fortified cities inhabited by giants. The appropriate
report for the spies to have returned with was "Yes they are strong and yes
they are mighty and maybe even by the ways of nature we would not be
successful against their armies, but we have the Master of the World on our
side."
Moshe wanted a pep talk from the spies. Their mission was to present the
facts as they were (the people of Canaan are mighty), but to encourage the
nation that with G-d's Help, these Canaanite armies would be delivered into
the hands of the Jewish people. Moshe expected the spies to remind the
people that they were also outnumbered by the Egyptians and they had no way
to survive by natural means at the Red Sea, but that G-d's Presence on our
side negates all the military advantages that our adversaries may possess.
Instead, Moshe received a dispassionate and secular analysis of the
military situation as if G-d would have no role to play in the upcoming
battle for the Land of Canaan.
Rav Moshe Shapiro, shlit"a, asks that this approach of the Shalo"h seems
to fly in the face of that which the Rabbis tell us that one should never
put himself in a situation of temptation. We should never tempt the evil
inclination. For the spies to come back and say "The Canaanites are strong
and they are giants and they would overwhelm us military if the battle
would be conducted based on the rules of nature (derech haTeva)" inevitably
would tempt those of weak faith to panic – as they did – and question the
wisdom of proceeding onwards to Eretz Yisrael. Why tempt the yetzer hara? A
person should try to avoid tests of faith (nisyonos).
Not everyone is on the spiritual level to hear such a report with
equanimity and bitachon (faith). Certainly, when we are dealing with an
army of 600,000 potential soldiers there will be a significant contingent
that will react negatively to such news. What was Moshe Rabbeinu thinking
(according to the Shalo"h's explanation) by inviting such a report from the
meraglim?
Rav Moshe Shapiro answers that maybe in other areas of life we should
never tempt the evil inclination or test people in matters of faith, but
there is a pre-condition (t'nai) in acquiring the Land of Israel that must
be clearly spelled out. Before acquiring the Land of Israel, one must have
the realization that without the Almighty we are not going to make it! This
is why they had to hear this grim report. The aleph-beis (A-B-Cs) of
acquiring Eretz Yisrael is "If you think you will be able to live there
"b'derech haTeva" [according to the ways of nature], forget it!" The Land
of Israel only works with the Ribono Shel Olam. "The Land upon which Hashem
your G-d seeks its welfare constantly; His Eyes are upon it from the
beginning of the year until the end of the year" [Devarim 11:12] Eretz
Yisrael is a different place, a different environment. Moshe knew that if
the Jews did not come with this attitude from the get-go, then they would
never succeed in Eretz Yisrael.
This special quality is not something that can be hidden under the carpet.
It is not something that can be "brought up later". In order to receive
Eretz Yisrael, it had to be clear from the outset that this would NOT
happen according to the laws of nature.
When Eretz Yisrael was literally being destroyed, the Almighty told the
prophet Yirmiyahu to go buy a field and record the deed [Yirmiyahu
32:9-10]. Real Estate values were collapsing. The country was about to be
captured. Was this the time to buy land? The answer is – as the prophet
says – that despite the bleak outlook in the short run, our promise from
G-d is that He will return us to this land and we will once again build
houses therein. Even in the bleakest of moments we needn't worry. But it is
always only with the Help and the Power of the Ribono shel Olam –
supernatural occurrences. This is the way one conquers and takes possession
of the Land of Israel.
A famous story was told at the eulogy of the Ponevitcher Rav, Rabbi Yosef
Shlomo Kahaneman. Rav Kahaneman bought a piece of land in what is today
Bnei Brak with borrowed money. The context in which this Lithuanian Rabbi
purchased the future site of the Ponevitcher Yeshiva is most interesting:
The Nazis were on the gates of over-running Egypt in the African campaign
of World War II. The British in Palestine were already burning their
documents because they were afraid they might fall into German hands.
Hitler's favorite general Erwin Rommel was finally defeated by General
Bernard Montgomery, but had that not occurred, the Nazi armies would have
been on their way to Palestine to massacre the Jewish community there.
It was at that moment in history that Rav Kahaneman bought real estate in
Bnei Brak with borrowed money in order to build his future Yeshiva. The
Ponevitcher Rav said at that time that the only prophecies recorded in the
Torah were those which were needed for future generations. The command to
Yirmiyahu to buy land when things looked bleakest was a command, he said,
that was needed for his own generation as well. It was Rav Kahaneman's
faith in the eternity of that command to Yirmiyahu which prompted him to
buy real estate in Palestine while the Nazi army was on the verge of
conquering Egypt.
This is not the way it works in America or in France or in Brazil. These
places do not have the promise that they are lands "upon which Hashem your
G-d seeks their welfare constantly". Eretz Yisrael is a special land and
things work there in special – supernatural – ways.
This week's write-up is adapted from the hashkafa portion of Rabbi
Yissocher Frand's Commuter Chavrusah Torah Tapes on the weekly Torah
portion. The complete list of halachic portions for this parsha from the
Commuter Chavrusah Series are:
Tape # 016 - Mixed Seating at Weddings
Tape # 061 - The Minyan: Who Counts?
Tape # 105 - Tallis: Does it Cover Only Married Men?
Tape # 150 - Tzitzis: Must They Be Worn?
Tape # 197 - Carrying Medicine on Shabbos
Tape # 243 – The Concept of Prison in Jewish Law
Tape # 287 - Women and Tzitzis
Tape # 333 - Techeiles Today
Tape # 377 - Tzitzis: Must they Be Seen?
Tape # 421 - The Issur of Histaklus
Tape # 465 - Donning a Tallis for the Amud
Tape # 509 - Ain Ma'averin Al Hamitzvos
Tape # 553 – Women and Tzitzis Revisited
Tape # 597 - Davening at the Graves of Tzadikim
Tape # 641 - K'rias Shema and K'eil Melech Ne'eman
Tape # 685 - Art Museums
Tape # 729 - Making Tzitzis
Tape # 773 - Kavanah When Wearing Tzitzis
Tape # 817 – Davening for a Rasha to Change – Does It Work?
Tape # 861 – Do We Knead Challah in America
Tapes or a complete catalogue can be ordered from the Yad Yechiel Institute,
PO Box 511, Owings Mills MD 21117-0511. Call (410) 358-0416 or e-mail
tapes@yadyechiel.org or visit http://www.yadyechiel.org/ for further
information.
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