DEFINING MAKHLOKET
INTRODUCTION TO PARASHAT
HASHAVUA
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In memory of
Yakov Yehuda ben Pinchas Wallach
and Miriam Wallach bat Tzvi
Donner
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PARASHAT
KORACH
DEFINING
MAKHLOKET
By
Rabbi Yaakov Beasley
A.
INTRODUCTION
By
this stage in Sefer Bamidbar, challenges to Moshe have become
commonplace, almost expected. In
our parasha, however, the complaint at hand is Moshe's leadership
itself. In Parashat Korach,
the people's ire is focused directly at Moshe and Aharon not at their
decisions, promises, and supposed failures. After several attempts to negotiate and
placate the rebels, Moshe invoked a miracle to prove the authenticity of his
mission:
Then
Moshe said: "This is how you will know that Hashem has sent me to do all
these things and that it was not my idea. If these men die a natural death,
experiencing only what usually happens to men, then Hashem has not sent
me. But if Hashem brings about something totally new, and the earth opens
its mouth and swallows them with everything that belongs to them, and they go
down alive into the grave, then you will know that these men have treated
Hashem with contempt."
Hashem
immediately responded to Moshe's request:
As
soon as he finished saying all this, the ground under them split apart and the
earth opened its mouth and swallowed them, with their households and all of
Korach's men and all their possessions. They went down alive into the grave,
with everything they owned; the earth closed over them, and they perished, and
they were gone from the community.
Despite
this dramatic vindication - Korach and his followers were swallowed up by the
ground and Hashem clearly answered and sided with Moshe against the
rebels - the
argument did not end at this point. The very next morning, the
Jewish people returned, still complaining.
Hashem's dramatic intervention did not end the dispute, but rather
became the next subject of the people's anger. Only Aharon's intervention prevented the
spread of a deadly plague among the people, and the subsequent flowering of his
staff brings the questioning to an end.
B. WHO
WERE THE REBELS?
When
we read the story of Korach, we immediately note the narrative's complexity[1]. The Korach conflict is difficult to
disentangle. How did Korach ultimately die? Why did Hashem desire to destroy
all of the Jewish people? How many people opposed Moshe, and for what
reasons? Clearly, several factions
appear in the text, each one with their own grievance. First, there was Korach
himself. The unusual length of the genealogy given in the opening verse -
"Korach, son of Yitzhar, son of Kohath, son of Levi" - suggested to Rashi the
reason for Korach's discontent:
My
father was one of four brothers
Amram was the firstborn. Of his sons, Aaron was
awarded the priesthood and Moshe was given kingship. Who is worthy of receiving
the next honor if not the second [brother, Yitzhar]? I, Yitzhar's son should
have been made prince of the clan, but instead Moshe appointed Elizaphan, son of
Uziel [the fourth and youngest brother; see Bamidbar 3:30]. Should the
youngest of father's brothers be greater than I? I will dispute with him and
undo whatever he does.
Korach
was aggrieved that he had been passed over when leaders were appointed for the
various clans. Already slighted when his father's older brother, Amram, had
provided Bnei Yisrael with their two supreme leaders, Moshe and Aaron,
the further rejection of being passed over for the nesiut, when his
father was the second oldest brother and Uziel was the youngest, was an
additional insult. He felt humiliated and he was determined to bring Moshe and
Aaron down.
Frustrated
ambition lay behind the involvement of two other groups as well. The Malbim
explains:
The
grievance [of Dathan and Abiram and On ben Peleth] lay in the fact that they
belonged to the tribe of Reuven who, as the firstborn son of Jacob, was entitled
to the highest offices of spiritual and political leadership. Instead, they
complained, the priesthood and divine service had been given to the tribe of
Levi and leadership of the tribes to Judah and Joseph.
Similarly,
the 250 men contended that as "princes of the assembly, famous in the
congregation, men of renown," the priesthood belonged to them, and not to
Aharon's descendants. Instead of conferring a hereditary title on a tribe, they
asserted that individual prestige and distinction should be the defining factors
when allotting honors. Ibn Ezra suggests that these 250 rebels were in fact
firstborn who thought that the priesthood was their natural prerogative.[2]
Although
Reuven was the firstborn of Yaakov, the tribe was continually and systematically
passed over when it came to leadership roles. For members of the other tribes and
families, resentment lingered from after the sin of the Golden Calf, when Moshe
took the office of the kehuna, the priesthood, and gave it to the
Kohanim of the tribe of Levi.
Thus, each of the three groups were motivated by envy and an apparent
desire for revenge against the two men, Moshe and Aaron, who seemed to have
arrogated the leadership roles to themselves, ignoring the people's rightful
representatives.
Why
did all this simmering resentment boil over into a dramatic conflagration at
this point? The Ramban explains
that as long as the Jewish people, despite their all complaints and grumblings,
felt that they were moving toward their appointed destination, Korach and the
other malcontents realized that there was no possibility of successfully rousing
the people in revolt. Once Hashem decreed, however, that the people would
not live to enter Eretz Yisrael, Korach sensed immediately that his
moment of opportunity had arrived; the people were disillusioned and they had
nothing to lose.
C.
DEFINING MAKHLOKET
The
argument between Moshe Rabbenu and his opponents has ramifications far beyond
our parasha's narrative. For
the Sages, this conflict became the paradigm of the wrong kind of
disagreement:
In
the end, every argument for the sake of heaven will be of permanent value, but
every argument not for the sake of heaven will not endure. Which is an argument
for the sake of heaven? The argument between Hillel and Shammai. Which is an
argument not for the sake of heaven? The argument of Korach and his company.
(Pirkei Avot
5:17)
What
is it about this disagreement that distinguishes it from all the others in
Tanakh? More importantly,
what qualities determine that an argument is "not for the sake of heaven"? The
standard of endurance cannot help here; people involved in an argument cannot
jump forward in time to the future to see whether or not their disagreement
endured. Almost everyone who
enters a disagreement would claim that they do so out of principle, not for
selfish motives. When involved in
an argument in the present, how can a person assess its value? Let us look at two commentators to help
ascertain what those defining qualities are.
The
first commentator that we will examine is the Meiri. In his commentary to Pirkei Avot,
he explains this teaching as follows:
The
arguments between Hillel and Shammai:
In their debates, one of them would render a decision and the other would argue
against it, out of a desire to discover the truth, not out of cantankerousness
or a wish to prevail over his fellow. That is why when he was right, the words
of the person who disagreed endured. An argument not for the sake of heaven was
that of Korach and his company, for they came to undermine Moshe, our master,
may he rest in peace, and his position, out of envy and contentiousness and
ambition for victory.
For
the Meiri, there is a fundamental distinction between two kinds of conflict:
argument
for the sake of truth and
argument for the sake of victory.
This stands out in the text, as Moshe's repeated attempts to enter
into negotiations with the rebels, Korach as well as Datan and Aviram, are
rebuffed. The Midrash Tanchuma
comments on the total silence of Korach throughout the
narrative:
And
Moshe said to Korach: Hear now,
sons of Levi! Moshe
uttered these words in an endeavor to appease Korach, but you do not find that
Korach responded. This is because
Korach was clever in his wickedness, saying, "If I answer him, I know that he is
a wise man, and will outwit me in his arguments, and I will be forced to become
reconciled to him. Better that I
should not enter into any discussion with him."
The
Malbim, on the other hand, sees a different quality in the Korach rebellion that
enables us to understand why it is the prime example of an argument not for the sake of
heaven:
Our
Sages wished to point out that in a holy or heavenly cause, both sides are in
fact united by one purpose, to further unselfish, Divine ends. However, in an argument not for the sake
of heaven, for personal advancement and the like, then even those who have
banded together on one side are not really united. Each govern their moves by calculations
as to what they stand to gain, and would cut the others' throats if it would
advance their own interests.
The
Malbim points out that ultimately, the attempt by the rebels would have
disintegrated. Even had they
succeeded in deposing Moshe, who would have replaced him? Had Korach attempted
to assume the mantle of leadership, Datan and Aviram would have risen up in arms
against him. The only common ground
between them was their desire to replace Moshe and Aharon. This reality, implies the Malbim,
accounts for the strange wording of the mishna. When it brings an example of an argument
not for the sake of heaven, it lists the two sides. In our case, however, all that is
written is "Korach and his congregation." They are the only two combatants in the
picture, for ultimately, they would have turned on each other.
[1] See R. Elchanan Samet's discussion of the difficulties and
irregularities in the parsha's larger structure in http://vbm-torah.org/parsha.60/38korach.htm
.
[2] See last year's Introduction to Parasha to Parashat
Beha'alotekha, at http://vbm-torah.org/archive/intparsha68/36-68behaal.htm, which
discusses the simmering resentment throughout the Torah among the people over
the replacement of the firstborn, the representatives of each family, with
Shevet Levi.