The children of Israel are en route to the Land of Canaan when they are attacked by the armies of Sichon and Og, whose domain lay on the eastern bank of the Jordanian river. Moses leads the Israelites into battle, defeats the two kings and conquers their land. Right after that, in an unexpected turn of events, the tribes of Gad and Reuben, who own an enormous amount of sheep and cattle, ask that they be given these territories, which were prime pastureland, in lieu of their allotment in the land of Canaan, which lay to the west of the Jordan.
The Bible relates in this week’s portion:1 "The descendants of Reuben and Gad had an extremely large number of
animals. And
they saw that the Ya’azer and Gilead areas were good for livestock. The
descendants of Gad and Reuben came and presented the following petition to
Moses… ‘If we have found favor in your eyes, may this land be given to your
servants for a possession; do not take us across the Jordan.'"
Moses...gives them a fiery and dramatic sermon...
Moses becomes extremely upset. He gives them a fiery and dramatic sermon that
lasts ten complete verses, a pretty long stretch in biblical narrative.
"Shall
your brothers go to war while you sit here?" Moses thunders. "Why
do you dissuade the heart of the children of Israel from crossing to the land
that G‑d has given them"?
Forty years earlier, he reminds them, the people of Israel had been poised to
enter the land of Canaan. But following a negative report by the spies who were
sent to scout the land, the entire nation spurned the land promised to their
ancestors as the eternal heritage of Israel. G‑d decreed that they remain in the
desert for forty years, until that entire generation died out and a new
generation prepared to accept the gift and challenge of the Promised Land. And
now, said Moses to the Reubenites and the Gadites, you are repeating the sin of
the Spies — a sin which condemned an entire generation and stopped Jewish
history in its tracks for forty years. Like your parents before you, you are
about to dissuade the heart of your brethren from entering the land.
"You will
destroy this entire nation," Moses concludes his passionate rebuke.
The Reubenites and Gadites accept Moses’ words with grace. In response, they
clarify their original position. Far from seeking to free themselves from the
impending wars for the Land, they were fully prepared to send their troops into
the Land and take a leading role in the battles until they were successfully
concluded. Only then would they return to the lands allotted to them in the
east.
"We will not return to our homes until every Israelite has
received his Inheritance," they pledge.
Moses consents to their plea. He changes his tone and grants them the
territories they requested.
Several points in this narrative are perplexing.
First, since their intentions it seems, were really pure (they never had in mind
to abandon their brethren going to war), how did Moses misread them so
profoundly and grow so furious with them? Why did Moses not first inquire what
their intentions were before coming down so hard on them?
G‑d wanted the Jews to settle the land at the west of the Jordan!
Second, Moses’ words focused on the point that it was unacceptable that one
segment of Jewry isolates from the rest of the nation, shirking responsibility
and escaping the fate of their brethren. But what about the seemingly more
important point: G‑d wanted the Jews to settle the land at the west of the
Jordan! These people decided that they wish to remain in the Trans-Jordan, but
who gave these two tribes the right to redefine the plan and choose the East
instead of the West? Why did Moses consent to their request?
Searching for the Sub-plot
Every serious student of the Hebrew Bible is aware
that most biblical plots contain sub-plots (often sub-sub plots), rarely
articulated in the narrative explicitly. Our present tale is no exception. The
explicit narrative is about two tribes of Israel concerned with their enormous
amount of livestock. Yet the drama in which this episode is captured in the
Torah somehow gives one a sense that these tribes were not only concerned about
their cattle; something very personal was at stake in their request to remain in
the Trans-Jordan. What was it?
The Bible gives us no hint. There is no way of knowing. We are left in the dark
until Moses is about to leave the world.
In the last section of Deuteronomy, just moments before his passing, Moses
speaks to each of the twelve tribes of Israel. His words to the tribe of Gad
must be heeded carefully: "He chose the first portion, for that is
where the lawgiver’s plot is hidden." (Deuteronomy 33:21)
These brief cryptic words, at last, expose to us the
true reason behind Gad’s insistence to settle the territory to the East of the
Jordan. Moses, the lawgiver, was destined to die in the East and never to cross
the Jordan. Gad pined to remain with Moses. Gad would not allow Moses’ burial
plot to remain isolated in the plains of Moab devoid of the presence of even a
single Jew.
The cry of Gad and Reuben: "Do not take us across the Jordan," was a plea
not to separate them from Moses.2 If Moses is not destined to cross the
river, they too did not wish to cross it.3 These were no mere farmers
worrying about real-estate. These were souls so deeply attached to their Rebbe
who were determined to spend their lives near the resting place of Moses.4
Moses, clearly, did not anticipate such a movement.
When the members of the tribes of Gad and Reuben approached him with their
request, they naturally could not communicate the entire truth. They would not
talk to Moses about his own death and his gravesite. Instead, they discussed
secondary, albeit not dishonest, motivations, namely the fate of their abundant
cattle.
Moses, in his intuition, felt that what they were expressing to him did not
capture the entire story. Moses sensed that their words eclipsed a deeper truth.
He thus suspected them in contriving a scheme designed to escape responsibility.
Hence, he rebuked them severely.
Yet surprisingly, they accepted Moses’ words in grace. The narrative makes it
clear that they were not upset by the false accusations Moses thrust upon them.
Why not?
Because they knew that they were not being straightforward. Above all, this was
not about them and their ego; it was about their selfless love and dedication to
Moses. His fury did not alienate them, it merely demonstrated once again the
genuine leader Moses was and strengthened their resolve to remain in his
proximity for eternity.
Moses agreed to fulfill their request. He could not tear himself away from the
people he dedicated his life to. If his people reciprocated the love he showered
upon them, he would not be the one to expel them from his midst. And at the last
moments before his death, he extols Gad for this deeply loving choice.5
Yet, after all is said, rabbinic commentary does
criticize the Reubenites and Gadites for their decision to remain in the
Trans-Jordan. The verse in Proverbs, "If an inheritance is seized hastily in
the beginning, its end will not be blessed," (20:21) is applied in the Midrash (Bamidbar Raba 22:7-9) to
the two tribes who seized the territory to the East of the Jordan. Centuries
later, when the Jews are exiled from their land through the Assyrian and later
Babylonian empires, it is these two tribes who are the first to be exiled from
their land.
Why?
Notwithstanding the noble and deeply moving intentions of Gad and Reuben, their
choice is considered "hasty" and immature. It was emotionally compelling, but
spiritually short sighted.
They failed to realize that
Moses’ true presence would not remain interred in the earth...
Yes, Gad and Reuben could not abandon Moses’ burial place. They were determined
to remain in the proximity of Moses’ body. For this the Torah relates their
story in detail, and they are recalled with great fondness. Yet, notwithstanding
their powerful emotions of love, they made an error. They failed to realize that
Moses’ true presence would not remain interred in the earth of the plains of
Moab.6 Moses would continue to live on in his vision, in his ideas, in his
teachings, and in the disciples who continued his vision and ideals. Moses'
vision was that the Jewish people should fulfill their G‑d given mandate to
enter the Land of Canaan, settle it and transform it into a Holy Land,
redefining the physical landscape of the soil of Canaan as an abode for G‑dliness.
Moses was never comprised of simple matter so that his identity would be defined
merely in terms of his physical body. (See Tanya Igeret HaKodesh sections 27-28) Moses’ life embodied a truth, a
vision, a way of looking at the world and understanding the objective of man's
journey on this earth. As long as that truth would live in the hearts of people
dedicated to Moses’ dream of transforming the earthy land of Canaan into a
divine home, Moses would remain alive. (See Sota 13b; Taanit 5b; Berachot 18a)
The same is true concerning all of our loved ones who pass on. Part of us craves to remain connected to their physical bodies. After all, that was the person we knew: A soul cloaked in a body. But, sad as it may be, a body does not live forever. If we internalize the ideals, values, love and dreams of our loved ones, then a piece of them remains alive. It continues to live through us.
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