All
the Children of Israel murmured against Moses and Aaron, and the entire
assembly said to them, “If only we had died in the land of Egypt, or if
only we had died in this Wilderness! Why is Hashem bringing us to this
Land to die by the sword? Our wives and young children will be taken
captive! Is it not better for us to return to Egypt?” (Num. 14:2-3)
It
is a mitzvah, a Divine decree, that we must live in Eretz Yisrael under
G-d's dominion, sanctifying His name, in order to create a holy state
and society which clings to mitzvot completely and properly, uninfluenced by the alien, false culture of the nations.
At
the same time, it is an unforgivable, loathsome sin to refuse to live
in Eretz Yisrael, and to prefer the depravity of the exile and foreign
rule. It is a chilul Hashem, and Israel are, thus, exposed to the
influence of the nations and their abominations.
G-d, therefore, was angry at our ancestors in the desert when they refused to go up to Eretz Yisrael and called out, “Let us appoint a new leader and go back to Egypt” (Num. 14:4). Surely the spies Moses sent out were prominent and righteous, as our sages said (Tanchuma, Shelach, 4):
“Send
out men” (Num. 13:2): This is in line with, “He that sends a message by
the hand of a fool, severs his own feet and imbibes damage” (Prov.
26:6). Were the spies fools? Surely the Torah said, “Send out men
(“anashim”),” and “anashim” always refers to righteous persons...
Rather, they were called fools only because they slandered the Land... All the same, they were great men who made themselves into fools.
[As Rabbi Meir Kahane puts it in Peirush HaMaccabee – Shemot, Ch. 3]:
Incidentally, this also teaches the bitter lesson that even the greatest of men can become a “fool” in the Torah sense of the word, if he lacks faith. As the Talmud says: What can cause the tzaddikim to have less than their full share in the World to Come? – Their lack of faith (Sotah 48b). Here, their lack of faith caused the spies to put out an evil report of the Land of Israel, and G-d therefore said: For how long will this nation fight against Me and for how long will they refuse to believe in Me? (Numbers 14:11).
The leader of the generation has to be perpetually on guard, to ensure
that his fear of heaven is greater than his wisdom, because without fear of heaven, his wisdom will not endure.
He has to work to ensure that his faith is securely anchored in his
fear of heaven. And we all have to be aware that even a leader of the
generation can err – especially in matters of faith.
Likewise, Num. 13:3, “All the men were leaders of the children of Israel,” was rendered by Targum Yonatan as, “All were wise men who had been appointed heads of the children of Israel.”
Thus,
they were great and righteous men, yet they sinned in turning their
backs on Eretz Yisrael and wishing to settle down in the exile, in
Egypt. As King David said, “They scorned the Desirable Land, they believed not His word” (Ps. 106:24).
Ostensibly, they had a good argument, pikuach nefesh, i.e., they wished to prevent loss of life. The spies said of the Canaanites, “We were in our own sight as grasshoppers, and so were we in their sight” (Num. 13:33). They were certain that the war against the Canaanites would be severe, and it would be hard to defeat the giants. Moreover, even if they defeated them, a few Israelites would fall. After all, we do not rely on miracles.
For that reason, these great and righteous men rendered a halachic ruling that pikuach nefesh overrides all areas of Eretz Yisrael;
it overrides Eretz Yisrael in its entirety. They certainly did not
intend to abandon G-d's Torah, but rather to return to Egypt and keep it
there. This, however, was their sin, because G-d had decreed that it
was forbidden for them to dwell outside the Land, and that only in
Eretz Yisrael could they sanctify His name and live in the isolation of
Torah. For that reason, no danger to the nation overrode Eretz Yisrael,
the only place the Jewish People could keep the Torah completely and
properly.
A war over the mitzvah of living in and conquering Eretz Yisrael is a milchemet mitzvah, which no danger to life overrides. Quite the contrary, this mitzvah overrides such danger, as Ramban wrote in Sefer HaMitzvot, Ibid., Mitzvah 4):
This
is what our sages call milchemet mitzvah. In the Talmud (Sotah 44b)
Rava said, “ Joshua's war of conquest was an obligatory duty according
to all opinions.” One should not make the mistake of saying that this
mitzvah only applies to the seven nations we were commanded to
destroy... That is not so. We were commanded to destroy those
nations when they fought against us, and had they wished to make peace
we could have done so under specific conditions. Yet, we cannot leave
the Land in their control or in the control of any other nations in any generation.
Fear
of the nations is just one dismal reason the Jewish People treat the
Desirable Land with contempt (longing for the good life is another). Precisely
because of this delusion that the exile is safe but Eretz Yisrael is
dangerous, G-d became angry and decreed death in the desert for the
generation that left Egypt, adding, “You said your children will
be taken captive, but they will be the ones I will bring there, so that
they will know the land that you rejected” (Num. 14:31). Those
who feared that they and their children would die in Eretz Yisrael died
precisely in the desert, whereas their children entered the Land and
lived. This teaches that the only security for the Jewish People is
in Eretz Yisrael, whereas the exile is their burial place. Our sages
said (Torat Kohanim, Bechukotai, Ch. 1): “'You will live securely in your land' (Lev. 26:5): In your land you will live securely, but not outside it.” Likewise, Obadiah said (v. 17), “Upon Mount Zion there shall be deliverance.” In other words, in Zion but not in the exile.
G-d,
Who knows His people's mind, knew, as well, that Israel would always
prefer the non-Jewish life of the exile, whose abominable depravity is
so sweet to the sinner among us. As King Solomon said, “Stolen waters are sweet, and bread eaten in secret is pleasant” (Prov. 9:17). G-d, therefore, decreed that Israel would never find safety and security in the exile. Bereshit Rabbah 33:6 teaches:
“He
sent out the dove... I t could find no place to rest its feet” (Gen.
8:8-9): “Had it found a place to rest, it would not have returned. Just
so, it says, 'She dwells among the nations; she finds no rest' (Lam.
1:3); and; 'Among the nations you shall have no repose; there shall be
no rest for the soles of your foot' (Deut. 28:65). If Israel found rest
in the exile, they would not return.”
Thus, G-d decreed that
Israel would never find permanent rest (“manoach”) in the exile, and
whoever says that they really can find it is an “ignoramus” [in Berachot
61a, R. Nachman calls Samson's father Manoach an “ignoramus”].
Not
in vain did our sages (Mechilta, Bo, 1) compare the exile to a
cemetery, for if Israel refuse to dwell in Eretz Yisrael, if they spurn
it for the depravity of the exile, they have no future, but suffering,
tragedy and annihilation.
Compiled by Tzipora Liron-Pinner from “The Jewish Idea" and "Peirush HaMaccabee- Shemot" of Rav Meir Kahane, HY”D
Wednesday, May 29, 2013
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