Shabbat Shalom: Parshat Balak Numbers 20:22-25:9
By Shlomo Riskin
Efrat, Israel - Balaam, the famous Gentile prophet of the Bible, is called
by our Talmudic Sages Balaam the wicked (HaRasha). Why is this so? True, he
went along with Balak the King of Moab to curse the Israelites, but at the
end of the day he blessed us, with the majestic blessing which opens our
Daily Prayer Books: "How goodly are your tents O Jacob, your dwelling
places, O Israel” (Numbers 24:5). And he even prophesied our messianic
victory at the end of the days: “I see it but not now, I look at it, but
it is not near. A star has stepped forth from Jacob and a scepter-bearer has
risen from Israel… He (Israel) will pierce and vanquish the nobles of Moab…
Edom will become (Israel’s) inheritance…Israel will emerge victorious….
Amalek, the first among nations, will have an end of eternal destruction”
(Ibid 17-20). These stunning words could hardly have emerged from the mouth
of an enemy!
To add to the mystery of the negative assessments of Balaam’s character by
the Talmud, the classic Targum (Aramaic interpretation) of Yonatan ben Uziel,
identifies Balaam with none other than Laban the Aramean, uncle of
Jacob-Israel, who “desired to envelop and assimilate the nation of Israel”
(Numbers 22:5, Targum Yonatan there). The Talmud, basing itself upon the “advice”
which Balaam is about to give - but which is never recorded - towards the
end of his prophetic visions (Ibid 24:14) as well as upon the act of public
cohabitation between the Prince of the tribe of Shimon, Zimri ben Salou, and
the Midianite aristocrat Kozbi bat Tsur, which is graphically described at
the end of our portion of Balak (25:1-9) rather than at the beginning of
next week’s portion of Pinhas where it really belongs, concludes that
Balaam’s advice was that the young women of Midian and Moab entice the
Israelite men (B.T. Sanhedrin 106a). In other words, just like Uncle Laban
certainly admired his nephew Jacob and desperately wished to prevent his
return to the land and faith of his father and grand-father by incorporating
him into Laban’s pagan Nahorite clan (“the daughters - your wives - are
my daughters, the children - your children - are my grand-children” Gen
31:43), so did Balaam, a sincere admirer of Israel, wish to set us off at
the pass by incorporating us into Moab and Midyan.
The fundamental question however, still remains to be answered: When
Israelite meets Gentile in such close proximity, who influences whom? Balaam
apparently banked on Moab’s assimilating Israel, although his prophetic
vision suggested the opposite, that Israel would trounce Moab; and indeed,
the descendant of Moab, Ruth, converted to Judaism, settled in Israel, and
became the great grand-mother of King David, progenitor of the Messiah. And
the true model of the midrashic picture of the “end of the days” is
provided by a cryptic comment found in the Hesed L’Avraham, a marvelous
study penned by R. Avrham Azulai, grand-father of the Hida: “R. Akiva was
the repair (tikkun) for Zimri ben Salou.” What possible relationship can
there be between the penitent master-teacher of 24,000 disciples who was a
major architect of the Mishnaic period and the Simeonite Prince who publicly
fornicated with a Midanite beauty right in front of Moses?
Rashi (commenting on B.T. Nedarim 50b) records the following incident
towards the end of the life of Rabbi Akiva:
“There was one Roman personage whose name was Rufus, and he would often
debate on matters of Torah against R.Akiva; R. Akiva always bested him in
argument. The Roman personage became embarrassed, and - upon his return home
- told his wife. She said to him, “I will tempt R. Akiva and cause him to
stumble! She was a very beautiful woman; she came before R. Akiva and (when
they were alone), she revealed her (naked) thigh before him. Rabbi Akiva
spat, and laughed and wept. She said to him, ‘Why did you act in such a
(strange) manner?’ He said to her, ‘I will explain to you two out of my
three activities.
I spat, because you came from a fetid drop (of sperm, of which I had to
remind myself).
I wept, because in the end your beauty will decay beneath the earth.’
But why he laughed, he did not wish to tell her.
Nevertheless, after she entreated him many times, he explained that it was
because she would eventually convert to Judaism and would marry her.
Whereupon she said to him, 'And is there the possibility of repentance?'
He said there was, and after her husband died, she married R. Akiva and
brought him great wealth."
Messianic movements all see an end-of-world order in which all of humanity will become unified. False messianism, however, sees a coming together of many different peoples without the clear and consistent ideological goals of freedom for every individual and world peace. Stalinist Communist wanted the world union of workers to unite, but under the banner of totalitarian enslavement; Peres’ New Middle East was and is devoid of individual human rights and has not yet abandoned terrorism; Laban’s only commitment was to wealth and self-aggrandizement, despite his clichés about family togetherness; and Balaam, heir to Laban, was willing to curse the people of redemption if only he would be paid off in large amounts of gold and silver.
Rabbi Akiva, on the other hand, believed in true messianism, an ideal founded upon the principle of “You shall love your neighbor because he is like you; (both of you share in Me, each of you is created in My image with a spark of my Divinity within your respective beings, because) I am the Lord “(Leviticus 19:18). And R. Akiva came from the tradition which insisted that Israel is the nation of the covenant, through whom “all the families of the earth shall be blessed” when “nations will no longer learn war anymore.” R. Akiva’s tradition teaches that in our meeting with the Gentile we must love him because we love ourselves, and we must - at the very least - enlighten him as to the crucial importance of the seven laws of morality. You need not be Jewish to eat Levy’s Rye or to have share in Divine eternity, but you do have to be moral and humane, placing “Thou shalt not murder” and “your man-servant and maidservant are entitled to a slavery-less and restful existence, just like you” as the basis for human conduct. These ideals - and not animalistic fornication - are the love expressions which led to Akiva-istic messianism, and not the Balaam -ist debauchery of Zimri ben Salou.
Shabbat Shalom
Shlomo Riskin
Chancellor Ohr Torah Stone
Chief Rabbi - Efrat Israel
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