“The Lord spoke to Moses, saying: ‘Make two trumpets of silver;
make them of hammered work. They shall serve you to summon the
community (
edah) and cause the camps (
mahanot) to
journey (Numbers 10:1,2)… And when you shall come to wage war in
your land, against the enemy who is oppressing you, you shall sound
the broken staccato, sighing, weeping sound (
t’ruah) with
your trumpets… and on the day of your rejoicings, on your festivals
and your new moons, you shall sound the firm, fixed, exultant sound (
t’kiyah)
with your trumpets…(10:9,10).” <>
Our Biblical portion this week uses two separate words to describe the
assemblage of the Israelites and two separate words to describe the
sounds which is to emanate from their trumpets: the trumpets shall
summon the “camps” (
mahanot) of Israel as well as
the “community” (
edah, literally the group bearing
witness) of Israel, and in time of war they shall sound the broken,
weeping
t’ruah sound whereas in times of Festival they
shall sound the firm, exultant
t’kiyah sound.
My revered
teacher Rav. J.B. Soloveitchik ztz”l distinguished between
the encampment of Israel, which herded the Israelites together
as a form of protection against the external elements of warring
enemies and difficult climatic and topographical conditions, (mahaneh
is Biblically used for protective army encampment, as in
Genesis 32:8,9), and the edah or community
of Israel which suggests a positive, united – commonalty of purpose,
testimony or mission to the world; similarly, the t’ruah, a
broken, weeping sound signals tremble or fear whereas the t’kiyah
a firm, fixed and exultant sound resonates resolve, commitment and
victory.
These different terms – and realities – hark back to two Biblical
covenants which formed our national and religious being as a distinct
people; The Covenant between the Pieces and The Covenant at Sinai.
The Covenant between the Pieces (Genesis 15) established the
nationhood of
Israel
. It guarantees Abraham progeny and delineates the boundaries of the
homeland which his descendants would inherit. It comes following a
war, contains an element of great, black fear (15:12), foretells a
period of servitude and affliction in a foreign land but guarantees
eternal survival and eventual occupation of the Promised Land. This is
what Rav Soloveitchik calls the covenant of fate. After all, an
individual neither chooses the family or nation-state into which
he/she is born nor the external persecution he/she may be singled out
to suffer. The familial solidarity and the haven of secure boundaries
of a national state will enable us to survive despite the external
challenges and obstacles.
The Covenant at Sinai (Exodus 19, 20) infused and inspired our nation
with a singular purpose and goal, a system of commandments which would
enable us to serve G-d and eventually bring the world to peace and
redemption. This Covenant was not inflicted upon us externally;
indeed, it is only when we voluntarily cried out that we would perform
and internalize the laws that the Almighty ratified this second
covenant. (Ex. 24:7,8).
The first covenant was our covenant of fate, the formation of the
encampment
of Jacob, the fearful, trembling sounds of the
t’ruah
which encourages us to seek refuge in the solidarity of a
family-nation-State united against inimical forces threatening our
destruction. The second covenant was our covenant of destiny, the
formation of
Israel
as G-d’s
witnesses, the exultant, victorious sounds of the
t’kiyah
which express the resolve and commitment of a people imbued with a
Divine mission, united in order to perfect the world in the Kingship
of the Divine.
From this
perspective, we can well understand the initial definition of the Rosh
Hashanah sound of the shofar as being described as “a day of
the broken, weeping sound” (Yom t’ruah yiheyeh lakhem
– Numbers 29:1), since Rosh Hashanah – the anniversary of the
creation of the world – brought us into an incomplete, imperfect and
not-yet- redeemed world, replete with suffering and tragedy. On Rosh
Hashanah we take the exultant t’kiya sound from
the promise of the Jubilee year, when everyone will be free and secure
in his/her own homestead and which serves as our metaphor for world
redemption (Leviticus 25: 8-10, with the word shofar
– meaning beautiful, complete – referring to the t’kiya
sound, according to our Talmudic Sages), in order to remind us that by
means of our repentance we have the mandate as well as the ability to
perfect the world under the Kingship of the Divine. Rav Soloveitchik
maintains that both in national as well as in personal terms, our
greatest challenge is to transform fate into destiny, to turn bitter
lemons into sweet lemonade, to develop our persecuted encampment into
a nation of G-d’s witnesses dedicated to redeem the world with love
and peace.
I would merely add that these two covenants, our national covenant
“between the pieces” and our religious covenant at Sinai, are not
two separate and distinct covenants, the first being the covenant of
fate and the second being the covenant of destiny, with the national
homeland of Israel serving as our ultimate destination whereas the
Bible and its laws are our true calling and destiny. No, the two
covenants must amalgamate into one since both are inter-related and
even inter-dependent.
The holocaust tragically proved to us that we cannot exist as a
religion alone without the necessary backing and protection of a
nation-state, replete with secure boundaries and an Israeli Defense
Force; and it is only through the medium of a nation-state, where we
must tackle the very real issues of poverty and unemployment, peace
and war, democracy and despotism, that we can ever hope to fulfill our
ethical mission of teaching the world the importance of universal
freedom and peace. It is for this reason that the Biblical
introduction of the Divine revelation at Sinai reads: “And now if
you will hearken, yes hearken, to My voice and observe My covenant,
then you shall be for Me a treasure amongst all nations, since I am
concerned about the entire earth. And (then) you shall be for Me a
Kingdom of priest-teachers and a holy nation” (Ex 19:5,6). And as
the Sforno interprets these words, “Since the entire world is Mine,
and the righteous of all nations are precious to Me without a doubt…
you must serve as priest-teachers to understand and teach every human
being to call upon the name of the Lord and to serve Him shoulder to
shoulder, as it is written, ‘From Zion shall come forth Torah’ (to
the world).” (ad loc)
It is our mission as a nation not to merely be a nation like all
nations but rather to teach the message of peace and freedom to all
nations.