Efrat, Israel – The Talmud records a most glaring and ambiguous
statement, which has its roots in a number of verses in this week's
Biblical portion, as well as its tangible expression in my City of
Efrat. First the Talmudic quote: "In other inheritances of the
world, the living inherit the dead; in the Land of Israel, the dead
inherit the living" (B.T. Baba Batra 117a). What can this
ambiguous comment possibly mean?
Allow me to begin my explanation with a brief history of the Etzion
bloc in which our city Efrat is located. In the 1940's there were
four settlements in this area on barren, rocky land bought from
Arabs in a registered sale by a Jew named Holtzman (holtz is Yiddish
for etz or tree). Not only was its location south of Bethlehem
strategic, protecting Jerusalem to the north, it was also scenic,
for it was verdant with green vineyards , majestic hills and
sweeping valleys; most important of all it was historic,
geographically poised between Hebron, ancient City of our Patriarchs
and Jerusalem, eventual city of Messianic peace. The farmers worked
indefatigably to till the unfertile soil, for they were certain that
the land worked by Boaz, Naomi and Ruth and the fields in which the
shepherd - Psalmist David had grazed his flock, would flourish once
again.
When the U.N. partition plan of Nov. 29, 1947 was not accepted by
the Arabs, the fighting in this region became ferocious because of
the battle for Jerusalem. Whoever controlled the hills of the Gush
would ultimately rule the Holy City. The settlements suffered heavy
losses, and it was decided in Jerusalem that a supportive group
would have to be dispatched to help the besieged area with arms and
food.
Setting out by foot, 35 men worked their way through darkness to
reach the surrounded settlements. On the way they met an old Arab,
captured him, and when he begged for his life they let him go.
Legend has it that after he was released, he revealed their
position. The 35 were all slaughtered. The remaining settlers - even
without their much - needed supplies and manpower, continued to
fight bravely, but were ultimately massacred - almost to a man.
The date was May 13th, 1948, and on the very next day Ben Gurion,
declared the birth of the State of Israel and - in honor of the
falled heroes of the Gush - agreed to include a reference to G-d in
the Declaration of Independence. The few survivors - re-established
their settlements in the Ashkelon area - but never stopped dreaming
of their eventual return to the Etzion Bloc. After the Six-Day war,
when the area was once again in Jewish hands, children whose parents
had been forced to evacuate the area or who had been killed by the
Jordanian legion now returned. In the hills of Gush Etzion, the
heirs to this land reconstructed the shattered dreams of their
parents who were no longer alive to see how their vision had borne
fruit.
That which occurred between 1948 and 1967 in the Gush is a paradigm
for the 1900 years in which the Jews were separated from their
national homeland after the Destruction of the Second Temple in 70
C.E. We were scattered to all four corners of the globe, but
our forbears never stopped dreaming of our eventual return to the
Promised Land of our fore-fathers. Because of their teachings,
sacrifices and suffering, the dream of Israel remained vital in the
hearts of their children. Among other nations, the living
inherit the dead. With us, it's exactly the opposite: the dead
inherit the living.
This concept emerges in the course of a legal dispute between Rabbi
Yoshiyah and Rabbi Yonatan in the Talmud (Baba Batra, 117a)
concerning the meaning of several key verses in this week's portion
of Pinchas:
Among those people you shall divide the land as an inheritance
according to the number of names. By lot shall the land be
distributed, according to the names of your fathers shall they
inherit it. (Numbers 26:53-56)
When the 40 years of wandering in the desert ended, should the
method of apportioning the land be determined by the number of those
who left Egypt or by the number of those who arrived in Israel?
For example, if I left Egypt with two sons, and one of my sons had
only one son, while the other had five sons, then if the division is
according to those who left Egypt, each one of my sons should get an
equal portion. Thus we find that five grandsons must share among
themselves the same portion which the grandson of the other son
receives. But if we make our determination according to those who
enter the land of Israel, we end up with six portions to be divided
equally.
Rabbi Yoshiyah stresses verse 53, "According to the names of
your fathers you shall inherit it," which to him indicates that
the land is divided according to those who left Egypt, while Rabbi
Yonatan emphasizes the verse, "Among these people you shall
divide the land as an inheritance," and takes 'these people' to
mean those who physically enter the land. The dispute is decided
that the six grand-sons receive six portions of land - but three
portions go to the descendants of the one brother who left Egypt,
and the other three are divided between the five sons of the second
brother who left Egypt. Therefore, the Talmud declares: "In all
other inheritance of the world, the living inherit the dead, but
here the dead [the generation which died out in the desert] inherit
the living [the generation which entered the land]." (Baba
Batra 117a).
Where did the Jews find the strength to wander for 38 years in the
desert, knowing that they would die before entering Israel? Only
because they believed even if they wouldn't enter the Promised Land,
at least their children would! And this is precisely what R.
Yonatan means when he says that the dead inherit the living. We live
in this land only because previous generations were willing to
devote their lives to a dream that never materialized. But through
us, they inherit land.
A famous midrash tells the tale of Hadrian meeting an old Jew after
the fall of Judea and Samaria planting a carob tree which, according
to tradition takes 70 years to bear fruit. Asked to explain his
behavior, the Jew answers that just as his father and grandfather
planted for him, he is planting for his child, and grandchildren,
oblivious to the flag the Roman eagle flying on Jewish soil.
The emperor then turns to his general and admits that with such
resilience and faith, with such willingness to plant in the present
that which will be reaped in the future, even the Roman armies don't
stand a chance. Hadrian was 100% correct; our parents and
grandparents inherit Israel through us!