A Thought on the Parasha
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Behold I Have Called by Name
Over the course of two parshiyot the Torah has described
with great detail the construction of the Mishkan and the making of the
priestly garments. Our parasha is introduced with a seemingly unrelated
theme: a census of the people in which each person will pay a half-shekel. Why
mention a census here?
Broadly speaking, the Torah is alerting us to the dangers inherent
in a major national project such as the building of the Mishkan. We know
that earlier project of this scale did not end well, namely, the construction
of the Tower of Babel. The precise sin of the builders of the tower is not spelled
out, but it is clear that it had something to with their being a single people
with a single purpose: "Behold one nation and one language there is for
them all, and this they have begun to do" (Breishit, 11:6). The problem is
not one of achdus; unity is a good thing. Rather, it is the loss of the
individual in the process. In such a large-scale and single-minded
project, all that matters is the vision and the goal: "We will make for
ourselves a name." And when this happens on the national level, the will
of the People often squashes the importance of the individual. Persons become
faceless, interchangeable, and of little if any worth.
The midrash says as much when it states that no one would
pay any attention at Babel when a person would fall off the tower, but when a
brick would fall, they would cry and bewail its loss (Pirkei Di'Rebbe Eliezer,
24). This is no midrashic exaggeration - it is estimated that close to a
half-million people died building the Great Wall of China. The building, the
edifice, the vision - this is all that matters.
What can be done to protect against this, to preserve the humanity
of each individual? In the case of the Tower of Babel, the people were
dispersed and given new languages. This created diversity and distinctiveness,
ensuring that they would not once again homogenize into a melting pot of
faceless unity.
In the case of the Mishkan there was another answer. In Terumah,
the command of the Mishkan opens with each person's personal and self-motivated
contribution: "From every person whose heart moves him, you shall
receive My offering" (25:2). And in this week's parasha, God
proclaims, "Behold I have called by name Bezalel son of Uri son of Hur...
and with him Ahaliav son of Achisamak of the tribe of Dan" (31:2,6).
People are named; they are unique individuals, each with special talents
that he or she brings to this task. This continues in next week's parasha with
the women who spun the wool, linen, and goat's hair (35:25-26). We are also
told that the washing basin commanded in this week's parasha was made
from the mirrors donated by women who gathered at the Tent of Meeting (38:8).
The Torah goes out of its way to give faces and form to some of the individuals
involved in this huge national endeavor.
And there is yet another way that the Mishkan differed from the
Tower of Babel: Those building the tower sought to reach up to the heavens;
those building the Mishkan sought to bring God's presence down to earth. When
we attempt to leave our world to reach God, it is easy to make everything in
this mundane reality subservient to that lofty goal. When we attempt to leave
our world to reach God, everything in this mundane reality becomes subservient
to that lofty goal. When we attempt to bring God into our world, in contrast,
we remain anchored in the world in which we live and connected to the people
who inhabit it with us.
The command of the census is a part of not losing focus on the
individual. By its nature, a census says every person counts. We are not just
an abstraction, a "nation." We are thousands and thousands of
separate, distinct people; we mourn every death, and we celebrate every birth.
On the other hand, taking a census can bring about the opposite
mentality: Everyone is just a number; no individual matters. If ten people die
the total number is smaller, but any other ten people will make up the
difference. Any one person is fungible.
It is to counteract this that the Torah commands the giving of the
half-shekel as part of the census. As the Rabbis explain it, they were not
permitted to count individuals directly. Rather, the number of people would be
known by the sum of the half-shekels. We can aggregate and count money, not
people. One person and one person and one person do not make three people.
People must always remain distinct and unique. They will have names, not
numbers. They will always be Reuven, Sarah, and Shimon: "Behold, I have
called by name."
And there is another corrective: Shabbat. At the completion of the
detailed instructions for the Mishkan, the Torah commands again the observance
of Shabbat. Shabbat and Mishkan are almost always juxtaposed, and the implicit
message - which the Rabbis made explicit - is clear: you must rest on the
Shabbat even if it means interrupting the building of the Mishkan. The project
is not what is ultimately important. It does not override all and continue
without end. There are things in this world that matter more than building the
Mishkan, and Shabbat, with its message of human dignity, is chief among them.
Shabbat proclaims that no living thing, and particularly no human,
can be made a slave to his work, nor a means to an end, even a lofty, religious
end like the Mishkan. Humans are fundamentally free; they have a basic right to
rest, a right to be free from the unrelenting pressures and demands of the
world. It is thus no surprise that Shabbat can be violated to save a human
life. A major goal of Shabbat is the recognition of each person's humanity, a
quality which we cannot allow the larger forces in the world to reduce or
eradicate.
Naming the individuals, refusing to tally people as numbers, and
interrupting the building of the Mishkan for a weekly day of rest allowed a
national project of supreme importance to continue with enthusiastic
participation and without ever losing sight of the face and individuality of
each and every person involved.
The loss of the individual is a matter to be feared not just in
worldly projects but in ideologies as well. Whether a project or an idea, the
person is lost when something else is assigned a position of ultimate
importance.
To not do this, and to give an ideology supreme importance, can be
seen as a modern manifestation of the sin of idolatry. If idolatry was, in the
time of the Torah, making something a god which was not in fact God, then a
contemporary translation of that would be assigning ultimate value to something
which is not of ultimate value. The Torah teaches us that, after God, people
are of the greatest value, and that the mitzvot are overridden to protect human
life. Giving anything else, be it any ideology or vision, more importance than real
people is a turning of that ideology into an idolatry.
This brings us to the Golden Calf. In the building of the Mishkan
we saw the faces of some of the individuals involved; in the making of the Calf
all we see is a faceless crowd. And far from each person contributing according
to his or her personal motivation, the entire people act as one
undifferentiated unit: "And the entire people tore off their
earrings and brought them to Aharon" (32:3). It is one mob acting in
unison, all giving the same thing, all doing the same thing. With the idolizing
of the calf came the formation of an unstoppable mob, and any individual -
whether Aharon or one of the people - was swept away by its force.
This remains an ongoing struggle. How do we devote our lives to
something larger than ourselves without losing sight of the real people in
front of us? This can be a problem when dealing with ideologues, even those
working for human rights or other social justice causes. One can reach a point
where the work is all about the cause and not about the people it is meant to
serve. This can also be a problem in religious leadership. The religious
leaders that I am most wary of are those who are the self-proclaimed defenders
of the faith. Too often, too many people are sacrificed in the name of religion
or for the sake of the cause that they believe reigns supreme. I am personally
inspired by religious leaders, be it a rabbi, or even be it the current Pope,
who believe that their religion is strong enough to defend itself and who
understand that their responsibility is to defend and protect the
individual. When we build a Mishkan, when we devote our lives to
something larger than ourselves, the names and faces of the real people we
encounter must always be in front of us. We must always be able to say:
"Behold I have called by name."
Shabbat
Shalom!
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