Thoughts
on The Parsha
Parshas
Korach
Favors
are Easily Forgotten
By:
Daniel Listhaus
וַיִּקַּח
קֹרַח בֶּן יִצְהָר בֶּן קְהָת בֶּן לֵוִי
וְדָתָן וַאֲבִירָם בְּנֵי אֱלִיאָב
וְאוֹן בֶּן פֶּלֶת בְּנֵי רְאוּבֵן
“Korach
son of Yitzhar son of Kehas son of Levi separated himself, with Dasan
and Aviram, sons of Eliav, and On son of Peles, sons of Reuvein.”
-Korach
16:1
Rashi1
explains that what instigated Korach's argument with Moshe was the
fact that he was jealous because Moshe appointed Elitzaphan ben
Uziel
as a nassi
(literally:
prince) over the B'nei
Kehas.2
Korach based his argument on what he assumed was logical. He assessed
the situation and realized that Levi's son Kehas
had
four sons: Amram, Yitzhar, Chevron, and Uziel. Amram's two sons –
Moshe and Aharon – assumed the two top positions of B'nei
Yisroel.
Moshe rabbeinu
was
the leader of the entire nation, and Aharon HaKohen
was the Kohen
Gadol.
When Hashem commanded for the appointing of the nassi'im,
Korach thought to himself that it was only fair that he assume the
position. After all, he was the son of Yitzhar, the second-to-oldest
son of Kehas.
However, Moshe appointed Uziel's son. This disturbed Korach immensely
and he decided to put together a support team and then went to argue
head on with Moshe rabbeinu
and
tried to establish that just as this decision of Moshe made no sense,
so too everything else Moshe said made no sense.
There
are two basic questions that come to mind when reading the story of
Korach. First, why did he wait this long to raise a stink? Elitzaphan
was appointed nassi
in
Parshas
Bamidbar.3
What took so long for Korach's jealousy to leak through? Why did he
not immediately challenge Moshe?
Second,
what was Korach's master plan exactly? Everyone loved Moshe rabbeinu.
He was the messenger who took them out of Mitzrayim,
split the Yam
Suf,
received the Torah directly from Har
Sinai,
and led B'nei
Yisroel though
the midbar
(desert). Why was Korach so confident that striking Moshe at this
particular point would not be met with an opposing force strongly
backing up Moshe? After all, even when it came to a real nevuah
(prophecy)
when Yehoshua said when he found out the Eldad and Medad were
prophesying that Moshe would die and Yehoshua would be the one to
lead B'nei
Yisroel into
Eretz
Yisroel,
Yehoshua begged Moshe to throw them in jail for saying such a thing.
Certainly everyone loved Moshe, and Moshe had Hashem and the majority
of B'nei
Yisroel who
were always there to side with him. So how was Korach so confident
that he would somehow win any argument with Moshe?
The
Ramban4
writes
that indeed Korach's timing was strategically intentional. Until this
point it was clear to the entire B'nei
Yisroel that
Moshe was always there to save the day. Even by the eigel
hazahav (golden
calf) – unarguably the greatest sin of all time by our nation –
Moshe somehow managed through the power of his tefillos
(prayers)
to abate Hashem's anger and threats to wipe out B'nei
Yisroel.
Very few people died from that event and the other times Hashem got
upset at the B'nei
Yisroel.
This was something that was recognized by everyone to the point that
if anyone would even think of attempting to do anything to hurt
Moshe, such a person would have been immediately stoned by Moshe's
followers – the B'nei
Yisroel.
However, Korach noticed a change that subconsciously had an affect on
the nation as a whole.
When
the B'nei
Yisroel entered
Midbar
Paran and
complained about the manna,
Hashem responded with sending a fire of fury, which killed many
people. Also, after the tragedy of the meraglim
(spies),
Moshe did not seem to make an effort to daven
on their behalf and try to be mevatel
(cancel)
the gezairah
(decree)
of the death to all of the nassi'im
who
sinned and the gezairah
of
B'nei
Yisroel living
at the time to be unworthy of entering Eretz
Yisroel
and needing to die in the midbar.
Although
it is in fact difficult to understand why Moshe's role as manhig
k'lal Yisroel did
not include davening at these particular points of time, or at least
not having as great of an impact, it is clear that Moshe did what he
was supposed to do. These events, and what seemed as Moshe's failure
to stand up for them, caused the B'nei
Yisroel
to have some negative feelings towards Moshe rabbeinu.
Korach sensed this slight change in attitude of the B'nei
Yisroel toward
Moshe and took advantage of the opportunity, which only fully
presented itself at this point in time after the episode with the
meraglim.
As
we read through everything that Moshe did for the B'nei
Yisroel this
Ramban
seems
outlandish. Could it be that there was a real change in B'nei
Yisroel's attitude
based on the fact that more people had died during the complaining
about the manna
and
the story of the meraglim?
Moshe's tefillos
to
Hashem during times that Hashem wanted to wipe out the whole nation
should have been viewed as a tremendous favor for an undeserving
nation, not something that they should now have forever to hold over
his head as a standard to expect. Yet that is precisely the feeling
that the B'nei
Yisroel felt.
They got used to Moshe always being there to save the day, and began
to expect nothing less. They subconsciously began viewing Moshe's
tefillos
as
a right instead of a privilege. Therefore, when their expectations
were not achieved, they harbored negative feelings against Moshe.
Korach sensed this change in attitude and took immediate advantage.
The
truth is that this is something most of us do on a daily basis. As
Yehudim
(Jews), our mission statement is to admit to our dependence on Hashem
and realize that everything about us is a pure gift from Hashem. The
Orchos
Tzadikkim5
stresses
this in the first three, of thirty, items he says is an obligation to
think about twice daily. He writes that we must remember that Hashem
created us from nothing; and even though He has no debt to us that He
needs to provide for us anything, He created us as man – the top of
the food chain and has kept us alive since the day we were born.
Additionally, Hashem created us with all our body parts and with good
mental health. All of this is purely out of Hashem's infinite
kindness and we are accordingly indebted to Him and have the
obligation to thank Him constantly.
Although
this should make sense, it is somehow still hard to not take out our
anger on Hashem when people get hurt or things do not go as smoothly
as we would like to expect. Each morning we read the berachos
(blessings)
acknowledging
the fact that Hashem opens our eyes to be able to see, gives us the
ability to sit and stand, provides us with strength, and wakes us up
every morning allowing our neshamos
(souls)
to return to our bodies. However, we must realize that these are not
merely items on a checklist of things we expected from Hashem, nor
are these our constitutional rights for living in this world. Rather,
they are privileges which not everyone is privy to.
This
mentality of thinking things are owed to us just because we expect it
to be that way is exactly the fundamental force behind jealousy and
was what propelled the whole story of Korach to begin with. Korach
analyzed the family of Kehas
and
the positions available and decided that by right he should have been
appointed as nassi.
May
Hashem help us with our emunah
so
that we can better realize that because our expectations are not our
rights, and that in fact everything we have is truly a privilege, we
have an obligation to be forever thankful.
1Bamidbar
16:1
2Obviously
this was not Moshe's personal preference or decision, rather Hashem
told him who to appoint, as Rashi writes.
3Bamidbar
3:30
4Bamidbar
16:1
5Orchos
Tzadikkim: Sha'ar Hazechira
Photo Credit: http://fletcherclan.blogspot.com/2012/07/yelling-or-watering.html
Photo Credit: http://fletcherclan.blogspot.com/2012/07/yelling-or-watering.html
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