The Stuff of Real Life
Parshas Masei
Posted on July 6, 2021 (5781) By Rabbi Naftali
Reich | Series: Legacy | Level: Beginner
This week’s Torah portion
concludes with an overview of the Jewish nation’s wanderings in the wilderness,
as well as key laws and preparations associated with their inheriting the land.
Moshe Rabbeinu designated
six Levite cities, three in Eretz Yisrael and three in Trans-Jordan, as cities
of refuge where an accidental murderer can escape an avenger from the victim’s
family.
Although his act of
homicide was not premeditated, the Torah considers him culpable for being
negligent, and not adequately protecting another’s life. The time he spends in
the Ir Miklat will enable him to realign his values and correct the habits that
led to his negligent behavior. The Levite city was the ideal place to achieve
this rehabilitation. The Levites were landless and wholly devoted to teaching
and guiding their fellow Jews. Even while in Egypt, the Levites were
preoccupied with spiritual advancement, and distanced themselves from the
pursuit of material prosperity.
Their conduct was
emblematic of the highest degree of moral responsibility. Living among people
of this caliber would re-educate and sensitize the murderer to the supreme
sanctity of human life.
The Talmud asks why were
there precisely the exact number of “refuge” cities in Trans Jordan as there
were in Israel? After all, Trans Jordan was only home to two and a half tribes,
while the remaining nine lived in Israel. Why not distribute the cities of
refuge in a way that would more accurately reflect the demographics?
The Talmud answers that in
Trans Jordan there were more homicides and the population’s sensitivity to
human life became diminished. The likelihood of accidental murder was therefore
greater. The average citizen was less conscious of the need to exert himself to
the utmost to protect his fellow Jew; he would be more likely to pursue his own
needs at the expense of his fellow citizen.
The great sage R’ Itzel of
Volozhin offers a different interpretation of the Talmud’s assertion that
bloodshed was more prevalent in Trans-Jordan, thus requiring more cities of
refuge in that region. The problem, he explains, lay not in the higher
incidences of accidental homicide in Trans-Jordan but in the over-eagerness to
avenge it. Since the inhabitants of Ever HaYarden were less sensitive to
murder, it was far more likely that an accidental killer would be pursued by a
family member driven to exact vengeance for unsavory reasons. The Torah
therefore provided the perpetrator with more immediate access to an Ir Miklat.
The culture of tolerance
toward bloodshed would delude people into thinking they were motivated by moral
principles in trying to avenge their relative’s death, when all too often they
were simply trying to even the score with a hapless fellow Jew.
The underlying message of
the portion is that nothing affects our mindset and value system more than our
social environment. We are all
conditioned by repeated and constant exposure to the prevailing culture.
Harmful outside influences can easily pollute our ability to distinguish right
from wrong and can easily desensitize us from appreciating the value and
sanctity of every humans life.
This underscores the
importance of ensuring that our homes are bastions of light, joy and an
appreciation for the kedusha of Klal Yisroel. These values must permeate the
atmosphere to the point where they are imprinted on the minds and hearts of our
children. Only by building our homes according to the Torah’s blueprint can we
turn them into lighthouses of positive energy. They will thus become the
miniature ‘cities of refuge’ that will protect ourselves and our families from
the steady onslaught of moral decay and corruption in the surrounding culture.
Wishing you a wonderful
Shabbos
Rabbi Naftali Reich Text
Copyright © 2014 by Rabbi Naftali Reich and Torah.org.
Rabbi Reich is on the
faculty of the
Ohr Somayach Tanenbaum Education Center.
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