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Shabbat Shalom: Parshat Shmini Leviticus 9:1-11:47
By Shlomo Riskin
Efrat, Israel –“And there came forth fire from before
G-d and devoured them [Nadav and Avihu] and they died before G-d” (Lev.
10:2).
This week’s Torah portion of Shmini raises one of the most crucial
questions directed at any religion, not just Judaism. How do we deal with
the tragedy of an unfathom¬able death, the good, the best, and the
brightest plucked from life like a weed in the wind? We are never more
humbled than when we stand before the coffin of a loved one taken away in
the bloom of youth, and all we can do is grope for words, struck dumb,
dazed, utterly baffled.
After the inauguration of Aaron and his sons into the priestly service of
the sanctuary, a luminous summit in early Jewish history, the text speaks of
G-d’s glory revealed as the fire of the Lord descends to consume the whole
burnt offering, and we can only imagine the communal ecstasy the Jewish
people feel upon witnessing this fire, the signature of G-d magnified to a
mass that all can behold.
Nadav and Avihu, Aaron’s sons, newly anointed, then take the fire pan and
offer incense before God. The text calls theirs a ‘strange fire,’ and in
the midst of the personal triumph of Aaron, he is suddenly struck with two
simultaneous deaths, his sons consumed by fire. From the heights of ecstasy,
in a flash, the high priest is cast into a pit of potential despair. Is this
not the most tragic moment of Aaron’s life?
Rabbi Mecklenberg, the author of the Ktav v-haKabbala, seizes this incident
as a way to fathom death. When the scorching fire consumes the sons of Aaron
like a ram and a bull, it’s an allusion to their deaths as a holy
sacrifice. The Torah, he wants us to understand, implies that all death
contains within it elements of sacrifice and atonement. And what appears
unjust in our eyes is not necessarily unjust in the eyes of G-d.
But why now, at the moment of Aaron’s greatest glory? Because during these
first hours after the 7 initiatory days, the Jewish people must learn that
just as within the Holy Sanctuary there are animal sacrifices, outside the
Sanctuary there are also human sacrifices. It’s a brutal lesson, painful
and tragic, but it’s a way to explain why the ones who are most pure and
whole are sometimes taken from us. Of course, if we don’t believe in an
invisible reality, a world beyond ours, indeed, an internal world, then this
perception of sacrifice is cruel. But if one accepts the statement in our
Ethics of the Fathers, that this world is merely a corridor to the world to
come, the notion that there are holy souls whose entry into the higher world
may serve as an atonement, can be a great source of comfort to families who
lose young children in acts of terror or mindless accidents. As the text in
our Biblical reading clearly states, “through those who are close to Me
shall I be sanctified” (Leviticus 10:3).
The midrash takes a very different approach, based upon the Biblical verse,
“And (Nadav and Avihu) brought before the Lord a strange fire which He had
not commanded them”. (Lev. 10:1) For many of our Rabbinic Sages this
indicates a transgression, with the false fire referring either to the fire
of jealousy (Nadav and Avihu could hardly wait to take the places of Moses
and Aaron), the fire of the Moloch idolatry, or the false and perverted
passion which can often come from becoming inebriated (and the very next
commandment of the Torah forbids an intoxicated Cohen from entering the
Temple precincts (Lev 10: 9).
There is however a third way of seeing this entire tragic incidence. The
issue is not at all the justice or lack thereof in the tragic deaths of two
young people; death is the most profound mystery of life. Death itself,
almost whenever and however it comes, is always filled with frustrated goals
and desires, unspoken words and feelings, and is always unfair and unjust.
The important point of the story as recorded in the Bible is the manner in
which Aaron responded to the deaths of his sons: “And Aaron was silent”
Vayidom Aharon (Lev. 10:3). And then the Bible goes on to tell us how Aaron
and the remaining sons continued to perform the Temple service. (10:12-20)
I was privileged to be present at the very first Sabbath circumcision of the
Klauzemberger – Tzanz hassidim in the Bet Midrash which they established
in Brooklyn New York, their first stop in America after the holocaust (They
were soon to leave Brooklyn and set up new and final residence in Netanya,
Israel) The Rebbe rose to speak: “My dear brothers and sisters, at every
circumcision ceremony we recite the verse from Prophet Yezekiel, ‘I see
you are rooted in your blood (damayich), and I say unto you that by your
blood you shall live , by your blood you shall live’. I would like to
suggest another interpretation. The Hebrew damayich does not come from
blood, dam, but rather from silence, dom, as in vayidom Aharon. There were
many reasons for us to scream out in protest during and after the Holocaust.
Had we done so we may very well have severed our entire relationship with
our G-d and our history. We chose to remain silent and to continue planting,
building and preserving. Indeed, by our silence do we live.”
Shabbat Shalom
Shlomo Riskin
Chancellor Ohr Torah Stone
Chief Rabbi - Efrat Israel
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