29 Jun HOW TO CHANGE THE WORLD A MAN AND HIS COUSIN DEBATE HOW TO TRANSFORM PEOPLE
All-Blue. The weekly
Torah portion of
Korach relates the
story of a man by the
name of Korach who
debates Moses and
ultimately leads a
mutiny against the
greatest Jewish
leader. “The entire community is holy, and
Hashem is within them,” Korach exclaims. “Why
do you raise yourselves over the congregation of
Hashem?” The Midrash specifies, in greater
detail, the nature of Korach’s arguments against
Moses. Just prior to the Korach debacle, at the
culmination of last week’s portion, the Torah
presents the commandment of tzitzis, or fringes,
which obligates the Jew to hang strings on each
edge of his four-cornered garments. One of the
strings on each corner, the Torah instructs, should
be of turquoise wool, known in Hebrew as
techeiles. Now, Korach dressed
two-hundred-and-fifty men who joined him in his
debate with Moses, with four-cornered garments
made completely of turquoise wool and then
confronted Moses with the following question:
Does a garment made completely of turquoise
wool still require a single turquoise thread in its
fringes? Moses’ answer was, yes. To which
Korach, who was attempting to demonstrate the
absurdity of Moses’ law, responded: If a single
strand of turquoise wool is enough for an entire
garment made of a different color, does it not
stand to reason that a garment of complete
turquoise should not require one more strand of
this wool? Then, the Midrash continues, Korach
approached Moses with another question: As we
know, a Jewish home requires a mezuzah, a piece
of parchment hanging on its doorpost, with the
writings of two short sections of the Bible
(Deuteronomy 6:4-10; 11:13-21) that discuss our
relationship with Hashem and our obligation to
follow His mitzvos. Now Korach asked Moses
the following question: If a home is filled with
many complete Torah scrolls, does it still require
a mezuzah on its doorpost? Again, Moses’
response was yes. Once again Korach dismissed
this verdict as absurd. A Torah scroll contains all
two-hundred-and-seventy-five sections of the
Pentateuch, while a mezuzah contains merely
two. If a single mezuzah suffices for an entire
home, would not many complete Torah scrolls in
a home suffice to create a “kosher” and holy
space? Do you really need another two portions
on the door post? This was the public debate that
took place in the desert between Korach and
Moses. What bothered Korach? But why did
Korach choose these two examples to
“demonstrate” that the laws presented by Moses
were illogical. He could have chosen myriads of
biblical mitzvos that apparently have no place in
logic. He could have, for example, scoffed at the
prohibition against eating cheeseburgers or
shrimp or horsemeat. He could have derided the
mitzvah of purifying a defiled person with the
ashes of a red heifer. He could have questioned
the mitzvah to blow a ram’s horn on Rosh
Hashanah, as opposed to playing a violin
or a chello? Why did Korach dissect and
analyze the nuances of the above two
particular mitzvos? There is another
aspect that requires reflection. From the
biblical description of Korach’s family
lineage, it is quite clear that he was no
simple rabble-rouser, craving the power or
fame of Moses. Korach was a member of
the holiest family of the Jewish people, a
man educated and molded by the sacred
souls and kindred spirits of the house of
Levi. He was Moses’ first cousin (their
fathers’ were brothers). Furthermore:
Joining Korach in his mutiny against
Moses were “two hundred and fifty men of Israel,
leaders of the community, of those regularly
called to assembly, men of renown,” the Torah
records. If Korach was simply an egotistical
trouble maker, he would not enjoy the
companionship of 250 Jewish spiritual leaders,
scholars and men of vision. One must conclude
that Korach’s debate with Moses was driven by a
powerfully sensible argument, logical enough to
persuade great leaders to join his rebellion. What
was the essence of Korach’s argument with
Moses? Drama vs. action Why does the Torah
instruct the Jew to insert into each of the fringes
one strand made of turquoise wool? The Talmud
explains, because this color reflects the heavens,
reminding the Jew of Hashem’s majesty and
presence. Now, Korach and Moses debated the
nature of spiritual leadership, how to impact and
inspire physical human beings to refine
their lives and to transform the world from a
material, selfish planet, into a place of
spiritual energy where the inherent spiritual
organic unity of the universe is exposed.
Korach believed that you must impress
upon the heart the stirring drama, depth,
vision, and mystique of Torah’s vision of
the world. You need to shake people up and
overwhelm them with the majesty, grace
and splendor of Hashemliness. Let their
entire “garment,” their entire identity,
become all-turquoise. Let them melt away
completely and become fully enveloped by
the “blue light” of heaven. Moses disagreed.
He said that to move people, to let their
spirits soar, is splendid, but never enough.
For inspiration to leave a lasting impact, it
must find expression in individual and
particular actions, words and thoughts. If
you wish to make a real transformation in
people’s lives, it is not enough to generate a
dramatic momentum, to make them cry,
laugh and dance, to get their souls in fire
and their minds aglow with inspiration.
That will last for a few hours or days, then it
might vanish. You must give them a single
tangible act through which they can connect
to Hashem and bring His morality into the
world. You need to inspire people to make
one strand of their lives blue. The future of
Judaism This was no mere argument about
how to deliver a transformative speech. It
was an argument about what should
become the great emphasis of Judaism.
According to Korach, Judaism was about
awakening a passion to revolutionize the
universe. But Moses learnt from Hashem
that in order to accomplish this goal, the
primary focus of Judaism needed to be on
individual daily behavior, changing the
world one mitzvah at a time. Korach’s
message seemed logical. If we can electrify
a soul with a passion for making the world
a Hashemly place, is the individual mitzvah
ultimately relevant? If we can turn a person
into being all-blue, isn’t a single strand of
blue truly insignificant? Let us talk about
changing people and changing the world, not
about small individual acts! Ultimately Korach
felt, that Moses was misrepresenting Hashem’s
true intent in the world. By putting so much focus
on mitzvos, Moses was stifling the spiritual
creativity to be found in the souls of Israel. Moses
was robbing the community from its grandeur.
“The entire community is holy, and Hashem is
within them,” Korach exclaims. “Why do you
raise yourselves over the congregation of
Hashem?” The Rvolutionary and the Leader
Korach was a spiritual revolutionary, but Moses
was a leader, a shepherd to his flock. Moses, to be
sure, deeply identified with Korach’s message. If
anybody understood the value of impassioned
idealism, it was Moses, a man who left everything
behind in his quest for truth. But a leader is not an
individual lofty soul; a leader is a collective soul,
a person who encompasses within his own heart
an entire nation, from the highest to the lowest,
and who is deeply in-tune with the reality of the
human condition. Moses knew that a message that
inspires boundless awe and excitement, but that
does not demand individual life changes, will not
have a lasting impact in the long run. As the fiery
inspiration dies down, as the coals dim their glow,
black ashes are left behind. When the concert is
over, and the lights go off, what remains from all
of the ecstasy? An empty heart. When an
idealistic spirit speaks of transforming the
universe and lifting all of humanity to heaven, but
fails to invest much focus on building the daily
infrastructure that will harness their passionate
energy, at the end, he might fall very low, perhaps
even become swallowed by the abyss. This
indeed occurred to Korach and his men, as
discussed in the continuation of the Torah
portion, as it continued to happen to many a social
revolutionary in our own times. Has this not been
the story of so many artists of the “flower
generation,” who raised people up to the heavens
and then saw themselves and followers end up in
the abyss? Securing Continuity The lesson in our
lives is clear. We all struggle with the question of
Jewish continuity. Many Jewish activists and
leaders created programs which inspire Jewish
passion, Jewish awareness, tikun olam (healing
the world), the love of peace, the love of Israel.
These are all beautiful, noble and idealistic
missions, but they do not always create lasting
change. Passion and excitement without tangible
deeds on a daily basis are powerful but not
everlasting. The blue cloak is good but what we
need most is a single strand of blue. Our youth
needs to be taught the value and nobility of the
performance of a single mitzvah on a daily basis.
When the ideals of Judaism—the infinite dignity
of the human spirit, the inherent unity of the
universe, the presence of a living, loving
Hashem—are translated into daily deeds, we call
mitzvos, they don’t remain abstract celestial
reflections, that can vanish momentarily, but
rather become tangible and eternal realities in
people’s lives.