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    BAMIDBAR: UNITY & IDENTITY

    Parashat Bamidbar is almost
    always read on the Shabbat
    immediately preceding
    Shavuot. What is the
    connection between
    this parashah and Matan Torah,
    the event that we celebrate on

    Shavuot?
    Parashat Bamidbar tells us how Beneh
    Yisrael encamped in the desert. Each tribe lived
    together in its designated place, with its unique
    banner. The Mishkan, where
    the Shechinah rested, was situated in the center
    of the camp.
    This arrangement symbolizes the fact that
    although the Jewish People consists of different
    groups, each with different ways of doing
    things, we are, ultimately, all part of one nation,
    of one entity, devoted to Hashem, which must
    be at the center of our lives.
    I once posed the following question to a group
    of young men and women from our community:
    If you find yourself sitting on a bus, and to your
    right is a Hassidic person, and to your left is a
    non-Jew, to which of these passengers do you
    relate more?
    To my dismay, several of the youngsters

    replied that they would relate more to the non-
    Jew. They explained that their lives far more

    closely resemble those of non-Jews than to the
    lives of Hassidic Jews who don’t use the same

    technology, who observe different customs,
    many of whom speak Yiddish, and who follow
    stricter halachic standards.
    This mistake, I believe, stems from a
    preoccupation with externals, from losing sight
    of our core identity.
    If we identify ourselves based on our iPhone,
    the videos we watch, the kinds of houses we live
    in, the vacations we go on, and the clothes we
    wear, then indeed, we might find ourselves
    feeling closer to our non-Jewish neighbors than
    to Jews from different communities and
    backgrounds. But this is not how we should be
    identifying ourselves.
    We are identified by our commitment to
    Hashem, by our mitzvot, by the Torah we learn,
    by the principles of emunah that we live by, and
    by the tefilot we recite. And if this is our core
    identity, then we feel a special kinship and
    connection with all our fellow Jews, no matter
    how different their lifestyle and customs are
    from ours. Once our identity is formed by our
    belief in Hashem and the Torah, then everything
    else is external and of limited significance. If
    our priority is Torah and mitzvot, then we feel a
    close bond with all others who share this
    commitment, even if they express it differently
    than we do.
    Let us take the example of siblings who find
    themselves in a fight. Usually, when siblings
    fight, it’s because they are too concerned with

    things that shouldn’t matter that much to them,
    such as money or personal honor. But when one
    of the two quarreling siblings faces some dire
    crisis, Heaven forbid, they in most cases come
    together and forget about the fight. Times of
    crisis redirects our focus onto what really
    matters, onto what’s really important. And when
    this is our focus, we realize that what we have in
    common far exceeds what divides us.
    The Torah says that when Beneh
    Yisrael arrived at Mount Sinai to receive the
    Torah, Vayichan Sham Yisrael Neged Hahar–
    they encamped facing the mountain. Rashi, in
    one of the most famous and oft-quoted passages
    in his Torah commentary, notes that the Torah
    uses the singular form – Vayichan, instead of the
    plural form, Vayachanu. The singular form is
    used, Rashi explains, to indicate to us that the
    nation encamped at Mount Sinai K’ish Echad
    B’lev Echad– “as one person, with one heart,”
    with perfect unity. Previously, the pasuk says,
    Vayachanu Bamidbar – “they encamped in the
    desert,” using the plural form. At first, they
    were not united. But once they focused their
    minds on receiving the Torah, and their attention
    was redirected onto what really matters, they
    bonded together, K’ish Echad B’lev Echad.
    When we have our priorities straight, and we
    focus on what’s truly valuable and important,
    we find that we have so much in common with
    all our fellow Jews.

    Of course, we absolutely must be respectful,
    friendly, courteous and kind to all people, Jew
    and non-Jew alike. Every human being is
    endowed with the image of G-d and must be
    respected. But our fellow Jews must be viewed
    and loved as family, no matter how different
    they are from us.
    This is why Parashat Bamidbar is always read
    before Shavuot. We are divided into different
    “tribes,” each in its own territory, and each with
    its own “flag,” its own unique characteristics
    and ways of doing things. But we must feel a
    close bond with one another, despite our
    differences.
    Shavuot celebrates Matan Torah, the event
    that gave us our core identity. The Torah defines
    who we are – a nation charged with a special
    mission. The more we recognize that this is who
    we are, that our Torah commitment defines us
    far more than our homes, our cars, our clothes
    and our vacations, the more closely we will feel
    connected with all our fellow Jews, and bond
    with them “like one person with one heart.”