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    HAIR AND MONEY

    Our Sages tell us that

    Korach was one of the

    wealthiest members of

    the nation. In fact, the

    Gemara states that

    Korach had 300 mules

    carrying just the keys to his treasuries.

    Yet, despite his wealth, he was

    dissatisfied. So much so that he made

    the foolish and catastrophic mistake of

    leading a revolt against Moshe

    Rabbenu. How did this happen? What

    led Korach, who had so much, to do

    something so foolish, for which he lost

    everything, including his life? The

    Midrash explains that at the time when

    the tribe of Levi was set aside as the

    special tribe that would serve in the

    Mishkan, Hashem had Moshe perform

    a special ceremony to “purify” the

    Leviyim for this role. This included the

    removal of all the hair on their bodies.

    Korach was a Levi, and so all his hair

    was removed. When his wife saw this,

    she said to him, “Look what Moshe is

    doing! He made himself the leader and

    his brother the kohen gadol, and now

    he made you bald. Why do you put up

    with this?” Korach listened to his wife,

    and made the fatal mistake of

    launching a revolt. Why was Korach’s

    hair such a sensitive point? Why

    would this, in particular, drive him to

    lead a revolt against Moshe Rabbenu?

    Hair is something extraneous to the

    body, but which is attached to the body.

    Many people relate to money the same

    way. There is nothing wrong with

    having money, or with having a lot of

    money. There is also nothing wrong

    with wanting money, or with wanting a

    lot of money. There is, however,

    something very wrong with being

    attached to money, with being

    consumed by the pursuit of money,

    with making one’s happiness or the

    value of his life depend upon his

    money or his material standards. For

    too many people, money is like hair –

    extraneous matter which they keep

    attached to themselves, which they

    make part of their being. G-d decided

    to set aside one special tribe, the tribe

    of Levi, that would be devoted to

    spiritual pursuits. As part of their

    consecration ceremony, they were

    required to remove their hair, to detach

    themselves from materialism, to show

    that money must never be seen as an

    essential part of our being. This was

    Korach’s wife’s complaint. She

    wanted to Korach to fight to keep his

    “hair” attached to himself, to keep

    money and material pursuits part of

    who he was. There’s an expression that

    goes, “Money is a very

    good servant, but a terrible master.”

    Money is great when it serves us,

    when it enables us attain things that

    help us enjoy life. But, as in the case

    of Korach, it becomes terribly

    destructive when it takes

    over our lives and controls us, making

    our happiness dependent on it. Let us

    try to keep money external to our

    beings, and always ensure that it

    serves us, instead of controlling us.