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    PARASHAT KORACH: THE CRACK IN THE DAM

    Parashat Korah tells

    the story of the quint-
    essential mahaloket –

    fight. The story is that
    of the rebellion led
    by Korah, who set
    out to challenge the authority of
    Moshe Rabbenu. Learning this story
    can teach us so much about why and
    how we need to avoid fighting.
    At one point in the story, Moshe
    sends a message to two of the leaders
    of the rebel group – Datan andAviram
    – asking them to come meet. Moshe’s
    intent was to try to talk things out and
    hope to make peace.
    But Datan andAviram refused. They
    sent a nasty message back to Moshe,
    saying that no matter what, they were
    not coming to meet with him.
    The Midrash says something
    startling about Datan and Aviram’s
    response. It says that they went so far
    as to tell Moshe, “Even if we will end
    up going to Gehinam and being

    punished forever because of this,
    we’re not ending this fight. We don’t
    care about anything.”
    It is very possible that the Midrash
    does not mean to say that Datan and
    Aviram actually said this. Rather, it
    means that at a certain point during
    this fight, Datan and Aviram realized
    that they were wrong. They
    understood that Moshe Rabbenu did
    not make himself the leader out of
    arrogance and selfishness. But it was
    too late. Once the fight got started,
    there was no turning back.
    A fight is like a crack in a dam. Once
    there is a crack, the water starts
    flowing through it until eventually
    the whole dam falls apart, and there’s
    a destructive flood. The same is true
    of a fight. Once a person gets into a
    fight, it is so, so difficult for him to
    back down. He feels compelled to
    persist, to keep going, to stand his
    ground, to take the fight to the bitter
    end, NO MATTER WHAT!!!

    This is why fighting is SO VERY
    DESTRUCTIVE. Because people
    can’t stop. Once they get started,
    they’ll sacrifice everything to win the
    fight. They’ll even ruin their lives.
    Rav Haim Palagi writes that he
    never saw a fight that did not end
    destroying lives. Rav Haim
    Shmulevitz writes that he has seen
    yeshivot which were able to withstand
    the greatest tests and challenges. But
    when a fight starts in a yeshiva, it
    almost always ends up destroying it.
    This is why Korah’s revolt ended in
    such a dramatic fashion – with the
    ground opening up and swallowing
    the rebels. Hashem wanted to show
    that there is nothing more destructive
    than fighting. So He did something
    drastic, something completely out of
    the ordinary, to show just how
    destructive fighting is.
    The lesson for us is not to let this
    crack open, not to let the fight start.
    When we hear something hurtful, or

    if there’s something we disapprove of
    or don’t agree with, we need to think
    very, very carefully before turning it
    into a fight. Far more often than
    not, IT JUST ISN’T WORTH
    IT. Whether it’s with a spouse,
    another family member, a friend or a
    business associate, we need to be so
    careful not to let the crack open in the
    dam.
    Because once it does, destruction
    will almost invariably follow.
    Let us always remember the great
    danger of fighting, and do everything
    we can to maintain peaceful relations
    with the people around us.