HOSHANNAH RABBAH
SIMCHAT TORAH
RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL
"Death Don't Have No Mercy In This Land"
shelter all of mankind in His tent of peace. May all of the children of
Abraham, Jews and Arabs, and yes, even Jews with Jews, learn to love
peace and pursue peace. Amen.
SYNOPTIC ABSTRACT:
This is the last portion of the Chumash (the Five Books of Moses). Moses
blesses each of the tribes of Israel individually. But did Moses bless
ALL twelve? When he is through with his farewell blessings, Moses
ascends Mount Nebo, sees the land of Israel from this mountain's top, and
dies. Who buries Moses? If the entire Torah was traditionally believed
to have been given to Moses on Mt. Sinai, did he write the last verses
describing his death as well? Upon Moses's death, Joshua takes over the
reigns of leadership. To learn more, we invite you to read more.
Like Jacob centuries before him, Moses blesses each of the twelve tribes.
Like Jacob, Moses's words are both blessings and prophecies. The Hebrew
word, "v'zot,"(and this) is how Moses begins his blessings. This the same
phrase that Jacob uses to end his blessings (Gen. 49:28). The Midrash
says that this is to show continuity of the people from their earliest
times as individual sons of Jacob to the time soon to come, when they
will enter the promised land and become a nation after wandering in the
desert for 40 years. Moses used this same phrase when he began his
summation of the Torah in Deuteronomy 4:44. Ramban ( Nachmonides of
13th-century Spain) says that this symbolizes that it was the ethics of
Torah that carried Israel through its past journeys, and Torah ethics
will continue to carry Israel through its future trials.
This portion is read on Simchat Torah. As mentioned above, this is the
last portion of the Chumash. As soon as we finish it, we immediately
begin the first book the Torah (Genesis). This symbolizes that our people
can never consider the ethics taught in the Torah to be completed. Our
study, as well as our living ethically, continues year in and year out.
This Shabbat's Haftarah, taken from the first chapter of the book  of
Joshua, is the book of the Holy Scriptures that follows Deuteronomy.  In
this Haftarah, Joshua solidifies his leadership and the Jews  pledge
loyalty to him by saying," all that you have commanded us we will do,  and
wherever you send us we will go." This is reminiscent of the words  said
by the Israelites in the desert to Moses: "We will do and we  will
listen." While the ethics of the Torah are unchanging in a  circular
pattern, Jewish history and our adaptation to the times must be  linear.
Moses is called "a man of God"(Deut. 33:01). His last act on  earth,
knowing that he would die, was to bless his people. Rabbi Yaakov  David
says that homiletically, Moses is asking the leaders of the tribes to  not
only be strong and wise, but to be honest and kind as well. Moses  calls
the Torah a "heritage"(Deut. 33:04). It is to be transmitted  from
generation to generation. It is not an inheritance. One can do what  one
wishes to do with an inheritance. A heritage is something valuable  and
special that is handed down to one's children. The rabbis in  Talmud
Tractate Pesachim 49B take the Hebrew word for "heritage," change  a
letter and a vowel, and read the new word as "married." The say  that
Israel and the Torah are married.
Twelve tribes are blessed by  Moses. Ephriam and Menassah are combined as
"Joseph," who was their father  but did not have his own tribe. Simeon is
left out. Ibn Ezra, of the  12th-century, says that this is because Jacob
has castigated Simeon in  Genesis 49:05 and because the sinners in the
orgy at Baal Peor were  Simeonites (Num. 25:03). Ramban disagrees. He says
that the twelve tribes are  always listed as twelve. Usually Levi is
deleted, as this tribe is landless.  But Moses wished to bless Levi, as
their task of transmitting Torah values  was extremely important. He
therefore had to omit a tribe and chose Simeon.  He omitted Simeon, as
their population was small. According to the critical  theory of Biblical
authorship, Simeon was incorporated into a part of Judah  as early as in
Joshua's time (Josh. 19:02). By the time of Deuteronomy's  writing after
the return from the exile in Babylon, this tribe was all but  forgotten.
Zebulun and Issachar are mentioned together. Zebulun engaged  in
successful maritime commerce and supported Issachar, who devoted time  to
study and teaching Torah (I Chron. 12:32). Rashi says that this  symbiotic
relationship is codified by halakah (Jewish law). A rich man, with  no
time for study, can pay someone to study and they both will get  "credit"
for fulfilling the commandment to study Torah. In spiritual  Jewish
philosophy, this goes against the spirit of studying Torah to make  us
better people. We study Torah ethics and do good deeds because it  the
correct way to be, and not to garner God's favor.
In Deuteronomy  34:05, Moses dies. There are eight more verses of the
Chumash. The rabbis  debate who wrote these. In Talmud Bavli Tractate Bava Batra 15B
there are two  opinions: Joshua wrote these eight lines, or God dictated
these words to  Moses, who wrote them with tears from his eyes, rather
than with ink. The  Vilna Gaon, of 18th-century Lithuania, says both
rabbis of the Talmud are  correct. Moses got the entire Torah from God.
The part that had to do with  his death came as one long stream of
letters. He says that the Hebrew word  "dimah" can mean "tear" or
"mixed-up." The Gaon says Moses wrote the letters,  but Joshua made them
into intelligible words. I must inject a personal note  here. Whenever I
read about Moses dying, I get tears in my eyes. While alive,  Moses is
called a "man of God." When he dies, he is called "a servant of  God"
(eved Adonai; Deut. 34:05). In death, he is completely in Heaven's  realm
and "control". As a living being, he is a man, able to make choices  and
able to make errors.
We are told that Moses dies "by the mouth of  God"(Deut.34:05). Rashi says
that this means Moses dies by a divine kiss. The  rabbis of the Talmud
discuss all the various ways one can die. They decide  that this is the
best of all the ways to die. While the text says that God  buried Moses,
some rabbis argue that Moses buried himself. Another tradition  says that
Moses's grave was ready for him since the evening of sixth day of  the
creation at precisely twilight of the first Shabbat (Pirkei Avot  5:06).
Talmud Bavli Tractate Sotah 13A says that the verse, "and no one knows  his burial
place to this day," means that Moses himself did not know where it  was. 
No one is to know where it is even now, so as not to make it into  a
shrine.
Another interesting point is discussed by the rabbis. Verse  34:08 says
that "the children of Israel bewailed" Moses's death. They  juxtapose this
with how the Torah says Aaron was mourned. Numbers 20:29 says  Aaron was
mourned "by the entire house of Israel." The rabbis say that Moses  was
mourned by men to whom he taught the law. The sages say that all  the
men, women, and children mourned for Aaron because he taught them  love,
kindness and how to pursue peace. Aaron was known to go throughout  the
camp transforming friends and families who had disagreements into  having
loving and amicable relationships with each other again.
In  Tractate Sotah 14a, Rabbi Simlai notes that the Torah ends with an act
of  kindness (chesed) of God burying Moses. The Torah also begins with an
act of  chesed in Genesis 3:21 when God clothed Adam and Eve. The Talmud
records that  chesed is the "founding" principle of the Jewish people and
of what we call  ethical monotheism. Abraham's mission was preaching 
chesed toward one  another.
 The Talmud teaches that chesed is associated
with spiritual  perfection and is the most important aspect of the Torah.
Chesed is the  unifying factor of creation, says rabbi Pinchas Winston.
If one masters the  trait of kindness, one masters the traits for building
relationships. Abraham  and his original religious philosophy believe that
the world was created for  chesed and for loving, kind relationships with
each other. King David  reiterated this idea in Psalm 89:03: "A world of
chesed You created."  
Imitating God is a higher spiritual experience than doing rituals  or
even talking to God, as we   learned when we read about Abraham  stopping
his conversation with God to care for three strangers. When one  makes
chesed a high priority in life, one is doing one's best to resemble  God.
God says in Genesis 1:03, "Let there be light (or)." Abraham is called  a
"light" in the Midrash. The Midrash also says that,"when Moses was  born
he filled the house with light." We know that God calls light, "good."  We
know of Abraham's many acts of kindness. But what was Moses's major  act
of kindness? Moses, the Midrash says, did a "chesed shel emet"  (true
kindness). 
While the Jews were busy collecting gold from the Egyptians
just prior  to the Exodus, Moses found the coffin of Jacob,which was
buried in the Nile  River, and brought it to the surface. He carried it
with him for forty years  and instructed Joshua to bury Jacob in Shechem.
Why is this called an act of "true  kindness?" The sages say it is an act
that can never be repaid. Because of  this one act, the Midrash says,
Moses merited burial by God Himself. It was  not due to the teaching of
the 613 commandments. It was not due to bringing  Israel out of slavery
and through the desert safely to the banks of the  promised land. It was
not due to being "shomar Shabbat" (strictly observant  of Shabbat), or
following exacting rituals of the dietary laws. Moses is  called a "man
of God," and a "servant of God," and is buried by God because  he did an
act of true, unrepayable chesed.
I close this last D'var of  the Chumash with a quote about Moses by Elie 
Wiesel: "His passion for social  justice, his struggle for national
liberation, his triumphs and  disappointments, his poetic inspiration, his
gifts as a strategist and an  organizational genius, his complex
relationship with God and His people, his  requirements and promises, his
condemnations and blessings, his bursts of  anger, his silences, his
efforts to reconcile the law with compassion,  authority with
integrity--no individual, ever, anywhere, accomplished so much  for so
many people in so many different domains. His influence is boundless.  It
reverberates beyond time."
Chazak! Chazak! Venitchazeik! Be Strong!  Be Strong! And May We Be
Strengthened! Amen!!
Chag  Somayach!
Shabbat Shalom.,
RABBI ARTHUR   SEGAL
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