This piece by Rabbi Kenigsberg was first posted in the Hanassi Highlights on Thursday 14 May. You can also read it in Hebrew here and in Yiddish here.
As we approach Chag HaShavuot and the memory of standing together at Har Sinai, Parshat Bamidbar offers a striking image of the Jewish people in the wilderness. The Torah describes in meticulous detail the arrangement of the camps: each tribe with its own banner, its own position and its own identity, encamped around the Mishkan at the centre.
At first glance, it seems almost contradictory. Chazal
describe the Jewish people at Sinai as standing “ke’ish echad belev echad”—“like
one person with one heart.” If unity was the prerequisite for receiving the
Torah, why does the Torah now emphasize distinction and separation? Why the
need for different flags, different camps and different identities?
Rav Yaakov Kamenetsky explains
that the tribal arrangement only took place after the completion of the
Mishkan. Before the nation could express its individuality, there first had to
be a shared centre. The Mishkan represented a common mission, a spiritual
anchor that transcended the differences between the shevatim. Only once that centre existed could
diversity become a source of strength rather than fragmentation.
Perhaps this also sheds light on a
cryptic story told by Chazal. The Gemara (Zevachim 116a) recounts that at the
time of Matan Torah, the nations of the world were terrified by the sounds and
upheaval surrounding Har Sinai. They ran to Bilam and asked whether Hashem was
bringing another flood upon the world. Bilam
answered: “Hashem oz le’amo yiten”—this
was not destruction, but revelation. The Jewish people were receiving
the Torah.
Rav Meir Shapiro of Lublin offers
a profound insight. During the flood, predators and prey coexisted peacefully
inside the teivah. But that was not true harmony; it was unity born of
necessity. The lion did not devour the lamb, simply because there was nowhere
else to go. In the future, however, when “the wolf will dwell with the lamb,”
the peace will be different. It will not emerge from fear or survival, but from
shared purpose.
That challenge remains deeply relevant for us today. Over
the past difficult years, Am Yisrael has shown extraordinary solidarity in
moments of pain and crisis. The question is always whether we can transform
that into something deeper and more enduring.
Parshat Bamidbar reminds us that Jewish unity does not
require uniformity. We do not all think alike or act alike. Each tribe had its
own flag and its own role. But all faced the same Mishkan.
As we prepare for Shavuot, let us strive for a unity rooted
not in crisis, but in shared purpose—a unity that embraces difference while
binding us together in a common mission.
Shabbat Shalom!
