This piece was first posted on the Hanassi Highlights, Thursday 18 June 2026. Thanks to ChatGPT you can also read it in Hebrew, here.
Parshat Chukat marks a profound turning point in the story
of the Jewish people.
Within a single parashah we encounter the deaths of Miriam
and Aharon, and the episode of Mei Merivah, after which Moshe is told that he
will not lead the nation into the Land of Israel. More than any other parashah,
Chukat represents the transition from one generation of leadership to the next.
Moshe, Aharon and Miriam were not merely great leaders. Chazal teach that they were each associated with one of the miraculous gifts that sustained the nation in the wilderness. The Gemara states: “Three good leaders arose for Israel—Moshe, Aharon and Miriam—and through them came three gifts: the manna, the Clouds of Glory, and the well” (Ta'anit 9a). When Miriam died, the well disappeared. When Aharon died, the Clouds of Glory departed. The obvious question is: why was Miriam specifically associated with water?
Rabbeinu Bachaye points us back to an earlier scene. As an
infant, Moshe was placed in a basket upon the Nile, and the Torah tells us:
"Vatetatzav achoto
merachok"—“His sister stood from afar to know what would become of
him” (Shemot 2:4).
In the merit of that act, Miriam was rewarded with the well
that accompanied the Jewish people throughout their forty years in the desert. But the connection runs deeper than
reward alone. Rav Soloveitchik
explains that Miriam was not merely watching a basket floating on a river. She
was watching Jewish destiny unfold. Standing “from afar” means seeing beyond
the immediate moment, beyond uncertainty and hardship, toward a larger future
that has not yet revealed itself.
This quality characterises Miriam throughout her life. She
encouraged hope during the darkest years of Egyptian slavery. She anticipated
redemption even before it arrived. She possessed the ability to see
possibilities where others saw only obstacles.
Yet there is another lesson as well. For forty years the people benefited from Miriam's well, but many may never have realised that the blessing came in her merit. Only when she was gone did they understand what she had provided.
So often the most significant contributions are the least
visible. A word of encouragement, a quiet act of kindness, a moment of
attention to another person —these rarely attract headlines, yet they shape
lives in ways we may never fully know. The
greatness of Miriam lay not only in her vision of the future, but in her
willingness to perform a seemingly small act whose consequences would be felt
generations later.
"Vatetatzav achoto merachok." Miriam stood
from afar. She teaches us to look beyond the present moment, to recognise
potential where others see uncertainty, and to remember that even the smallest
acts can become sources of blessing far greater than we imagine.
Shabbat Shalom!
