Parashat Be'ha'alotkha
Internal & External Change
The struggle of transition.
By Rabbi Elliot Rose Kukla
This commentary is provided by special arrangement with
American Jewish World Service. To learn more, visit www.ajws.org.
"I don't understand why I
keep making the same mistakes," a patient of mine recently told me. He had
called for a chaplain in the middle of the night because he felt overwhelmed by
remorse. "I have been hospitalized five times now. I've lost my
girlfriend, my friends, my law practice, all because of drinking… I really want
to change, but somehow I just keep doing the same old things over and over
again."
Change is hard.
We are in the middle of reading the Book of Numbers, which
is about the Israelites' struggle to leave slavery and abandon old behaviors. The
Book of Numbers could be affectionately called the Book of Kvetch, as it is filled with complaining--the people
remember slavery in Egypt fondly and regret their decision to move toward
liberation.
Most of this complaining is really a way of expressing the
same heart-wrenching sentiment as my patient expressed--making fundamental life
changes, even if they are life-saving ones like leaving slavery or quitting
drinking, is extremely difficult. Even when we intellectually know we need to
discard harmful addictions, behaviors, or relationships, leaving behind old
ways of being in the world is at best an ambiguous experience.
From Slavery to Freedom
In this week's portion the people complain bitterly. "If
only we had meat to eat," they wail. "We remember the fish we ate in
Egypt for free, the cucumbers, the melons, the leeks, the onions, and the
garlic. Now our gullets are shriveled. There is nothing at all, nothing but
this Manna to look forward to (Numbers 11:5-6)!"
It is hard to understand why the people remember slavery and
oppression so warmly. Jewish sages question whether the Egyptian taskmasters
really gave the Israelites fish for free and posit that the freedom that they
are recalling in Egypt was actually a freedom from morality and obligation (Midrash
Sifrei 11:6).
As slaves, the people did not have to make decisions--they
did not even have to choose what to eat--and they were free from any
responsibility. In the desert the people begin to mature and make choices for
themselves, but still yearn for the deceptive "freedom" of slavery. In
other words, the people had left slavery but not psychological bondage--they
were still thinking like slaves as opposed to thinking like free people.
The contemporary writer William Bridges claims that there is
a difference between change and transition:
Change is your
move to a new city or your shift to a new job. It is the birth of a new baby or
the death of your father…Change is situational. Transition on the other hand,
is psychological. It is not those events, but rather the inner reorientation
and self-redefinition that you have to go through in order to incorporate any
of those changes into your life. Unless a transition happens, the change won't
work, because it won't "take."
Leaving Egypt
was a change. Leaving slavery is a transition.
Linking Egypt to the Present
In the contemporary world, we often talk about social
change. Change is essential, but we also need social transition. Investing in
the education of women is one example of promoting social transition. Studies
have shown that when girls and women have more educational opportunities, rates
of HIV infection are significantly lower. The education of women leads to
transitions in the way individuals relate to each other, to their families, and
to the range of options they see for their own lives.
When HIV prevalence drops, life expectancy and incomes rise.
This in turn leads to even more educational options for women as well as men,
and ultimately to the growth and improvement of society. In other words, making
condoms and anti-retroviral medications more widely available promotes
life-saving change, but educating women leads to transition in the way HIV/AIDS
impacts the global community.
As my patient realized, change without transition is just a re-arranging of the
furniture--the foundational problems of our lives stay the same, and we keep
experiencing the same problems over and over again. The Israelites in this week's
portion left Egypt but carried their slavery within them. In this season, as we
read the Book of Numbers, may we learn from the Israelites' wandering and find
a pathway out of both internal and external oppression. May we make not just
changes, but also deep transitions that allow us to march forward toward a
promised land of justice and freedom.
Rabbi Elliot Rose Kukla is an activist, writer, organizer, and
educator.