Parashat B’ha’alotkha
Leaving Childhood Behind
The specific
complaints of the Israelites in the wilderness illustrate their inability to
develop mature, adult relationships.
By Rabbi Shimon Felix
The following article
is reprinted with permission from The
Bronfman Youth Fellowships in Israel.
In this week's parsha we have one of a number of stories in
the Torah about the kvetching and complaining that the people of Israel were
guilty of during the time they were in the Sinai desert, traveling from Egypt
to Israel. The story, in chapter 11 of Numbers, goes like this:
"And the riff-raff among them had a craving, a lusting,
and again they wept, along with the people of Israel, and they said 'who will
feed us meat? We remember the fish we used to eat in Egypt, free; the
cucumbers, the watermelons, the leeks, the onions, and the garlic. But now our
souls are dry, there is nothing, all we see is this manna.'"
After this strange complaint (leeks? onions? garlic? And
what kind of fish did the Egyptians give their slaves for free?), the Torah, in
a pointed aside, extols the virtues of the manna that the Israelites so
bitterly complained about: "Now the manna is like coriander seed and it
looks like bdellium. The people would go out and collect it…its taste was like
rich, moist oil…" This glowing description of the manna makes it difficult
to understand what the Israelites were complaining about.
The Rabbis add to the problem by telling us that, in fact,
the manna had the quality of tasting like whatever the eater imagined; ice
cream, southern fried chicken, sun-dried tomatoes, whatever, which leads to the
question--if that was the case, why didn't the Jews just imagine that the manna
tasted like watermelons and cucumbers and all that other stuff from Egypt that
they said they missed so much? The Rabbis, in a well-known answer, say that
these particular foods, when eaten by nursing mothers, produce an unpleasant
taste for their nursing babies, and therefore God, as a favor to the nurslings,
did not allow the manna to taste like them. Later on, I am going to posit a
somewhat different explanation.
We then return to the story, and are told that "Moshe
heard the nation crying, by their families, each person at the opening of his
tent, and God was very angry, and it looked bad to Moshe." Moshe then
turns and complains to God: "…Did I conceive this entire nation? Did I
give birth to it, that you should say to me, 'carry it in your bosom, as a
nursing parent carries a suckling child, to the land that you promised to their
forefathers?' Where am I going to get meat to give to this whole nation, for
they are crying to me, saying 'give us meat, so we can eat!' …"
It really looks like Moshe has lost it! The imagery he
uses--motherhood, nursing, crying children--is fascinating, and is even more so
in the original Hebrew, in that Moshe uses some feminine language, which the
Rabbis see as making him seem even more of a female, "mother" figure.
The thrust of the story seems to be, I think, that the
Jewish people behaved in a way that was extremely child-like, and Moshe's
response is appropriate to that. The crying, the fact that they missed the food
they ate in Egypt, not because it was very good but, rather, because it's what
they were used to, Moshe's infantilizing the people in his speech to God, all seem
to indicate that this is not about a real need for real food, but rather is
about a tendency on the part of the Jews to regress to a simpler, child-like
reality, symbolized by the foods of that childhood.
I'm reminded of an episode of "Friends" that I accidentally
watched in which Monica was supposed to cook a Thanksgiving dinner for
everyone, and each person, childishly, wanted the mashed potatoes exactly the
way their mother cooked it; with lumps, without lumps, creamy, crunchy, etc.
One is also reminded of Proust's madeleine, and how his childhood, and
subsequently his entire life, was conjured up for him by the sensory memories
he experienced when he dipped it into his cup of tea.
This desire for the physical, sensory, and tactile
experiences of our childhood is not uncommon--I feel the same way about Kedem
grape juice and Ring Dings, which really are awful. In our story, however, this
is apparently part of a much more problematic pathology.
The Rabbis explain this pathology in the following way: When
the people complain, the Torah tells us that "Moshe heard the nation
crying, by their families, each person at the opening of his tent." The
simple meaning is that they gathered in family groups in order to protest the
lack of meat. The Rabbis, however, claim that "by their families"
actually means they were crying ABOUT a family matter, namely, the fact that
now, after having been given the Torah, the Jews were forbidden to engage in
incestuous sexual relations, and this is what they were crying about!
Where did the Rabbis get this weird idea? Why do they insult
the Jews of the pre-Torah period by maintaining that they were not only guilty
of incest, but were in fact so into it that they all got together and cried
when those relationships were forbidden to them?
It would seem that we are being taught a profound lesson
about infantilism, growing up, and sexuality. The Torah's paradigm of mature,
adult sexuality is expressed in Genesis, at the creation of Adam and Eve. Adam
is lonely without a mate, unsatisfied. God creates woman, Adam likes her, a
lot, and the Torah says: "Therefore a man leaves his father and mother and
clings to his wife, and they become one flesh."
Of course, Adam had no father and mother to leave, and yet
the Torah insists that an intimate relationship between a man and a woman is
predicated upon a leaving behind of the intimate relationships of one's
childhood, and the establishing of a new relationship, the forging of a new
reality. Growing up, we are being told, is about leaving behind the sensations
and intimacies of childhood, and creating a new set of sensations and
intimacies.
"And they become one flesh," according to the
Rabbis, refers not only to this new-found intimacy, but is also a reference to
the new life, the child, who is created by this union, which, in fact, makes
the transition from childhood to adulthood complete; one leaves behind being a
child by becoming a parent.
The People of Israel in the desert were infantile; craving
the food of the nation's 'childhood' in Egypt, complaining about the food that
they now had to go and get themselves, and whose taste they had to invent
through a creative act of the imagination. They preferred, instead, to simply
nostalgically remember and re-experience the tastes and sensations of their
infancy, the food the Egyptians gave to them "free"--i.e., like
babies, fed to them by an all-powerful "parent," as passive, rather
than active recipients.
This mind-set, the Rabbis tell us, is consistent with
incest; a clinging to the intimacies of one's infancy, rather than moving
forward to create new, adult intimacies, new relationships, out of which are
created new human beings, new families. Incest, in this understanding, is about
not being able to grow out of the relationships that we are born into, not
being able to grow beyond the sensations and interactions we experienced as
children. Incest is a failure of the imagination, a failure to look beyond our
childhood, which is our first experience of love, intimacy, and relationship, to
the possibility of leaving that behind in order to create a new set of
relationships, and, ultimately, new life.
It is appropriate, therefore, that God withheld from the
Jewish people the ability to imagine that the manna tastes like foods that are
bad for nursing babies. The message behind that is clear--it is time to give up
what you 'ate' (experienced, felt, loved) as a child, and to 'eat' like an
adult, i.e., that which is a product of your own active imagination, and which
will nourish your own children. Your expectations of physical sensation and
pleasure should not hark back to your infantile experiences of them, but,
rather, should be part of an active attempt to leave them behind, to stop being
a child and become a parent.
The message for the growth and maturation of the nation, as
well as for us as individuals, is clear.
Rabbi Shimon
Felix is the Israel Director of the Bronfman Youth Fellowships in Israel.
He lives with his family in Jerusalem, and has taught in a wide variety of
educational frameworks in Israel and abroad.