Parashat Ha'azinu
A Life of Vision
We who are engaged in building Jewish communities must simultaneously look
to the past and the future.
By Rabbi Kerry Olitzky
This commentary is provided by special arrangement with
the Jewish Outreach Institute, an organization dedicated to creating a more
open and welcoming Judaism. To learn more, visit www.joi.org.

This week's
portion, which nearly completes the annual reading of the entire Torah,
reflects on the past as it simultaneously offers a powerful vision for the
future. As a result, the subtlety of this portion and the myth that has been
perpetuated through its common retelling yearns for further exploration.
Moses will not be
allowed into the Promised land. The primary reason offered is his disobedience:
he angrily struck the rock for water when he was merely supposed to touch it
with his staff, gently coaxing the water from its source (see Numbers
20: 2-13.) Many read this as the
explanation for his punishment.
Yet Moses is taken
to Mount Nebo at the end of his life and allowed to gaze into the future, a
privilege none of us are given. Can this really be considered a punishment or
is it simply a recognition that the past generation--and its slave
mentality--has to remain in the desert?
The past must not
be forgotten but it cannot be recreated. Nor can it be brought into the future.
With the help of God, Moses is able to see the fruits of his labors, the
dénouement of the journey of the people in the desert. He gazes across into the
Land and is given the ability to see.
We have witnessed
Moses' ability to see so many times in the past, such as when he witnessed the
presence of God in the midst of a burning bush that was not consumed, but the
vision described in this portion seems to be an entirely new phenomenon. It
seems odd that it is introduced at the end of Moses' life and at the end of the
Torah.
Before she passed
away I asked my grandmother, my bubbe,
the last of the Russian generation in our family, about her life in Russia. She
used whatever strength was left in her 5 foot frame and told me quite clearly,
almost stridently, "We left Russia because it was terrible. I have
forgotten about it. You must forget about it too."
The nostalgic past
is never as good as we would like to remember it to be. But it is a means of
getting us to this place. Had she not journeyed to these shores, my family
might never have experienced its freedom.
Moses has dedicated
his life to a vision. He led the people out of Egypt into the desert so that
they might commune with God before entering the land of promise. Perhaps his
goal was the eventual destination: arriving in the land. But the Torah would
not have spent so much time telling the story of the journey were it also not
important.
We who are engaged
in creating a new form of Jewish community should take heed of Moses' lesson.
We should give ear (literally, haazinu, the name of this portion) and
pay attention to the lesson he is offering to those who will listen. The
lessons of inclusion may be found in our past, but our vision for an inclusive
Jewish community is part of our vision for the future.
Rabbi Kerry
Olitzky is the author of many inspiring books that bring the wisdom of Jewish
tradition into everyday life. He most recently co-authored 20 Things for Grandparents of Interfaith
Grandchildren to Do (And Not Do) to Nurture Jewish Identity in Their
Grandchildren and Jewish Holidays: A Brief Introduction for Christians.