Parashat Masei
Lost Stories
The list of the
Israelites’ encampments during their journeys in the wilderness reminds us of
the importance of preserving and retelling our own stories.
By Jane West Walsh and Gershon Silins
The following article is reprinted with permission from The Union of American Hebrew Congregations. For a free e-mail subscription to the UAHC’s
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"They set out from Rithmah and encamped at
Rimmon-perez" (Numbers 33:19). This is one stage on the list of 42 such
encampments described in the parashah that outlines our people's journey from
slavery to freedom.
What is the use of this list? We know it is important
because the text itself tells us so: "Moses recorded the starting points
of their various marches as directed by Adonai" (Numbers 33:2). Since God
commanded Moses to write the list, we can be sure that there is an important
reason for it, but its purpose is still not obvious.
Rashi thinks that the journeys were recorded to make God's
benevolence known--the list shows that they were enabled to settle down for
extended periods. In addition, Rashi gives another reason for the list: Midrash
Tanchuma compares it "to a king whose son was ill, and he brought him to a
distant place for treatment. When they returned, the father began enumerating
all the journeys. He said to him, 'Here we slept; here we were chilled; here
your head ached; etc.'" Therefore, says Rashi, this short listing of the
stages of their wanderings was designed as reading material for the people to
recall what had befallen them at each place, after they had settled in their
land.
Maimonides (in the Guide) goes a step further. The stages
had to be recorded for subsequent generations, who might think that the
Children of Israel traveled in a desert that was near to cultivated land and in
which it was possible to grow or find food. Their subsistence in the real
wilderness is confirmed by the list of actual places so that in the future the
magnitude of the miracle of our survival could be seen.
But this is only half the story. Rithmah and Rimmon-perez
are places that can no longer be identified, and they are not mentioned
anywhere else in the Torah (likewise, the other encampments mentioned in verses
18 through 29, according to Jacob Milgrom in the JPS Torah Commentary,
Numbers).
What lessons can we learn from this list and these forgotten
and remembered places? What further questions emerge upon reflection?
Narratives and lists are metaphors. They serve as one way
human beings communicate with one another about things worth remembering and
the thoughts associated with them. Current brain research indicates that the
narrative form may, in fact, be "hard-wired" in our brains. Like the
loop that tells us to move our feet "right, left, right" without
thinking after the early trials and errors of the toddler years, the narrative
form may be innate to how we think and remember. Stories and the sequence of
ideas they impart are essential to understanding the world and our place in it.
As Jews, our wandering in the wilderness, marked here by the sequence of
forty-two places at the beginning of Parashat Masei, appears to be essential to
our very being as a people on a continuing journey in which we share history
and destiny.
Most likely, this list comes from the most ancient sources.
We can imagine that since the list is just a list, our ancestors heard it and
knew exactly what these places represented. They had complete stories in mind,
having full understanding of the events that took place there (as we do when we
hear the words Watergate or Woodstock, for example). They probably thought
those stories would always be remembered by the hearers of the list.
So one thing we learn is that even the most important story
may be forgotten if the hearers do not pass it on. What happened at Rithmah or
at Rimmon-perez? We will never know.
There are stories in our time, too, awesome and tragic ones,
and they may also be forgotten. Hundreds of thousands of Jews emigrated from
centuries-old centers of Jewish life, and a generation was wiped out in Europe,
and only a handful are still here to tell of it. This can also be true of our
own histories in this renaissance of Jewish life in America. When we are gone,
will these dramatic events become like Rithmah?
Let us remember to tell and retell the stories that help us
understand our world and our place in it as Jews. Let us make time for stories
in our Jewish lives at home and in our congregations. Let us support community
projects that record our stories and the stories of those who have come before
us. Let us listen and ask questions of our own families--parents and
grandparents--and record and preserve their stories for ourselves and for the
collective memory of our people. Let us tell and retell so that our common
destiny will live on--leolam vaed (forever).
For Further Reading:
Studies in Bemidbar, Nehama Leibowitz (Israel:
Haomanim Press, 1993).
A Celebration of Neurons, Robert Sylvester
(ASCD,1997).
Jane West Walsh is
a lecturer at the Cleveland College of Jewish Studies and a planning associate
at the Jewish Education Center of Cleveland.
Gershon Silins is
the cantor of Temple Emanuel, Kensington, MD.
The Union of American Hebrew
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