Parashat Pekudei
Team Effort
Building global community, like the
construction of the mishkan, requires everyone to participate.
By Carol Towarnicky
This
commentary is provided by special arrangement with American Jewish World
Service. To learn more, visit www.ajws.org.
In this week's parashah, Pekudei,
Moses finished the work of setting up the mishkan, the movable sanctuary
in the desert. The mishkan was designed to be the central structure of
relationship between God and God's people. It was also the center of the human
community, the location of all religious activity and the site where civil
disputes were heard and settled. It housed the tablets of the Ten Commandments,
the core document that declares the principles of human-Divine and human-human
interactions.
The
mishkan in many ways exemplifies the relationship between holiness and
community. The root of the Hebrew word, sh-ch-n, is related to the root
of the words Shechinah--God's presence on earth--and shachen--neighbor.
The
physical placement of the mishkan was also significant: once
constructed, the mishkan not only was the spiritual and civil center of
the people, but also the physical center of the community as the Israelites
arranged their camp around it by tribe (Numbers 1:1-4:20). Through the mishkan,
the Israelites were able to structure their community around God and God's
laws. The creation of holy community thus became possible through the shared
creation of a structure founded on sacred ethics.
The
Torah gives detailed instructions on the design and construction of the communal structure, and names the
person responsible for building it. Yet the Israelites were still invited to
contribute offerings from their own hearts.
Everyone has a Role
Sforno,
a 16th century Italian commentator, wrote that because the Jewish people
wholeheartedly donated the materials to build the mishkan, they shared
in its actual construction. Even if one was physically unable to do the work of
creating the mishkan, he argued, providing support for its construction
allowed each individual to share in it completely.
The
parashah, too, even while recognizing the leadership of the mishkan's
chief architect, emphatically attributes the project to the entire
community. "The Israelites did so," it says, "just as God had
commanded Moses, so they did (Exodus 39:42)."
The
same is true as we work to build a holy global community. We may not be able to
do the intense physical labor required to build community centers in Honduras
or Uganda, but we are able to contribute funds to those who can.
We
may not be able to provide medical care to refugees from Darfur, but we can
commit to keeping the crisis at the forefront of our thoughts and actions. We
may not be able to stop the AIDS pandemic, but we can advocate for better
legislation to meet the needs of those suffering from the disease.
The
mishkan was completed a year following the exodus from Egypt, leaving 39
more years in the desert (Exodus 40:17). The Israelites did not wake up the
morning following its completion with nothing left to do. For them, and for us,
the task of making the universe a worthy dwelling place for God continues,
requiring us to repair and renovate the many situations that are broken.
Like
the holy community that erected the mishkan, a holy global community
must be centered around an ethical core. It must be a place where neighbors
treat each other with respect, where disputes are settled in justice and where
everyone beneath his vine and fig tree can live in peace and unafraid (Isaiah
2:4).
Carol
Towarnicky is a freelance writer in Philadelphia.