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Nehar Deah
Lech Lecha
On the Brit Bein Habetarim ("The covenant between the
pieces")
Hashem's promise to Abraham at the beginning of our parasha (weekly
Torah portion), "For all the land which you see, to you I will give
it, and to your seed forever" (Bereishit 13: 15), seems to Abraham,
to fly in the face of reality. He does not have a son to inherit from
him, as he painfully states: "
you have not given me seed,
and so a member of my household will inherit from me" (13:3). This
"member of my household" is Abraham's faithful servant, known
as "Damascus Eliezer" (verse 2). In answer to his doubts, Hashem
promises him that he will have a son, from his own loins, to succeed him
and that his descendants will be as numerous as the stars and that they
will be given the Land of Canaan. On this occasion, Hashem's words are
accompanied by a festive ceremony, known in Jewish tradition as "brit
bein habetarim" ("covenant between the pieces"). This
name is indicative of the proceedings of the ceremony: a three-year-old
heifer, a three-year-old goat, a three-year-old ram, a turtledove and
a young pigeon are taken by Abraham and he cuts (the Hebrew word used
is "batar") the first three and places the halves "each
half against [=facing] its other" (15:10). Towards evening a "smoking
furnace and a burning torch" are seen passing through the divided
animals. The furnace and the torch are common images indicating the presence
of G-d, in the same way as we see his presence at the revelation at Mount
Sinai in the form of "lightning, thunder and a heavy cloud"
(Shemot 19:16), or in his leading the people of Israel through the desert
by a pillar of cloud in the day and a pillar of fire at night. On the
occasion of this covenant, Hashem is seen as passing between the pieces
of animal, thereby affirming his promise and accepting upon himself the
responsibility to bring it to fruition. In the only other place in the
Bible that a similar ceremony is mentioned (Jeremiah 34:6-22), there is
a description of the nation and its ministers who declare a covenant dealing
with the setting free of slaves: "they passed between the pieces"
of the divided calf (ibid verse 18).
We know of similar ceremonies from other ancient peoples, and from their
descriptions we witness the symbolic significance of dividing up animals.
In the covenant signed between two kings of states in northern Syria in
the eighth century before the Common Era - King Bar-ga'ayah of KTK and
Mati'el of Arpad - it is written (translated from Aramaic): "if Mati'el
will lie to Bar-ga'ayah, Mati'el will be divided up and his ministers
will be divided up as this calf has been divided up". In ancient
Babylon, it was customary that the participants in the covenant would
touch their throats at the same time as the animal's throat was slit,
and in the kingdom of Mari on the Mediterranean bank of the Euphrates
(in Syria, near to its border with Iraq), a commonly used phrase, "killing
the young donkey", was used to mean signing a covenant. According
to Babylonian mythology, even the gods "brought their souls in this,
vowed by oil and water and touched their throats" when they crowned
Marduk as their king. The basic principle: covenant-binding ceremonies,
such as the one Abraham was witness to, were used to give greater weight
to the words of the covenant and indicated to the participants the bitter
fate of one who did not keep the covenant.
But every silver lining has its cloud. During this impressive ceremony
with it's mystical and threatening atmosphere, it is explained to Abraham
that the covenant that is being made, will only come to pass after his
descendants go through a period of 400 years of servitude in a "land
which is not theirs" (which in fact came happened with the slavery
in Egypt). Only after this will they "go out with much wealth"
in order to return to the dwell in the Promised Land. The reason for the
delay: "For the iniquity of the Amorites is not yet full" (verse
16), i.e. the sins of the people of Canaan have not reached their full
proportions. This explanation presents the future events in the history
of the children of Israel, as a preemptive prophecy, and even gives an
answer to the moral dilemma that has bothered generations: under what
circumstances can one revoke ownership of a land in order to transfer
it to another nation? The given answer: the behavior of the resident nation
is the determining factor, when it's sins "go too far", they
are dispossessed of their land, and it will be given to others. This historiographic
viewpoint returns again in the words of Moses to the nation on the eve
of its entry into the land: "Not for your righteousness, nor for
the uprightness of your heart do you go to possess their land: but on
the account of the wickedness of these nations, the Lord your G-d drives
them out from before you and that he may perform the word that the Lord
swore to your forefathers" (Devarim 9:5). In addition: the nation
of Israel has no reason to think that they enjoy some form of preference
by virtue of the covenant that gave them the land. The book of Vayikra,
in it's unique way, binds Israel to a system of universal morality and
warns Israel against abominations: "that the land not vomit you out
also, when you defile it, as it has vomited out nations that where before
you" (Vayikra 18:28), meaning that the land of Israel will not suffer
abominations from any source.
The fact that this topic is raised indicates that already in first temple
times there were those who tried to deal with the question of moral justification
for the settling of the land of Canaan, ruling over it and its inhabitants.
The answer they give is: Neither their might, nor their forces, merit
Israel having it's land, but only the merciful kindness of Hashem towards
his nation in the "covenant between the pieces". This act of
kindness obligates the sons of Abraham to keep to the "way of the
Lord, to do justice and judgment, that the Lord may bring upon Abraham,
that which he has spoken of him" (Bereishit 18:19).
Professor Mordechai Kogen
Dept. of the History of the Nation of Israel
Literature of the Sages - How many years was the slavery in Egypt?
It seems that the answer is clearly given in the weekly Torah portion,
in Hashem's words to Abraham in the "covenant between the pieces":
"You shall surely know that you seed will be strangers in a land
which is not theirs, and they shall be enslaved and tortured for four
hundred years." (15:13). Despite this, in the story of the Exodus
from Egypt, the Torah gives us a slightly different figure: "the
sojourning of the children of Israel, who dwelt in Egypt, was four hundred
and thirty years" (Shemot 12:40). We can probably compromise between
the two figures given, by the traditional assumption that the children
of Israel dwelt in Egypt thirty years before their enslavement began,
which then continued for a period of four hundred years.
The problem is that this compromise does not solve a greater question
that arises from the biblical narrative. According to the timetables and
the names that the Torah gives, it seems that Kehat, the son of Levi,
was one of those who went down to Egypt with Joseph (Bereishit 46:11)
and Kehat was the father of Amram, who in turn was the father of Moses.
According to the Torah, Moses left Egypt when he was 80 years old, and
it turns out that there is absolutely no way to calculate that Kehat and
Amram together lived 320 (or even 350) years. In addition the Torah itself
tells that Kehat lived 133 years (Shemot 6:16) and Amram lived 137 years
(ibid verse 20), and clearly many of the years of Kehat's life overlapped
those of his son, Amram. Because of this difficulty we find many attempts
in the sources to show that the period of slavery was less that 400 years,
with the commonly accepted answer being only 210 years. This answer appears,
for example, in a work called "Seder Olam" ("The
Order of the World") which was written in the 3rd century C.E. According
to this work, the 400 years begins already with the birth of Isaac, as
already from this moment Abraham has descendants which are strangers in
"a land which is not theirs" (Canaan). According to this interpretation
of Hashem's words in "the covenant between the pieces", we can
reduce the 400 years by taking off the years of Isaacs's life up till
the birth of Jacob (60 years) and the years of Isaac's life up till he
went down to Egypt (130) and in this way we get to 210. In this way we
can maintain the exact figures given in the Torah This answers to those
who wish to question the veracity of the Torah, something that seemed
extremely important to the author of "Seder Olam".
In retrospect, after this figure was established, the sages found (Midrash
Bereishit Rabbah 91:2) a form of "proof" within the Biblical
narrative itself. When Jacob sends his sons down to bring food from Egypt,
in the time of the famine, he says: "I have heard that there is corn
in Egypt, go down to there
" (Bereishit 42:2). The gematriah
(numerical value of the Hebrew letters), for the Hebrew word "radu"
("go down") adds up to 210. According to this, Jacob's words
were prophetic, and he in fact knew that this was the period of time that
his descendants would spend in the land that he was sending them to.
Personalities - Damascus Eliezer
In the "covenant between the pieces", Abraham presents "Damascus
Eliezer" as the "steward of my household" (Bereishit 15:2)
or "the son of my house" (verse 3), who will inherit from him
after his death, if he has no descendants. We know of a custom, from the
ancient East, that a childless person would, while still alive, adopt
someone - often a slave which he freed for this purpose - who would serve
him during his life, would bury him and would be his heir. "The son
of my house" therefore means a slave, who was freed via a process
of adoption, to perform the tasks that a son would normally have done.
What is the meaning of the strange name "Damascus Eliezer"?
There are those who see in the word "Damascus", the name of
his city of origin (i.e. "Eliezer the Damascene"), a city which
lay on the route Abraham traveled from Charan to the Land of Israel. Others
see this as a double name, for example "Tubal Kayin" (Bereishit
4:22), possibly the slave's original name ("Damascus") plus
the name Abraham gave him when he freed him and made him his heir (this
second name has a clear meaning: "G-d is my helper").
It must be pointed out that Eliezer is not mentioned again in the Torah,
though the tradition of the ancient commentators (e.g. Babylonian Talmud,
Yoma 28b), identifies him as the slave, "the elder of his [Abraham's]
house, that ruled over all he had", who went to Charan to bring back
Rebecca in order that she could marry Isaac (Bereishit 24:2). One cannot
bring proof for this assumption from the Biblical narrative, and in fact
it is difficult to accept, as the Torah repeatedly emphasizes the fact
that the messenger to Charan was a "slave", and it's is difficult
to believe that the heir apparent of Abraham, the respected member of
his household, would be known by such a title. Despite this, the assumption
that it was Eliezer that brought Rebecca has become deeply ingrained into
the Jewish consciousness and many would be surprised to learn that it
was only a Midrash. The Midrash is well known for naming anonymous biblical
figures (e.g. the claim that the interpreter who stood between Joseph
and his brothers [Bereishit 32:23] was none other than Manasseh son of
Joseph, or the claim that Samson's mother was "Tzlelfonit").
Another interesting mention of Eliezer is found in the sources that deal
with the war between Abraham and the four kings that capture Lot, his
nephew (Bereishit 14). When Abraham is told by the "palit"
(refugee) (that the Torah identifies as Og, King of Bashan, who was "niflat"
[ejected, same root form as "palit"] from the flood!)
that his nephew has been captured, he enlists "his trained servants,
born in his own house, three hundred and eighteen" (verse 14) and
he goes out to free Lot. The number of fighters he takes with, 318 is
not a round number and the Midrash makes note of the fact that the gematriah
of Eliezer's name is exactly 318! When pointing out this gematriah,
the Babylonian Talmud states (Nedarim 32b) that Abraham and Eliezer fought
alone against the invading kings, teaching us of their superhuman physical
strength.
The Midrash even tries to explain the name "Damascus Eliezer"
and does this by dividing the word "DaMeSeK" (Damascus)
into two words - a technique known as notarikon - giving a new meaning
to this name: "draws and gives to drink ("Dolah uMeSeK")
from the teachings of his teacher to others" (Babylonian Talmud,
Yoma 28b), meaning that he drew from the teachings of Abraham and imparted
them to others. In this way the Midrash also turns Eliezer into a wise
man who spread the teachings of Abraham.
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