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Nehar Deah
Beha’alotecha
Moses, Aaron and Miriam - Siblings, Leaders and Rivals
Moses, Aaron and Miriam were siblings, as is written “and [Yocheved]
bore to Amram Aaron and Moses and Miriam their sister” (Bamidbar
26:59 [and see also Shemot 6:20 and Chronicles I 23:13]). And which of
these brought Israel out of Egypt? According to a tradition which has
been preserved in the prophecies of Micha, it was all three: “For
I brought you up out of the land of Egypt and from the house of bondage
I redeemed you and I sent before you Moses, Aaron, and Miriam” (6:4).
According to another tradition, only Moses and Aaron brought Israel out
of Egypt: “You lead your people like sheep by the hand of Moses
and Aaron” (Tehillim 77:21 and see also Yehoshua 24:5). There is
no need to state that these two traditions clash with the central tradition
of the Torah, which tells of Moses being the sole leader who brought Israel
out of Egypt.
The story in this Torah portion (Bamidbar 12) differs from all these
traditions in that it describes an open conflict between the siblings
over the leadership. Miriam and Aaron are defeated and Miriam is punished.
The story of this incident begins with Miriam and Aaron’s jealousy
of Moses and their public criticism of his virtues: “And Miriam
and Aaron spoke against Moses about the Cushi [Translator’s
note: this is usually translated as ‘Ethiopian’ or ‘black’]
woman he took, because he took a Cushi woman and they said, ‘Did
God only speak with Moses, did he not speak with us too?’ And God
heard” (verse 1-2). Miriam’s preface to Aaron teaches that
Miriam was the dominant instigator in the uprising against Moses. This
can also be learnt from the description of the significant anger directed
against her (verse 14) and the magnitude of her punishment.
Miriam and Aaron voiced two complaints against Moses: the issue of the
Cushi woman he took and the issue of equality of prophecy. The
claim against of the Cushi woman is against Moses’ leadership,
since a deficiency has been found in him, and the claim of equality is
against the status of Moses as having the sole right to speak in the name
of God. The claim of equality reflects the unique phenomenon of “family
prophecy”, in which all the siblings of a family are prophets.
The issue of the Cushi woman is unclear. It is not clear from
the story who the Cushi woman is. Is it Tzippora or is it another
woman, and why and under what circumstances did Moses take her? It seems
that here we have a hint of a well developed literary tradition that was
know to a number of people, but was not preserved in the Bible (but maybe
continued to exist and found its way to post-biblical literature, such
as the writings of Yosef ben Matityahu). What is clear is that the Bible
criticizes the fact that Miriam and Aaron spoke out against Moses and
thereby acted against God’s wishes.
Moses does not respond to the attempts to question his status as a prophet
and leader. It is not even stated that he heard the words of his brother
and sister. The one who heard was God (Bamidbar 12:2) and it is He who
responded and decided the outcome of the dispute. The narrative explains
Moses’ silence as extreme modesty, “and the man Moses was
more modest then any other man who was on the face of the earth”
(verse 3).
The greatness of Moses’ modesty is apparent from a comparison to
the story of the prophecy of Eldad and Meidad which precedes it (Bamidbar
11). When Eldad and Meidad prophesize in the camp, Joshua son of Nun,
Moses’ disciple, calls out: “My master Moses, incarcerate
them” (verse 28), and Moses answers him: “'Are you zealous
for my sake? Would that all God’s people were prophets, that God
would put His spirit in them” (verse 29). Miriam and Aaron’s
act is more extreme than that of Eldad and Meidad in that this time the
questioning of Moses’ unique status as a prophet does not come from
strangers but from his family.
According to the narrative, God reveals himself to Miriam and Aaron at
the entrance to the Tent of Meeting and puts them in their place in terms
of Moses superiority over them and over all other prophets. Moses merited
to be called “my servant” by God and it is even said of him
that “he is trusted in all my house; I speak with him mouth to mouth,
with clear vision, and not in riddles; and he sees the image of God”
(12:7-8). God became angry with Miriam and Aaron (verse 9) because they
questioned the required order of subordination. They were supposed to
be subordinate to Moses, who in turn was subordinate to God, and should
not have stood up against him. They had to learn the correct order the
hard way: Miriam was struck with leprosy and in order to save her Aaron
needs to ask Moses to pray for her to God. The correct path is from the
lower to the higher: from Miriam via Aaron to Moses, and from Moses to
God.
Miriam’s punishment is immediate: “And the cloud move away
from over the tent and behold Miriam was covered with leprosy like snow”
(verse 10). [Translators note: the disease tzara’at is usually translated
as leprosy and this convention is used here, but the biblical descriptions
of this disease bear little similarity to the modern day disease by that
name.] Miriam spoke out against the black (Cushi woman) and was
punished with white (leprosy). Half her flesh was eaten by it. Her illness
was so severe that she became nothingness. The laws of leprosy in the
book of Devarim state: “Remember what God did to Miriam along the
way when you went out of Egypt” (24:9). This punishment is meant
to serve as a warning to whosoever tries to question Moses’ leadership.
Aaron is described by the narrative of this Torah portion as being close
to Miriam. He spoke out against Moses together with her; paid attention
to the leprosy and was aware of her distress; admitted his part in the
sin (“And Aaron said to Moses: 'My lord, please do not account this
sin to us, for we have done foolishly and we have sinned.” [verse
11]); he came to her aid with an impassioned plea to Moses that he save
her (“Let her [Miriam] not be like a dead person whose flesh is
half eaten when he comes out of his mother’s womb” [verse
12]). Moses acceded to his request (with a short prayer, “God please,
save her please” [verse 13]), but it is difficult not to pay attention
to the differences in content, style and length between Aaron’s
plea and Moses’ prayer.
The connection between Miriam and Aaron, and Miriam’s standpoint
as a prophetess and leader appear in another tradition about Miriam. In
the Song of the Sea, Miriam is presented as “Aaron’s sister”
and as “a prophetess”: “And Miriam the prophetess, Aaron’s
sister, took the drum in her hand and all the women went out after her
with drums and dances. And Miriam answered them: Sing to God, for He is
greatly exalted: He has thrown horse and its rider into the sea”
(Shemot 15:20-21).
An early hint of these leadership struggles can possibly be seen in the
story of the birth of Moses. Moses is the only one among the three siblings
for which there is a story of his birth (Shemot 2:1-10). The story opens
with the classic formula for the beginning of a successful marriage: “A
man went … and he took … and the woman became pregnant and
she gave birth to a son” (verses 1-2). From this wording we could
conclude that Moses is the firstborn, but from the continuation of the
story it becomes clear that he has an older sister (verse 4), that interpretive
tradition identifies with Miriam, while Aaron, even though he is older
than Moses (Shemot 7:7) is not even mentioned in the story. Therefore
the problem arises of how to explain the fact that the narrative presents
Moses as the firstborn even though he had older siblings. Various solutions
to this problem have been suggested. There are those who gave this story
a creative solution: Moses was the firstborn of Amram and Yocheved, while
Miriam and Aaron are children of Amram from a previous marriage. There
are those who gave this story a stylistic solution: the Bible “compresses”
these events in order to focus on Moses. However it is likely that the
solution can be found in the area of the polemics within the Bible on
the question of who redeemed Israel from Egypt. Presenting Moses as the
firstborn, ignoring Aaron and concealing the name of Miriam were aimed
at presenting Moses as the one and only person to which the task of redeeming
Israel from slavery in Egypt, was given and not to Aaron or Miriam.
Dr Leah Mazor
Bible Studies Department
Geography - “Miriam’s Well”
We can also learn of the important place in Jewish tradition throughout
the ages which Miriam, Moses’ sister, held from the traditions which
deal with “Miriam’s Well”. In the Tosefta, a composition
from the third century, brings Miriam, together with Moses and Aaron,
as those in whose merit the children of Israel merited to receive certain
gifts, such as the manna falling from heaven. In Miriam’s merit,
the Tosefta states (Sotah 11:1), a wondrous well accompanied the children
of Israel which provided them with water. The Tosefta continues (Succah
3:11) and describes the well in the following words: “there was
a well … like a rock full of holes, trickled and rose like the water
of this small jug, it ascended mountains with them and descended to the
valleys with them … the princes of Israel surrounded it with their
staffs and recited over it the song ‘Rise up well and answer her,
rise up well and answer her’ [see Bamidbar 21:17] and it bubbled
and rose upwards like a pillar”.
What happened to Miriam’s well after her death. According to the
Tosefta (ibid), in Moses’ merit the well continued to accompany
the children of Israel, until they reached the land of Canaan, when it
became hidden. Where did the well hide and with what waters did its waters
mingle. A number of answers are given to this question in the literature
of the sages. According to one “Rabbi Chiyya said: whoever wishes
to see Miriam’s Well - should go up to the top of the Carmel and
look out and they will see a type of sieve in the sea” (Babylonian
Talmud, Shabbat 35a) and according to the other the well sank into the
Kinneret Sea (Sea of Galilee), “the Sea of Tiberius”, as is
told in Midrash Vayikra Rabba (25:5): “It happened that someone
who suffered from boils went down to immerse in the waters in Tiberius
and it was a opportune time and he saw Miriam’s Well and washed
in it and was healed”. The Midrash continues and asks “where
is Miriam’s Well?” and answers: “that whoever ascends
Mount Yesimon [=a mountain in the lower Galilee that has not been conclusively
identified] and sees a type of sieve in the sea - this is Miriam’s
Well”. The Midrash also tells that the well is to be found immediately
opposite the main entrance to the ancient synagogue of Tiberius. According
to this explanation the well did not abandon the nation of Israel and
continued to contribute from its wondrous powers even after the biblical
period, until the times of the sages.
We would not be surprised then to discover that the well continued travel
along with the children of Israel, even in much later times. This we find
in a story brought in the book “Likutim Shonim (Various Collections)”
(Frankfurt 5642): “It happened that someone suffered from boils
and his wife went after the Sabbath to draw water and waited an hour …
and she happened to get water from Miriam’s Well … when she
came to her husband he was angry with her. He said to her ‘where
have you been?’ and she was so angry that her pitcher fell from
her shoulder and her pitcher broke and drop fell on his flesh and in every
place that the drops touched him he was healed.” It seems that this
story reflects a tradition known to us from the writings of the Jews of
France and Germany from the fourteenth century - to go out after the Sabbath
to draw water, out of a belief that it is then that the wells fill up
with water from Miriam’s Well, which, during the rest of the week
is found in the Kinneret.
Miriam’s Well has therefore carried out an important task during
the history of the nation of Israel: in its merit the children of Israel
quenched their thirst in the wilderness; it symbolizes the continuity
between the wilderness period and the settlement in the land of Israel
and even links between the land of Israel and the diaspora by transferring
the healing powers in its waters.
Characters - Yosef ben Matityahu
Yosef ben Matityahu (or by his Roman name: Josephus Flavius), Jewish
historian and military leader, lived and worked in the first century CE.
According to his own writings, he was born to a Jerusalemite priestly
family and his mother had blood ties to the Hasmonean family. Already
at an early age he gained significant status and at age 26 he joined a
mission that traveled to redeem Jewish prisoners from Rome. When the Jews
in the land of Israel prepared for the “Great Revolt” against
the Romans, in the seventh decade of the first century, Yosef was appointed
commander of the Galilee. It was a surprising decision as he was young
and inexperienced, and was even known to have a favorable attitude to
the Romans. However, it is likely that it was specifically this attitude
at allowed his appointment, since it suited the moderate line that the
leadership of the first revolt wanted to take. Almost immediately at the
beginning of the revolt, when Vespasian arrived with his army in Israel,
the besieged cities of the Galilee fell to him. Yosef ben Matityahu holed
himself up in Yodfat and after its fall he fled to a cave with about forty
people where they decided to kill themselves and they drew lots to decide
who would be the last to die. Yosef ben Matityahu remained with the last
fighter and persuaded him to fall into the hands of the Roman, who allowed
him to remain alive and eventually even brought him to Rome. Why did the
Romans not kill Yosef? How did he remain alive? Did he in fact lead the
revolt in the most effective manner? We cannot answer all these questions,
nor describe his character, since everything we know about Yosef are the
things he himself wrote.
In Rome Yosef gained the patronage of the Caesar and he was even allowed
citizenship, something which can be seen in the new name he took for himself.
His situation was not comfortable since he was a Jew in Roman surrounding
after the revolt and also because the local Jewish society related to
him with contempt and saw him as a traitor. His situation is reflected
in the four books he wrote in Greek, during the years he lived in Rome,
up till his death around the year 100 CE.
(a) “War of the Jews” - a comprehensive description of
the revolt, which, if reading between the lines, can be seen as a call
not to revolt against the Romans;
(b) “Antiquities of the Jews” - the story of the history
of the Jewish nation from the creation of the world till Yosef’s
times, a composition which presents Judaism, its heroes and its Torah
to the gentile world.
(c) “The Life of Yosef” - autobiography;
(d) “Against Apion” - a responsa which comes to defend Judaism
against claims made by anti-semites in the Greco-Roman world.
With respect to Moses, Yosef tells (Antiquities of the Jews 2:10), among
other things, about a war that Moses fought as head of the Egyptian army
against the Cushim. During this war Moses revealed his military
prowess and he dealt the Cushim a crippling blow and forced them
under siege. It was there that the daughter of the king of Cush , named
Tharbis, saw him from the wall and she was struck with a great love for
him. She suggested to Moses that he marry her and she in return would
surrender to city to him. This in fact happened and Moses returned to
Egypt with the Cushi princess at his side. Is it possible that
Yosef presents to us a possible version of a very ancient tradition whereby
Moses is associated with a “Cushi woman”, a tradition
that the Torah also hints at? We will never know for sure, but the possibility
certainly exists.
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