Parshat Bereishit: Misguided unity

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By Rabbi Avi Billet

Issue of Oct. 31, 2008 / 2 Cheshvan 5769

Reading the story of the dispersion at the beginning of chapter 11, it is hard to see where the people went wrong. In the words of Targum Yonatan, they spoke one language, one kind of speech and had the same mindset. Their “achdut” (communal unity) should be a model for all!

The Talmud (Sanhedrin 109a) has a few suggestions as to what the “dor hapalaga” had in mind when building their tower. The first suggestion, that they were trying to make a hole in the sky to create a constant flow of water, is quickly rejected. But then the Talmud explains that there were three groups. The first wanted to live in the heavens, the second wanted to worship idols on top of the tower and the third wanted to wage war. The latter group may have wanted to use their position as a command center from which they could fight off attackers, or, according to a different opinion, as a means to reach heaven to fight G-d.

None of these explanations are evident from the text. The only indication the text gives us is that they were looking for collective glory, to avoid becoming dispersed (11:4).

Rabbi Menachem Leibtag, of the Tanach Study Center (tanach.org), uses his “Migdal Bavel vort” as a primary base for teaching about Judaism’s mission in the world. They wanted to “make a name for ourselves,” (11:4) while Abraham went out of his way to “call in the name of G-d.” (12:8, 13:4. 21:33) They placed themselves at the center of their universe, while Abraham put G-d at the center of his universe.

It is possible that they were building a tower to be prepared in case of a future flood. It is possible that they wanted to make a one building city in which everyone would live together. It is possible that they wanted to create a standard under which everyone would live, and a society in which everyone would be doing the exact same thing.

To their credit, they all participated in the effort. To their credit, they seemed to share the same ideals. To their credit, they knew that when you want to live a certain lifestyle, you need to work hard to achieve that goal.

And yet they were worthy of punishment, a punishment in which their unified language changed and they could no longer understand each other. Rabbeinu Bachya says their unity caused G-d to merely disperse them instead of destroy them as He destroyed the generation of the flood. But, he says, they sinned with their speech, in the sentiments they expressed about building a city and making themselves a name, and so they were punished with their speech.

Perhaps their greatest sin was not in their admirable unity, but in their insistence that everyone be the same. We live in a world of many colors and stripes, in which there is room for differences of opinion. People are free to choose how they want to live their lives, and must be flexible in “allowing” others to be free to make their own choices.

Using a little poetic license, just as the rainbow has different colors which all equally contribute to the beauty of its whole, we have to train ourselves to see that people who do not look or think exactly as we do have a right to express an opinion and be heard.

This applies, most currently, in the election campaign, but has repercussions in every way in which we live our lives.

There is one major difference, however, between the Jewish community and the generally “free” society. We have a unifying language, Hebrew, and a guidebook with rules we are committed to following. There are different interpretations for some of these rules, but there is a general uniformity that makes us children of Abraham, who seek to “call in the name of G-d.”

We have to remember that it is never about us. When we make it about “us” and “our way of life” instead of “for G-d and the Torah” (and some people have a difficulty discerning between the two), we are as guilty as the generation of the dispersion, who were spread across the globe because of their misguided principles.

Avi Billet welcomes your thoughts and comments at avbillet@gmail.com