Parshat Shmini
by Rabbi Avi Billet
Tragedy has struck. Aharon's two older sons are dead,
victims of their own efforts in bringing a 'strange fire' into the Mishkan. Now
their corpses must be removed from a room only their father and brothers may
enter, yet these very people are the ones who are prevented from entering
because they have a job to do, and responsibilities which can not fall by the
wayside – the inevitable outcome of their becoming "tameh" through
contact with the deceased.
And so Mishael and
Eltzafan are called in. They are described to us as "The sons of Uziel,
uncle of Aharon."
Being students of the
Torah, we know the relationship of all these people from Shmot 6:18 and 6:22 .
So why does the Torah
add the unnecessary words, "Uncle of Aharon?"
Rashi tells us nothing
new when he explains that "Uziel was the brother of Amram." Rabbenu
Bachaye even wonders why Rashi bothered to tell us this – we know it from Shmot
6. Rabbenu Bachaye explains what he believes was Rashi's line of thinking based
in a Midrashic idea (Midrash Agadah, Yalkut Shimoni, etc) that the Torah is
coming to teach us how Aharon had inherited his qualities of being a
"lover and pursuer of peace" from his Uncle Uziel. Malbim similarly
explains that he was his beloved uncle who had similar qualities in general,
and that there is a unique kind of filial attachment that relatives who are
very similar have for one another.
I find this difficult
to accept as an answer – because it doesn't explain Rashi very well. If the
meaning was to suggest that Aharon was more like his uncle than his father, why
didn't Rashi just say that? Perhaps Rashi was simply noting that this verse
supports information we had been given earlier.
Rabbi Ovadiah MiBartenura suggests that one might
mistakenly think that Aharon's Uncle Uziel was a different Uziel married to a
sister of Amram. In this manner, it is being made clear that Mishael and
Eltzafan, sons of the brother of Amram, are Levites. The rule is made clear
that if no Kohanim are available to remove the corpses, Levites could enter the
Mishkan, but not regular Israelites.
Furthermore, the
Sha"kh explains, their connection to Aharon through their father is
significant for other reasons. "There is no one other than you two who can
get them; they were sgan-kohanim and you are sgan-levites (sgan = Vice). You
were both at the same level in your field. Eltzafan was to be the prince of the
Levites (Bamidbar 3:30 ). Just as
Aharon and Uziel were equated, so were their respective sons equated (even
though Mishael and Eltzafan were Aharon's first cousins and of his generation,
it is the father-son equation which parallels them with Nadav and Avihu)."
The Netziv adds that
Mishael and Eltzafan were modest and humble in their own way. The special
kinship between Aharon and Uziel allowed for this branch of the family to take
care of the tragic unfoldings on Aharon's behalf. There were, after all, some
members of the family who were jealous of Aharon (think Korach), and might have
viewed his tragedy as their opportunity to one-up him, to gloat in his loss.
But this was not the way, nor the concern of the family of Uziel, who were
family-people through and through.
It is important to note
that Aharon is often used in the Torah as a family connection. When Miriam
dances after the splitting of the sea, she is described as "the sister of
Aharon." Pinchas is described a number of times as "Pinchas son of
Elazar, son of Aharon."
There are three
approaches as to why Miriam is described as "the sister of Aharon":
either because she prophesied first of all her siblings – even before Aharon
(Otzar Midrashim), she prophesied when
she was only the sister of Aharon – about the birth of Moshe (Talmud Megillah
14a), or because he gave his life for her (Midrash Sechel Tov Beshalach 15).
Being connected to
Aharon, whose reputation is so outstanding, is a tribute to Miriam, a tribute
to Pinchas, a tribute to Elazar (when he is Kohen Gadol), and continues to be a
tribute to all the Kohanim, whom we continue to call Bnei Aharon.
In short, Uziel's being called Aharon's uncle is a
tremendous credit to a man about whom we otherwise know very little. The role
his sons play, and the fact of their being chosen to take the deceased out of
the Mishkan speaks volumes of who each of them was on a personal level, not to
mention (or specifically to mention) the stock from which they came.
May all parents,
grandparents, uncles and aunts merit to have children, grandchildren or nieces
and nephews about whom we are proud to say, "I am the parent/ grandparent/
aunt/ uncle of So-and-so. And I am proud of it." Especially if you see a
little bit of yourself in the next generation.
Because this kind of
pride, unencumbered by jealousy, is what makes a family unit strongest, as it demonstrates who among us models the behavior we most proudly affirm.
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