In a few days, it will be June 6th, D-Day. Seventy-Six years ago, English, Canadian, and American soldiers crossed the English Channel, landed on the beaches of Normandie, and saved the world from the tyranny, fascism, and the heinous authoritarianism of the Third Reich. Nearly a year before D-Day, OSS agent (The U.S. Intelligence Agency that eventually became the CIA) Walter Langer created a psychological profile that explained Hitler's grip on power and on public opinion as follows: “His primary rules were: never allow the public to cool off; never admit a fault or wrong; never concede that there may be some good in your enemy; never leave room for alternatives; never accept blame; concentrate on one enemy at a time and blame him for everything that goes wrong; people will believe a big lie sooner than a little one, and if you repeat it frequently enough people will sooner or later believe it.” A “Big Lie” justifies the corrupt megalomaniac's power and his believers’ actions. Whether it is a corrupt anti-democratic dictator from China, Russia, Belarus, or Iran or to dictators of nearly any authoritarian regime of the previous centuries, when people want to retain power or are threatened with losing power, they will resort to their own big lie.
This Shabbat we read from Parsha Shlach Lecha. Parsha Shlach Lecha includes the troubling narrative of the 12 spies and the ensuing report of Eretz Canaan made to Moshe and B’nai Yisroel. However, following the negative report from ten of the twelve spies, God and Moshe realize that this generation is not yet ready to enter the land. This was the reason why B’nai Yisroel would now have to wait nearly 4 decades prior to entering Eretz Canaan. Yet towards the end of the Parsha, Torah makes it very clear, that despite this generation’s lack of faith, returning to the land is inevitable and a covenant that will be fulfilled. Ki Tavo’u El Eretz Moshvoteichem Asher Ani Notein Lachem –God spoke to Moshe saying: Speak to the Children of Israel and say to them: When you will come to the Land of your dwelling places that I give you…. (Num. 15:2). Meting out punishment did not remove hope, it did not remove inevitability, nor did it mitigate the covenant that God had made with Avraham, Yitzchak, Yaakov, or Moshe Rabeinu at Sinai. This punishment only delayed the inevitable until another generation was worthy enough to inherit the covenant.
Those ancient leaders of B’nai Yisroel, those ancient Princes of twelve tribes were appointed by Moshe. Ten of them were concerned about themselves, their dwindling authority. These ten had little concern for a covenant. In their report to Moshe, these ten first objectively praised the land (Num. 13:27-29). However objective reporting immediately gave way to the subjectivity of opinion (Num. 13:31). After departing from Moshe and Aaron, the spies ignore any objectivity and only offer their “expert” opinion. VaYotziu Dibat Ha’Aretz Asher Taru Otah El B’nai Yisroel Leimor -And they spread an evil report of the land which had been explored to the Children of Israel. The negative report claimed that the land at up its inhabitants, giants or Nephilim occupied the land and as the spies claim Vanhi v’Eineinu Ka’Chagavim V’Chein Hayinu B’Eineihem - and we were in our sight as grasshoppers and so we were in theirs (Numb. 13:32-33) The report played upon the fears of the people. They felt small, exposed, hopeless and they could not imagine entering the land. Once again, national anxiety and hysteria cause B’nei Yisroel to yearn for Egypt. Lo Matnu B’Eretz Mitzrayim - Would that we had died in the land of Egypt. (14:3) But this yearning for Egypt was different. This hysteria was not because they were experiencing hunger and thirst, it was based upon the subjective opinion of those then who seemed to have an air of authority about them. So the hysteria and desire to return to Egypt culminated in the following words. VaYomru Ish El Achiv Nitnah Rosh VNashuva Mitzraima -So they said to one another, “Let us appoint a leader and let us return to Egyp” (14:4). In the Talmudic Tractate Sanhedrin 107a, the Sages ask who would have been the leader to bring them back to Egypt? Their answer is incredibly revealing and proved prophetic, an idol. An Idol would have brought them back to Egypt. On the one hand, the sin of the spies was due to a lack of faith in God. On the other hand, the sin of the spies is a warning to all those who listen to “the evil reports” who believe the evil reports, who get swept up in the hysteria and sacrifice their Ruach HaKodesh their divine spirit in exchange for idolatry.
No, the idol need not be a statue. Any cult of personality is idolatrous. The sin of the spies was twofold. First were the spies. Their sin was to tell the Big Lie and let the Big Lie fester playing upon the fears of the people. The second sin of the spies was the people’s willingness to give up on Moshe, to want another leader. A leader that would tell them what they wanted to hear, a leader that would placate them, a leader that would have been idolized. In a sense, the people were not only willing to replace Moshe but they were willing to replace God. The Big Lie, the evil report offered by the ten spies, teaches us that, ultimately, the choice to listen to and accept a “big lie” is up to the listener. If the listener’s faith in social institutions, authority, society, is already diminished then that listener is vulnerable and the prime target of a big lie. For B’nai Yisroel, it will take 40 years to rid itself of the stink of the Big Lie. For the nations that have had to deal with their own “Big Lie”, years are required, before it dissipates. For Caleb, for Joshua, and ultimately for the generation that was born in the wilderness, the Generation that didn’t know slavery, they were immune to this “Big Lie”.
Rav Yitz
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