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Taking The Way Of Dispute And Division (from Parashat
Korach in the writings of) Rabbi Yitzchak Luria of Safed translation and commentary by
Avraham Sutton
Rabbi Chaim Vital writes in Shaar HaPesukim and Likutei Torah (Chumash HaAri, Bamidbar, pp. 133-134): "Vayikach Korach ben Yitzhar ben Kehat ben Levi" (Numbers 16:1) –The sages, of blessed memory, were hard pressed to explain the meaning of Vayikach Korach ["And Korach took"]. [On the surface, the verse itself does not indicate what he took.] They therefore interpreted the expression figuratively: "He took/made a bad acquisition for himself." Korach "took" it upon himself to question Moses and Aaron's authority. And although he tried to camouflage his real intentions and fool others that his complaint was for the general good, it was really selfish, i.e. only in order to "take" glory for himself. Sanhedrin 109b: "Vayikach [Korach]" – Reish Lakish said: sh'lakach mekach ra le'atzmo – he [figuratively] took/made a bad acquisition for himself." [Rashi: he started a ketata (argument, disagreement).]
Zohar Korach (3:176a): "Vayikach Korach" – He took evil counsel for himself. He who chases after that which is not his – not only will he lose the very thing he pursues, but what he has will be taken from him. Korach chased after that which was not his [the high priesthood]. He therefore not only did not get what he wanted, but he also lost what he had. Korach went in the way of machloket, dispute and division. He caused division above, and he caused division below. He who seeks to cause a division in the tikun of the world [i.e. the divine order] – he will perish from all the worlds. Machloket is the opposite of Shalom, Peace. He who opposes shalom, opposes the Holy Name, for the name of the Holy One is Shalom… Pirkei Avot (5:16): Any dispute that is for the sake of Heaven will ultimately endure; whereas any dispute that is not for the sake of Heaven will not ultimately endure. What dispute was for the sake of Heaven? The dispute of Shammai and Hillel. What dispute was not for the sake of Heaven? The dispute of Korach and his entire congregation.
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We can now understand how and why the Oral Tradition (the Talmud, Zohar, Midrash, etc.) can state so many varied "opinions" about any one situation or character. The sages had special "glasses" with which to penetrate behind the superficial level of the Text and enter into its spiritual meaning. This doesn't mean that they cast the simple, outer, narrative layer of the text, aside, G-d forbid. On the contrary, they saw it as an extremely important outer garment, without which we could never even approach the inner soul level. Read with the above in mind, we can now understand the way the sages of the Talmud (Sanhedrin 109b) dealt with the "characters" in this week's portion:
All that the sages said about Korach and his followers will be understood in the light of what we will say here. How? By revealing the archetypal level beneath and behind the outer level of the narrative. Know that Moses was born with the good aspect of the nefesh [soul] of Hevel. Rav Chaim now gives a number of cross-references to places in which he has already developed this idea: See above where we explained this on the verse, "A new king arose over Egypt" (Ex. 1:8, in Shaar HaPesukim, s.v. Ve'hinei bechinat Balaam, Chumash HaAri, Ex., p. 16). [The souls of] the entire Generation of the Desert are extensions of Moses' soul, as alluded to in the verse, "The nation in whose midst I am [number 600,000 men on foot]" (Num. 11:21) [he was literally the central soul in their midst that contained all of them, and they were his extensions]. On the verse, "Ki shiv'atayim yukam Cain – If Cain will be revenged seven-fold, Lamech will be revenged seventy-seven-fold" (Gen. 4:24, in Shaar HaPesukim, Chumash HaAri, Bereshit, pp. 119-120), we have also explained how the evil in the ruach of Cain reincarnated in Korach. There, he explains as well that the letters yod-kof-mem of yukam ["revenged"] are an acrostic for Yithro, Korach and Mitzri [the Egyptian that Moses killed]. All of these men were gilgulim of Cain. However, we have a problem. All of them were alive at the same time! The answer: Cain had nefesh, ruach and neshama. 1) His nefesh incarnated in the Egyptian. Wanting to fix and elevate the good aspect of his former brother's nefesh, Moses did not kill the Egyptian with a sword, but rather by pronouncing a Divine Name. 2) Cain's ruach incarnated in Korach. This is why Korach was jealous of Moses, and disputed his power. 3) Cain's neshama incarnated in Yithro. This is why he gave his daughter Tzippora to Moses as a wife. In Shaar HaGilgulim (36th Introduction, end; pp. 313-314 in Bnei Aaron edition), he explains further that, while the evil aspect of the nefesh of Cain incarnated in the Egyptian, the good aspect incarnated in Kenan and Mehalel. Similarly, while the evil aspect of the ruach of Cain incarnated in Korach, the good aspect incarnated in Samuel the Prophet (one of Korach's descendants). Finally, the good aspect of the neshama of Cain incarnated in Yithro after he converted. Again, this is why he gave Tzippora to Moses. For she had been his (Hevel's) twin sister whom he (Cain) "took" to be his own wife, in addition to his own twin sister. It took all this to repair the damage that Cain did by killing Hevel. With this, you can now understand Korach's renewed argument with Moses, at this time. In other words, Hevel and Cain [or at least specific aspects of each of these spiritual qualities] have returned in Moses and Korach. Know that the nefesh of Hevel itself contained a number of nefashot [souls], as well as a number of nitzutzot [sparks]. [Both] consisted of an admixture of good and evil.
The good souls/sparks in Hevel numbered 37, the gematria of his name. Whereas the evil souls/sparks in him numbered 308 [the gematria of Korach]. [308 + 37 = 345, the gematria of Moses.] Moses was born with the fully rectified aspects of Hevel's soul. He was completely good, as we explained on the verse, "And she saw him, that he was good" (Ex. 2:2; Likutei Torah, in Chumash HaAri, Shemot, p. 43). This
is why the gematria of Hevel (37) plus the gematria of Korach (308)
totals Moses (345). It alludes to the fact that all the nitzutzot in Moses
were good, whereas the remaining 308 evil sparks in Hevel constituted the basic
nefesh makeup of Korach. In
addition to this, the evil aspect of the ruach of Cain also entered
Korach through ibur (gestation). This didn't just "happen." Rather, by constantly dwelling in his thoughts on his plan to undermine Moses (who was really Hevel), he attracted these aspects of Cain to himself.
This then is the mystery of the phrase, "Vayikach Korach – And Korach took," wherein we are not told what it is that he took. As we have said, however, this refers to his taking the evil aspect of the ruach of Cain. This is alluded to in the sages' statement (Sanhedrin 109b): "Sh'lakach mekach ra le'atzmo – he took/made a bad acquisition for himself." Seeing, that is, that the evil aspect of Cain's ruach had now entered him, he thought: "Until now, I was from the evil aspect of Moses/Hevel, and I was therefore subject to him. Now that I have the ruach of Cain, he can no longer dominate me." Korach sought to escape Moses' dominion. (Click on the footnote number to return to the text.) [1] The central letters of the word machloket [dispute] are chet-lamed-kof, which spell chelek, "part." These central letters are surrounded by the two letters mem and tav, which together spell met, "dead." We learn from this that a "part" or "piece" of the truth is "dead." Only when all the pieces come together does the truth emerge in all its living glory. In our context, we can also add that the same letters can be re-arranged to spell lakach mavet, alluding to the fact that, by choosing to enter into a machloket with Moses, Korach "took [i.e. chose] death" for himself. |
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