Thursday, July 4, 2013

Matot-Massei 5773: Machla, Tirtza, Chogla, Milcha and Noa



At the conclusion of this week’s Torah portion, Tzelophchad’s relatives express concern about his daughters’ inheritance. They worry that if the women marry men from tribes other than their own, the married women’s inheritance would transfer to their sons, who would belong to their fathers’ tribes. Their landholdings would thus be lost to Tzelophchad’s tribe, Menashe (Menasseh).

Moshe (Moses) relays G-d’s commandments concerning this issue, acknowledging that the relatives have a valid concern about the transfer of inheritance. For the next fourteen years, until the Land is conquered and divided, any woman who inherits her father’s property may only marry a member of her father’s tribe.

As the L-rd had commanded Moshe (Moses), so did the daughters of Tzelophchad. Machla, Tirtza, Chogla, Milcha and Noa married their cousins. They married into the families of the sons of Menashe, the son of Yosef (Joseph), and their inheritance remained with the tribe of their father’s family.” (Bamidbar/Numbers 36:10-12)

Talmud (Bava Basra 120a) relates that all five of Tzelophchad’s daughters marry late in life, after age 40, and it states that they wait for “suitable men.” This could mean that they hold out for men who are as wise and righteous as they are. (The previous page in Talmud remarks on the wisdom of the daughters who are able to expound on Torah and are described as righteous.) Talmud makes a point of saying that the women miraculously are able to bear children despite their advanced age (Baba Basra 119b).

Rashi, citing Talmud (Bava Basra 120a), writes that the daughters’ names appear in a different order each time they are written in Tanach. Of the verse in this week’s portion, he comments: “Here it enumerates them according to seniority over each other in age, and they were married in the order in which they were born. But throughout Scripture (Bamidbar/Numbers 26:33, Yehoshua/Joshua 17:3) it lists them in order of their intelligence and informs us that they were all equal.”

It is interesting to note that the ban on inter-tribal marriages was lifted on Tu B’Av (15th day of the month of Av) which this year falls on July 22. Tu B’Av is a purely rabbinic Talmudic holiday which has not been fully observed since the sixteenth century, although Tachanun (repentence prayers) to this day are not said on that day. With Yom Kippur, Tu B’Av is called “the most festive/happiest day of the year.” (Taanit 4:8)

The maidens of Jerusalem would go out and dance in the vineyards in the outskirts of the city. They dressed in borrowed white garments so as not to embarrass those who were poor. Rabbi Arthur Segal explains: “The girls would wear the same white simple dress so that rich and poor would look alike, none adorned with jewelry or make-up, so that the males would get to know them for their intelligence and chesed (kindness), and not for their external attributes…This allowed Jewish young men to fall in love for the right reasons (Taanit 30b-31a).”