This is not so much a shiur on the parsha, as some thoughts on the upcoming wedding of my Chana to Elkonoh.
So when Chana started dating Elkonoh, I figured that was as bashert as you could get.
But that is connected to the parsha, because the original אלקנה was the great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-grandson of קרח, the villain of our parsha.
And that lineage is important to understand קרח's motivation.
And it is the wording of the Torah that makes it clear that Korach considers himself part of a chain: דתן, אבירם and און are named in the usual fasion: with patronymic and tribe. Korach is named father after son for four generations, and the Torah might have gone further:
In fact, the midrash evokes nominative determinism in all their names:
What is this chain, this שלשלת גדולה, that connects קרח to שמואל? It is the idea of speaking truth to power.
Korach’s claim that we are all equal before ה׳—that כל העדה כלם קדשים ובתוכם ה׳—is true. We need to protest when those in power abuse that power. And the lineage of Korach embodies that principle. We first see that in the story of לוי and דינה, when he and שמעון rescue her from שכם. Jacob is concerned about אַ שאַנדע פֿאַר דער גויים: (בראשית לד:ל) וַיֹּאמֶר יַעֲקֹב אֶל שִׁמְעוֹן וְאֶל לֵוִי עֲכַרְתֶּם אֹתִי לְהַבְאִישֵׁנִי בְּיֹשֵׁב הָאָרֶץ. לוי and שמעון respond: there is an injustice, we have to fight: (בראשית לד:לא) הַכְזוֹנָה יַעֲשֶׂה אֶת אֲחוֹתֵנוּ?
And that comes out in the story of שמואל:
That seemingly irrelevant detail, וישחטו את הפר, is the key to this story.
The chutzpa of Shmuel saying that they don’t need a כהן is striking because of who the כהנים were:
So the need to “wait for a כהן” was a symptom of the corruption of the משכן and the כהונה. Samuel was making the same claim as Korach: כל העדה כלם קדשים, so שחיטה כשרה בזר. He was challenging the status quo, the entire power of the כהנים. And he would become the נביא of the destruction of the משכן and the כהונה:
שמואל got that chutzpa from his parents. When his נבואה refers to כל אשר דברתי אל ביתו, it refers to an earlier נבואה, from his father:
And חנה also has an incredible chutzpa:
Chana goes to the משכן, the place where the כהנים are offering קרבנות and invents a whole new way of serving ה׳.
But there is a
difference between קרח, and אלקנה and חנה. קרח was an iconoclast: tearing down institutions that he felt had become corrupted. To make a medical pun, אלקנה and חנה were iconoblasts: they didn’t just tear down institutions, they built the institutions that would allow בני ישראל to serve ה׳.
We saw that חנה developed תפילה. אלקנה tried to bring the people back to the משכן.
And שמואל would lay the groundwork for מלכות בית דוד and the בית המקדש.
That is the nature of our Chana and Elkonoh. They are strong-willed and stand for what is right, perfectly happy to bulldoze through whatever obstacles need bulldozing. But it always (ירמיהו א:י) לִנְתוֹשׁ וְלִנְתוֹץ…לִבְנוֹת וְלִנְטוֹעַ.