Notes on the Painting Terumah. |
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Terumah:
Exodus 25:1 - 27:19
Haftorah I Kings 5:26 - 6:13
The Sedra Terumah and its companion Haftorah focus on the Holy Sanctuary; the Mishkan. The Sedra concerns itself with the Tabernacle carried by those who were the last of the Jewish People to have known the sting of a taskmaster's lash when they were slaves in Pharaoh's Egypt. The Haftorah tells of King Solomon's efforts to create the "permanent" sanctuary in Jerusalem where, today, we are only able to pray at the remains of the Western Wall of that great structure or rather, of the second iteration of the Holy Temple that Solomon built until it was destroyed by the Babylonians in the year 586 Before the Common Era.
The Torah's description of the Sanctuary can be daunting in all its amazing detail to make even those of us with an understanding of architecture or to those with a yen to draw or paint and who may wish to capture what this structure was all about and how the Jewish People, all newly freed slaves, save for one; Moses, who, though born to a Jewish slave, was raised and lived his life until the Exodus as a Prince in Pharaoh's court, related to it.
We are told that the Lord commanded that the Sanctuary be assembled; saying it was to be "built" would be stretching things since even though the Tabernacle was to be furnished with gold clad items and richly decorated, it was ostensibly a compound staked out in the wilderness and defined by what amounted to linen sheeting hung from tent poles and forming two concentric rectangular fields with the Holy areas at the center of the configuration and with the outer perimeter of sheeting creating a buffer zone around the inner one; the Holy one.
With so much detail defined by cubits; a measurement that is estimated to be something like 18 inches or the distance from the tip of one's fingers to the inside of one's elbow, it is easy to allow the over arching purpose and meaning of the Sanctuary to escape us.
The Lord had taken the Jewish People; the Children of Israel, who was formerly known as Jacob, out of Egypt after some 400 years of enslavement there in a great show of strength using ten fabulous and at the same time terrible plagues to bring Pharaoh to submission. The newly freed slaves were led to Canaan and told to conquer it. But, the People were still slaves at heart and lacked the courage to take the Lord as seriously as we might expect them to even though they had witnessed first hand the greatness of the Almighty. They scouted out the Land and though it was reported to be beautiful by some of the scouts, the vast majority of them described the inhabitants as giants and unbeatable by the relatively ragtag group of untrained would-be worriers. The real result when the Jews rejected the Lord's direction was to prove themselves to be unready at best and therefore unworthy of entering the Promised Land.
Their punishment was to be redirected into the wilderness where they would be led and protected by the Lord while they lived out their lives until there was no one of that generation of former slaves remaining. Their children, who only knew slavery from the stories their parents would have told them, would become the ones to enter the Land. But, while they wandered in the wilderness and after the experience at Mt. Sinai, where they received the Torah, the establishment of the portable Sanctuary was ordered. It would be carried from encampment to encampment, set up in such a way as to be
visible from all around and the Tribes, named for the Sons of Jacob and, in the case of Joseph, by his two sons, who were actually Jacob's grandchildren, would position their individual camps in the same arrangement that was used both at the foot of Mt. Sinai and in the same order that Jacob's sons themselves had stood around their father's bier before his burial.
So, "Why the Sanctuary?"
Slavery and its effects are tough to shake. The sin of the scouts, the Chait HaMiragliem, demonstrated the fragility of the lessons supposedly learned during the Exodus. The Sin of the Golden Calf, which resulted in Moses becoming so enraged as to angrily destroy the first set of the Ten Commandments, which we understand were written actually by the Hand of G-d. They saw the amazing proofs of the existence and the power of the Lord and they still could not believe it. How could that be? Of course, from our vantage point separated by thousands of years and never having experienced slavery, it is easier for us to judge the Jews of that generation harshly. But, though they
had all that evidence of G-d's power and might and of His commitment to his people, the people who had chosen Him after all, it was obviously still not enough to balance out the effects of centuries
of slavery.
It was apparently with that in mind that the Lord introduced the Sanctuary that it might serve as a constant reminder of G-d's presence among His People. It was hoped that the mutual commitment between His People and their G-d would be constantly brought to mind by the close proximity of the Spirit of the Lord in residence in the Mishkan; the Tabernacle. The People would then be moved to live their lives in the way of the Lord's commandments. The arrangement between the Lord and
the Jewish People was and is a conditional one; if we live according to the precepts set down by the Almighty, he will dwell among us; and later, when the Jews at last do inhabit the Promised Land, they will be permitted to continue to stay in that Holy Land so long as they again stay the course as His precepts demand.
The flip side of that conditional arrangement is that were the Jewish People not to live according to His rules, the Lord would leave and no longer dwell among us; ie. the Sanctuary would then be reduced to an assemblage of things with little if any purpose.
The modern day Temples and Synagogues are perhaps as close as we can come to reminding ourselves of the importance and the Power of the Sanctuary and of the Holy Temple in Jerusalem on uniting and inspiring the Jewish People to live lives of merit. However, the use of Mazozot placed on our residential door posts can be an additional reminder for us to follow the rules. So, too can the gatherings that we have around our family dinner tables on Sabbaths and Holidays. In all these and
more the conditional relationship between the Lord and the Children of Israel is as alive today as it was when the portable Sanctuary was carried and revered for those 40 years all those centuries ago.
My painting of the Sedra and the Haftorah is an effort to capture the essence of the place and space of the Mishkan with the knowledge that most of it would have been known by reputation rather than having been witnessed directly. The sky blue surrounding the encampment made up of flag-shaped areas incorporating the various known symbols and aspects of each group are allowed to live separately but work together to form the overall encampment as it was deployed each evening. The sand like spaces within the compound devoted to the Sanctuary could be any piece of the wilderness; nothing special really except that it would be chosen to be the momentary dwelling to the Lord Himself. That shows us that all things can be potentially Holy depending on its use rather
than on what it actually is. The elements of the Holy areas of the Mishkan presented a special challenge that I tried to meet by using colors to set apart or offset the stones of the Tablets of the
Covenant making the most unexciting and perhaps the least "attractive" of the entire painting the most important item of them all. There is a hidden arrow of light leading upward through the entire inner area of the Tabernacle representing the spiritual energy that would be moving in and through the structure on its way back to its source; the Lord G-d.
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Title: Terumah |
Medium: Water Color on Paper |
Size: 22" x 30" |
Available Framed or Unframed |
Created: Shevat 5769 corresponding to February 2009 |
Signed: Drew Kopf 2009 (lower left interior pathway) also in Hebrew: Dov Bear 5769 (lower right interior pathway). |
Original in a private collection, Chicago, IL; gift of the artist. |
There is a tendency for us sometimes to get mired down in detail and to miss the moment. The Sanctuary is there for us to remember our relationship with our Maker and of our belief in His great promise to us that is a certainty when we live the life he hopes we will.
Drew Kopf
February 2009 – Shevat 5769