In my parshah, Ki Tissa, Moses as the leader of the Israelites is faced with
a dilemma. How does a leader react when his or her followers stray from the
direction they are teaching them to follow? At the beginning of my parshah,
the Israelites are wandering in the desert following their leader Moses.
They have stopped at Mount Sinai, and are about to receive the greatest gift
of all time. The tablets which will remind them of G*d’s commandments. Moses
goes up onto the mountain, but while he is there, the people decide to build
a golden calf as an idol. They sing and dance around eh calf, and worship it
as a god. When Moses comes down from Mount Sinai carrying the two stone
tablets, he sees what the people have done. He throws down the tablets, but
after he cools down deeds with G*d to forgive the Israelites.His reaction is a critical point in Jewish history (pause) as well as in
the history of mankind.
May be the reason the whole incident of building the golden calf occurred
was because the Israelites’ leader, Moses was not with them to keep
reminding the people that G*d did exist, that G*d was with them, and that
you can not pray to G*d through an idol.
But instead of Moses, Aaron was in charge. And Aaron’s leadership left
something to be desired. Aaron was like a baby-sitter or care taker who
doesn’t provide a vision, but just bends to the loudest will. A leader will
listen to his or her people, educate them, and inspire them with a vision. A
baby-sitter will not.
It can be said that the Israelites were a people raised in slavery, with
little education. I feel that education is the solution to many worldwide
problems,. In this situation, the Israelites needed to be educated by the
tables which Moses was to bring down from Mount Sinai. These tablets would
explain how the people were to live their lives. If the Israelites
understood the laws of G*d and internalized the values in them, they would
not need an idol like the golden calf to workshop.
They needed to be educated in the laws that would help us grow into the
magnificent people we have become. But it takes a leader to educate and
inspire, not a baby-sitter.
Part of leadership comes from understanding the needs of the people,
being able to communicate the vision in a way that people can hear and use
in their lives, and most importantly, not giving up and abandoning their
people when they fail.
For a mother does not give up on her children, a teacher does not give up
on her student, and Moses did not give up on the Israelites.
When Moses came down from Mount Sinai carrying the second set of the 10
commandments, his face was glowing with radiance. And all of the Israelites
saw what Moses was feeling internally on the outside. The feeling of being
touched by G*d. The god which made a covenant with Abraham, the god who
makes miracles happen, the god who is forgiving, and the god who loves all
of his people.
I feel touched by God. When I pray, there is a feeling inside of me of
love and serenity, of radiance, and of sparks.
I realize that the real challenge of leadership is to find a way to make
that inner feeling of radiance and sparks visible to others-like Moses did.
Only then can you influence others and make the world a better place. On
this day I feel more touched by G*d than ever. When I davenned shacharit
this morning, I felt that G*d was truly watching over me. For today I am a
Bat Mitzvah. Which manes I now will take on the responsibility to showing
others the love for Judaism, and the love for G*d that I have acquired
during my life.
It is now that I will begin my long journey to finding out and
understanding how to do what I’ve dreamed of doing. Becoming a leader, by
what I do and by the example I set. As a leader I have to learn how to make
my inner feelings of sparks and radiance visible to others.
Only then will I be able to lead myself and others toward a better world.