A Loaf for the Creator - Shelach 5786
What comes to mind when we use the word Challah? Usually it refers to the special bread that we eat on Shabbat and holidays after kiddush, often braided and with seeds on top. The meaning of the word Challah in its original Biblical form is a loaf. A loaf of bread or even a “loaf” of Matzah. And there is a Mitzvah of “Challah” in this week’s Parsha (Bamidbar 15:18-21): Upon your arrival in the land to which I am bringing you, when you eat from the bread of the land, you must donate a raised-offering to G-d: Donate the first of your dough, a loaf (Challah in the original Hebrew) as a raised-offering... From the first portion of your dough you must give a gift to G-d, in all your generations. Which means that whenever a person would make a dough, they are to give the Kohen (priest) the first loaf, and it needs to be large enough to make a meal. This was the case at the time when people were generally ritually pure, meaning that they had the ashes ...