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PARASHAT
HASHAVUA
PARASHAT
MIKETZ
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Dedicated in memory of my father, Hillel ben Yechiel (Herman) Reiter, of Debrecen, Hungary,
whose yahrzeit falls on the 24th day of Kislev. May his soul be among the Righteous in Gan Eden.
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Dedicated
in memory of Devorah bat Anshel z"l
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Revava – The Riva Koschitzky z"l Torah Enrichment Program
Invites you to participate in the
Chanuka 5771 Study Days at Yeshivat Har Etzion
On the topic of
The Relationship between Jews and Non-Jews
Wednesday and Thursday,
December 1-2, 2010 (24-25 Kislev)
For
details see: http://haretzion.org
The Study Days are dedicated in memory of Riva Koschitzky z”l
Whose
second yahrzeit fell on the 22nd of Kislev.
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Afraid to
Hope
By Rav
Yair Kahn
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Dedicated
to the family of Zacharya Baumol,
a talmid of the yeshiva missing in action
since being captured in Lebanon in
1982,
for having the courage to hope
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1. Setting
the Stage for Reunification
In this
week’s parasha, the spotlight is on Yosef and his brothers. The brothers,
with the exception of Binyamin, are sent to
Egypt
to buy grain. They don’t recognize Yosef and are at his mercy. Yosef, who rules
Egypt,
accuses the brothers of espionage and imprisons them. After three days, Yosef
frees all his brothers, aside from Shimon, demanding that they return with
Binyamin to verify their story. After they arrive with Binyamin, Shimon is
freed. Yosef then sends his brothers back home with grain. However, he frames
Binyamin and accuses him of theft. All the brothers return to the house of
Yosef.
As these
events unfold, the brothers begin to confront their past. They view their
misfortune as divine retribution for what they did to Yosef. They go through a
penitential process. The culmination of this process occurs when Yehuda, who
originally suggested selling Yosef into slavery, offers himself as a slave
instead of Binyamin.
Yosef also
goes through a process. He is also forced to confront his past. He recalls his
dreams and remembers what his brothers did to him. As he observes his brothers
and witnesses their remorse, brotherly compassion is rekindled. Yosef’s
compassion brings him to tears. Initially, he still manages to control himself.
But following Yehuda’s passionate plea, he loses his composure. “Then Joseph
could not refrain himself before all that stood by him; and he cried, 'Remove
every man from my presence’” (45:1). The penitence of the brothers led by
Yehuda, coupled with the flame of brotherly love re-awakened in Yosef, sets the
stage for reunification of the house of Yaakov.
What would
Yosef have done had he not lost his composure? What was his next move? Was
imprisoning Binyamin a way of forcing Yaakov to come to
Egypt? We can only ponder the possibilities.
In the entire
story, Yaakov appears only on the sidelines as the story of Yosef and the
brothers unfolds. The brothers know that they have to bring Binyamin to meet the
Egyptian ruler. When Yaakov refuses, they don’t even bother arguing with him.
They ignore him, knowing that in the end he will succumb. Eventually, the
inevitable occurs: “And it came about when they had finished eating the food
they brought from Egypt,
their father said to them, ‘Return and bring back some food’” (43:2). Rashi,
based on a midrash, comments: “Yehuda said: ‘Wait for the old man until
the bread will be finished.’” Yaakov is the old man, respected but irrelevant.
He is unrealistic and he is forced to alter his plans when reality inevitably
catches up with him.
Nevertheless,
I would like to focus this shiur on Yaakov. What might have been going
through his mind? Or perhaps, what thoughts did he not allow to go through his
mind? All the Torah tells us is that Yaakov could not be consoled. According to
Rashi, Yaakov continued to grieve the entire twenty two years of Yosef’s
absence. Presumably, the death of Yosef, Yaakov’s favorite, was so terrible that
he refused to accept words of comfort and consolation. However, I believe that a
sensitive reading of the commentaries will yield two very different approaches.
2. Rashi's
Approach
When Yaakov
sends his sons to return to
Egypt, he blesses them as follows: “And may God Almighty give you mercy before the man, that he
may release unto you your other brother and Binyamin” (43:14). The phrase “your
other brother” is quite odd. Why didn’t Yaakov refer to Shimon by name? Rashi
addresses this problem and comments: “‘Your brother’ - refers to Shimon. ‘The
other’ - he was inspired by the Divine Spirit to include Yosef.” According to
Rashi, the reference to Yosef was a result of ruach ha-kodesh - divine
inspiration. Even though he didn’t intend to reference Yosef, he unknowingly
used a phrase that had prophetic vibrations. Only in retrospect, when the
mission to Egypt
leads to the return of Yosef, do we appreciate the significance of that strange
phrase and its divine origins.
We find that
Rashi also offered a mystical explanation as to why Yaakov refused to be
comforted. “‘But he refused to be consoled’ - A person cannot accept consolation
for one who is alive, but is thought to be dead, because only for the dead was
it decreed that he be forgotten, but not for the living” (37:35). According to
Rashi, the ability to be consoled is a gift bestowed unto man by God. This gift
was never awarded in a case where the person never actually died. Therefore,
Yaakov could not be comforted for the mistaken assumption of Yosef’s death.
According to
Rashi, Yaakov treated Yosef as if he were dead. After being shown the
blood-covered multi-colored garment, there was no doubt whatsoever in Yaakov's
mind. Therefore, his inability to be comforted and consoled cannot be explained
rationally or psychologically. The only avenue open to Rashi is the mystical one
- Yaakov was ineligible for the divine gift of consolation.
3. The
Psychological Approach
An
alternative to Rashi’s approach is presented by the Ramban. He quotes Rashi's
comment that Yaakov referred to Yosef when he said "the other" and adds: "This
is correct, for while praying, he intended to pray for the other as well -
perhaps he is still alive." While the Ramban builds off Rashi's comment, his
commentary is radically different. According to Rashi, the reference to Yosef
was involuntary and unintended by Yaakov. It was a divinely inspired slip of
tongue, meaningful only in retrospect. The Ramban, on the other hand, considered
it an intentional ambiguity, designed to implicitly include Yosef in his prayer.
Yaakov, according to the Ramban, still harbored the hope that Yosef was alive.
True, he was shown Yosef's blood-covered coat, but he never saw the body. The
spark of hope never faded. Maybe, Yaakov thought, Yosef somehow managed to
survive.
According to
the Ramban, Yaakov's inability to be consoled need not be explained mystically.
There is a solid psychological reason to explain why he can find no solace. How
can Yaakov be comforted for Yosef's death while still hoping that he is alive?
How can Yaakov's soul find peace while Yosef may be in danger, desperately
trying to come home? The possibility to mourn and to eventually achieve
consolation is predicated on accepting tragedy as fact. One who does not accept
the facts cannot mourn. One who denies that the tragedy occurred will never find
solace.
4.
I could not bring
myself to pray that I would see your face
There is a
verse which appears to contradict the Ramban's approach. After Yosef reveals
himself to his brothers, they inform Yaakov that Yosef is still alive. "And
they told him, saying: 'Yosef is yet alive, and he is ruler over all the
land of Egypt.'
Va-yafag libo, for he believed them not" (45:26). According
to Rashi, the phrase va-yafag libo is no more than an expression of
disbelief. It reflects a cognitive reaction. Yaakov averted his heart from
believing that Yosef was alive. According to Rashi, we understand why Yaakov
found it difficult to believe after assuming that Yosef was dead for twenty-two
years.
The Ramban
explains that the term va-yafag means ceased. He writes: “The movement of
the heart stopped and he was as if dead.” In other words, Yaakov had a seizure
and fainted. Va-yafag is indicative of emotional shock. However,
according to the Ramban, Yaakov never lost hope that Yosef might return. It
wasn't long ago that Yaakov implicitly prayed for the safe return of Yosef! Why
was the news that Yosef was alive so shocking to Yaakov that his heart failed?
Years later,
when Yosef was told that Yaakov was very ill, he took his two children, Menasheh
and Efrayim, and went to see his father. Upon seeing Menasheh and Efrayim,
Yaakov exclaimed, "I
could not bring myself to pray that I would see your face; and, behold, God has
let me see your seed as well" (48: 11). One might interpret this statement as
referring to Yosef's current visit. Yaakov, who was on his deathbed, didn't
expect to see Yosef again before he died. On the other hand, Yaakov might be
reflecting back on those twenty-two years of darkness. Yaakov never imagined
that he would see Yosef again. He was sure that he was dead, torn to pieces by
an evil beast. How, then, can the Ramban claim that in reality, Yaakov never
lost hope that Yosef would return? How can the Ramban claim that Yosef actually
did include the return of Yosef in his prayers?
In order to
explain this point, I ask for your indulgence. I would like to present a
somewhat fictional scenario that will help us understand Yaakov's reaction.
Yaakov is acutely aware that all the known data points to one conclusion - Yosef
is dead. But Yaakov never saw the body. Somewhere deep inside, he still harbors
the hope that maybe, somehow, Yosef survived. In his waking hours, when he is
governed by rationality, he tells himself, “Silly old man! You know he’s dead!”
But late at night, when overcome by exhaustion, when his subconscious is able to
express his innermost feelings, perhaps he has a dream. Maybe in the dream a
vision appears, a vision which caught his fancy years ago. He sees the sun,
moon, and eleven stars prostrating themselves before Yosef. Suddenly, Yaakov
awakes and cries, “You silly old man!”
Yaakov knows
that his dreams and hopes are ridiculous, but they don’t go away. Yaakov cannot
be comforted because somewhere deep in the innermost recesses of his soul, a
spark of hope remains. His tortured soul is restless as he swings like a
pendulum from hope to despair.
When
Hezbollah released Ehud Goldwasser and Eldad Regev as part of a prisoner swap;
when instead of walking out of the car, they were carried out in coffins; when
the collective heart of the nation joined their families in empathy and support
- I thought of Yaakov. The tragedy of the families was great, all hope was
destroyed, but finally the bodies of their loved ones were returned. There would
be a grave to visit; a place to cry, a day to recite Kaddish. Closure was
now a possibility and with it some form of solace.
The point of
the above is as follows; we normally consider hope positive. However, in certain
situations, when our hope is a futile one, it is not hope but rather kilyon
einayim (see Devarim 28:65). Kilyon einayim, literally extinction of
the eyes, refers to endless yearning for something that will never come. Hope is
a source of comfort, but kilyon einayim leads to agitation.
I would like
to suggest that according to the Ramban, the possibility that Yosef was still
alive was buried in the innermost recesses of Yaakov’s heart. Yaakov was aware
how ridiculous it was. He was also aware of how any thoughts of Yosef’s survival
tortured his restless soul. Yaakov therefore tried to suppress any suggestion
that he would see Yosef again. His claim that he
couldn’t bring himself to pray that he would see Yosef
once again was true - Yaakov could not utter such a prayer explicitly. However,
in the ambiguous phrase “your other brother,” Yaakov’s innermost wishes and
dreams expressed themselves.
How does Yaakov react when informed that Yaakov is alive? How does he
respond when the source of twenty-two years of suffering is reinforced? Will his
initial reaction be one of joy and relief? Or perhaps Yaakov will react with
shock and dread? Does the shock at being informed that Yosef is alive prove that
Yaakov was absolutely convinced that Yosef was dead? Or might not the cessation
of Yaakov’s heart be caused by twenty-two years of kilyon einayim?
The kilyon einayim of Yaakov eventually ended. Yosef was alive
and Yaakov went to Mitzrayim to see him. May
Hashem end the kilyon einayim of the families of all the
prisoners of war and MIA’s.
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