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PARASHAT
HASHAVUA
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In loving memory of Channa Schreiber (Channa Rivka bat Yosef v' Yocheved) z"l,
with wishes for consolation and comfort to her dear children
Yossi and Mona, Yitzchak and Carmit, and their families,
along with all who mourn for Tzion and Yerushalayim.
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PARASHAT
VAYECHI
Clouds of
Galut
By Rav
Yair Kahn
I.
Forgetting Yosef
Our Sages
said, “shivim panim la-Torah” - in other words, the Torah lends
itself to multiple interpretations and should be understood at various levels in
order to be properly appreciated. One must acknowledge the complexity of the
Biblical narrative. Thus, while studying the story of Yosef, one should
recognize that it is both a religious story as well as a human one. It impacts
both on the unfolding of Jewish history as well as the realization of Jewish
destiny. It contains ethical norms alongside divine messages.
In the
opening chapter of Shemot, we read that a new king arose in Egypt “who did not know Yosef” (Shemot
1:8). How is it possible that this king did not know Yosef, the savior of all of
Egypt? Our Sages explained that the king
certainly knew of Yosef, but acted as if he did not know him. He denied Yosef’s
role in saving Egypt. He became suspicious of the
loyalty of Yosef and his family. But
even this is hard to explain. What caused the king to forget all that Yosef had
done for Egypt?
What caused the king to view the children of Israel as a threat to Egyptian security?
From the
perspective of Jewish destiny, this occurred through divine intervention. The
prophecy revealed to Avraham, that his offspring would be enslaved in a foreign
country, was about to be realized. The children of
Israel
were already in a foreign land; all that was missing was the beginning of the
bondage. Our Sages dealt with this issue from a religious perspective as well. The children of Israel began to assimilate. Accordingly,
the negative attitude of the Egyptian king and his ability to rally the people
around him can be viewed as both a punishment and as divine intervention meant
to thwart the attempt at assimilation.
However, I
would like to focus on the human level. What social forces were at play that led
to such a dramatic turnaround? What rules of human behavior brought about this
drastic shift? These questions are not posed merely out of historical or
biographic curiosity. I propose that there are important messages that can be
discovered by exploring the Torah at this level as well.
II. The
Oath
Our
parasha opens with Yaakov’s request to be buried in Chevron. Yosef immediately agrees to this
seemingly modest request. But then something strange occurs - Yaakov asks that
Yosef take an oath. Why did Yaakov insist on an oath? Did he have no trust in
Yosef? Did he doubt that Yosef would keep his word? Rashi relates to this
difficulty later in the parasha. When Yosef asks permission to bury his
father in Canaan, Pharaoh responds, “Go bury
your father in accordance with your oath” (50:6). Rashi notes the unnecessary
mention of the oath and comments: “But if not for the oath, I would not have let
you.” According to Rashi, Yaakov
apparently had the insight that Pharaoh would not be willing to allow Yosef to
perform his father’s burial in Canaan.
Therefore, even though he trusted Yosef, he requested that he take an oath in
order to give Yosef leverage over Pharaoh. However, we are still puzzled by
Pharaoh’s opposition to Yaakov’s seemingly modest request.
The
explanation, however, is obvious. In last week’s shiur, we noted that
Pharaoh invited Yosef’s family to come to his court and become part of Egyptian
nobility. We showed how Yosef manipulated an arrangement whereby Yaakov and his
family were permitted to live in Goshen.
Apparently,
Goshen was far from
Pharaoh’s court, which would explain why Yaakov didn’t recognize Yosef’s
children when Yosef came to visit Yaakov on his deathbed. Yosef had to distance
his family to allow them to develop without the threat of assimilation.
In Pharaoh’s
mind, however, despite the distance separating
Goshen
from the capital, Yosef’s family were members of the Egyptian nobility. In fact,
even after conceding that Yaakov and his children could live in
Goshen, he still offered the
role of minister of the royal cattle to Yosef’s brothers. Moreover, when Yaakov
died, he was treated as royalty; not only was he embalmed, but seventy days of
national mourning were observed.
From this
perspective, the request to bury Yaakov in Canaan
amounts to a slap in the face of Pharaoh and the entire Egyptian nation. Was a
seventy day period of national mourning declared for an elderly Hebrew? The
Egyptians refused to eat together with Hebrews, let alone mourn them publicly!
Yosef finds himself in a very difficult situation. He doesn’t even dare ask
Pharaoh to bury his father in Canaan directly.
Instead, he has Pharaoh hear about the request in a roundabout way:
And when the
days of weeping for him were past, Yosef spoke unto the house of Pharaoh,
saying, “If I have found favor in your eyes, speak, I pray you, in the ears of
Pharaoh, saying: ‘My father made me swear, saying: ‘Behold, I
die; in my grave which I have dug for myself in the land of Canaan, there shall
you bury me.’ Now therefore let me go up and bury my father, and I will come
back.” (50:4-5)
Moreover,
when Yosef indirectly transmits Yaakov’s request, he changes the wording.
Yaakov’s politically offensive statement, “Please do not bury me in Egypt,” was
diplomatically left out.
Pharaoh felt
obliged to grant Yaakov’s request due to the oath, but he tried to make the best
of the situation. After the seventy days of national mourning, he tried to
present the burial in Chevron as an Egyptian event:
And Yosef
went up to bury his father; and with him went up all the servants of Pharaoh,
the elders of his house, and all the elders of the land of Egypt
and all the house of Yosef, and his brethren, and his father's house; only their
little ones, and their flocks, and their herds, they left in the land of Goshen.
And there went up with him both chariots and horsemen; and it
was a very great company. And they came to the threshing-floor
of Atad, which is beyond the Yarden, and there they cried a very great and sore
cry; and he made a seven day mourning for his father. And when the inhabitants of the land,
the Canaanites, saw the mourning in the threshing-floor of Atad, they said:
“This is a grievous mourning to the Egyptians.” Wherefore the name of it was
called Avel-Mitzraim, which is beyond the Yarden. (50:7-11)
Mori
vi-Rebbi, Ha-Rav Yosef
Dov Soloveitchik zt”l, told us the following story, which he heard from
one of the relatives of Baron Edmond Rothschild, also known as Ha-Nadiv
Ha-Yadu’a, the famous philanthropist. Baron Rothschild died in 1934 and was
buried in Paris. In 1954, his family
decided to move his remains and those of his wife to Ramat Ha-Nadiv in Zikhron Yaakov, Israel. When General Charles de Gaulle
heard of the plans, he called James Rothschild, the baron’s youngest son, and
said: “I always considered members of the Rothschild family loyal Frenchmen,
only differing regarding religion. But let me ask you, who is a good Frenchman?
One who is reared in France,
educated in a French school, whose native tongue is French, who is ready to take
up arms to defend France,
and one who is buried in French soil when he dies. I can’t imagine a good
Frenchman whose remains are moved elsewhere. I knew the Baron and had unlimited
faith in him. I always defended him from those who doubted his loyalty to France. Now I see
there is some truth to those accusations.”
Similarly, it
seems that Pharaoh began to doubt Yosef’s loyalty to Pharaoh and to Egypt. When Yosef requested permission
to bury his father in Ma’arat Ha-Machpela, why did he find it necessary
to add that after the burial he would return to Egypt? Apparently,
Pharaoh had room to suspect that Yosef would remain in Canaan. The Torah informs us that when the brothers went to
Canaan to bury Yaakov, they left their young children, their flock, and their
herd in Egypt. Why does the Torah have to tell us
that their cows and sheep didn’t join the funeral procession? Apparently, the
Torah is trying to hint to how much the Egyptians didn’t trust Yosef’s family.
The children
of Israel leave Egypt, but they leave their children and
flock behind – this is a clear reference to the time of Moshe. Moshe demanded
that the people be allowed to leave Egypt for a three day journey in the
desert to worship Hashem. Pharaoh, who was afraid that the Hebrew slaves
would escape, responds, “So be Hashem with you, if I will let you go and your
little ones” (Shemot 10:10). Later, when Pharaoh succumbs to the pressure
of the plagues and allows the children to go, he says, “Go, serve Hashem; only
let your flocks and your herds stay; let your little ones also go with you”
(10:24). It seems that at the time
of Moshe, Pharaoh based his position on the policy set at the time of Yosef,
established to ensure that the children of Israel didn’t escape.
In any case,
the point is clear. Pharaoh no longer considers Yosef’s family as loyal
Egyptians. He is concerned that they will use their father’s funeral to escape
back to Canaan, after milking Egypt during the
years of famine.
Sefer
Bereishit ends with
Yosef administering an oath to his brothers:
“God will surely remember you, and you shall carry up my bones from here”
(50: 25). Yosef, who is known in
Egypt
as Tzafnat Pa’aneach, the Egyptian prince, doesn’t dare ask Pharaoh to be buried
in Ma’arat Ha-Machpela. He is left no choice but to ask his brothers that
they return his remains to the land of his fathers. We can almost see the dark
clouds of galut approaching as the sefer closes with Yosef trapped
in Egypt:
“So Yosef died, at the age of one hundred and ten years. And they embalmed him,
and he was put in a coffin in
Egypt” (50:26).
III. A New
King Arose in Egypt
At the
beginning of the shiur, we asked what led to the turnabout in Yosef’s
popularity. Why did Pharaoh and the Egyptians forget all Yosef had done for Egypt? What brought about the
transformation from savior to threat? Perhaps the trigger was Yaakov’s request
to be buried in Ma’arat Ha-Machpela.
Furthermore,
it is reasonable that once Yosef was viewed as a foreigner, more faithful to his
own clan than to Egypt, Yosef’s past
policies were re-evaluated. The section in the Torah that describes Yosef’s
economic policy is bookended by Yosef’s preferential treatment of his family.
The section begins:
And Yosef
sustained his father and his brothers and his father’s entire household bread
per child. And there was no bread in the entire land for the famine was very
harsh and the land of Egypt
and the land of
Canaan languished due to the famine.
(47:12-13)
The section
concludes:
And as for
the people, he removed them to the cities, from one end of the border of Egypt to the other end… And Israel dwelt in the land
of Egypt, in the
land of Goshen;
and they took possession therein, and were fruitful, and multiplied exceedingly.
(47:21, 27)
We noted in
last week’s shiur, that Yosef’s economic policy was appreciated by the
masses. But what did the people think when Yosef’s loyalty became suspect? These
verses, describing the privileges enjoyed by Yosef’s family, echo in our ears
when we read how the new king of Egypt
enslaves the children of
Israel. It was Yosef the Hebrew who used some
mystical ability to steal Egyptian money, herds, and lands. It was the Hebrew
who introduced mass slavery into Egypt and forced the Egyptians to move from one
corner of Egypt
to the other, while allowing his own family of Hebrews to take possession of the
very best of Egyptian land. Perhaps it was not so hard for the king to mobilize
the masses against the children of Israel. After all, they felt justified
in taking away the freedom of the Hebrews to ensure that they couldn’t escape
after milking the land
of Egypt. Perhaps they were
able to rationalize enslaving the children of Israel as a way to retrieve all that had
been taken from them.
We noted that
the enslavement of the children of Israel
occurred after Yosef introduced mass slavery to Egypt. We should ask whether this is
merely historical irony, or perhaps a tint of criticism. After all, in the end,
Yosef did take advantage of a natural disaster and human suffering to enslave a
people. The enslaving of Egypt
came back to haunt the children of Israel. Perhaps Israel’s bondage
came to teach us a lesson. The Torah, after all, uses our experience of the
Egyptian bondage to teach us to be sensitive to the suffering of the vulnerable:
“Do not take the garment of a widow as collateral and remember that you were a
slave in Egypt”
(Devarim 24:17-18).
IV. Ma’aseh Avot Siman La-Banim
In
conclusion, the story of Yosef in Egypt certainly
falls into the category of ma’aseh avot siman la-banim. Throughout the
galut, there have been situations in which Jews have played important
roles for the benefit of the host state. Often, such Jews have been faced with
dilemmas analogous to that of Yosef, torn between commitment to Jewish values
and traditions on the one hand and loyalty to the host state on the other. When
these Jews do almost everything for the good of the host state, are they always
accepted? Often, despite all their efforts, there are those that will accuse
them of being disloyal, who will cast doubt upon them along with their fellow
Jews. Some will argue that they can’t be trusted in times of crisis. Like
Pharaoh before them, they will say: “If there be a war, they will join forces
with our enemies and attack us and leave the land” (Shemot 1: 10).
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