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SHEMOT 5763-2002
"The Making of a Concerned Jewish Leader"
Rabbi Ephraim Buchwald
The
story of Joseph has come to a conclusion, and with the
arrival of the children of Jacob in Egypt, G-d's prediction
to Abraham (Genesis 15) of exile, slavery, and persecution
has begun. In this week's parasha, Shemot, which begins
the book of Exodus, the Midrash, the legendary interpretation
of the Bible, tells us that Pharaoh hears from his diviners
and soothsayers that a Hebrew male child will soon be
born who will redeem the Israelites from slavery and destroy
Egypt.
The Egyptian soothsayers also inform Pharaoh that the
Hebrew savior's downfall will be through water. Determined
to save Egypt, Pharaoh decrees in Exodus 1:22: "Kol
ben hayee'lod ha'y'orah tash'lichoohoo," Every
male child that is born, shall be cast into the river!
Notice the interesting wording of the decree! Typical
of virulent anti-Semites, the paranoid Pharaoh decrees
that "every male child"--even Egyptian male
children(!), shall be thrown into the river.
In order to save the infant Moses, his mother places him
in a reed basket in the river as his sister stands by
to see what will happen to him. Pharaoh's daughter, (the
Midrash tells us that her name is Bithya), who is bathing
in the river, finds the child, and rescues him. Seeking
a nursemaid for the child, she unwittingly delivers him
to the child's sister, Miriam, who gives him to his mother,
Yocheved, to care for him until he is weaned.
Who is this child Moses, and how does he merit to become
the savior of Israel? For insight into these questions,
we might approach Steven Spielberg, and question him regarding
his rendition of the "Prince of Egypt." I suspect,
however, that we would do far better by investigating
our traditional Jewish sources.
The Midrash says that when Moses was about two years old,
he was sitting on his adoptive mother, Bithya's lap, next
to Pharaoh, his adoptive grandfather. Attracted by Pharaoh's
glimmering crown, Moses the child reaches up, removes
the crown from Pharaoh's head, and places it on his own
head. The Midrash says, that one of Pharaoh's court advisors,
Bilaam (the same Bilaam who eventually tries unsuccessfully
to curse the Jews), cries out that the child's actions
prove that he is determined to destroy the Egyptian monarchy
and that the child must be put to death. Bilaam suggests
that the Egyptian wise men be consulted to render judgement.
Says the Midrash, the angel, Gabriel, disguised as an
Egyptian soothsayer, (other versions maintain that it
was Jethro), suggests that the child be tested by putting
both a beautiful onyx stone and a hot coal in front of
the child. If the child chooses the onyx stone, it would
indicate for certain that the child wishes to usurp the
royal throne.
While the child naturally is attracted to the glimmering
stone, the angel Gabriel redirects the child's hand to
the coal, singeing Moses' fingers. The child instinctively
places the coal to his mouth, burning his lips, which
accounts for Moses becoming a stutterer and slow of speech.
The Torah informs us that when Moses eventually flees
from Egypt to Midian, he becomes a shepherd of Jethro's
flocks. The Midrash relates that G-d sees how lovingly
Moses tends to the sheep, especially one little sheep
who runs away to fetch water. The Almighty consequently
chooses the kindhearted Moses to be the shepherd of His
flock, Israel.
These are Midrashim, legends, regarding Moses, but what
does the actual Torah text tell us about Moses?
The Torah tells us in Exodus 2:11: "Va'yigdal
Moshe," that when Moses was grown he went out
to his brethren, "va'yaar et sivlotam,"
and he sees their burden. This young man, raised as an
Egyptian prince, nevertheless feels the pain of his Hebrew
brothers as his own. Moses encounters an Egyptian smiting
a Jew--not for laziness or neglect of his work, for no
other reason but that he was a Hebrew. When Moses concludes
that no one else will intervene to save the Hebrew from
certain death, Moses himself smites the Egyptian.
Two other incidents involving Moses' active intervention
are recorded in the Torah. First, Moses witnesses a violent
quarrel between two Jews, and intervenes. Then, when he
arrives in Midian, Moses rescues the daughters of Jethro,
who are unfairly chased away from the well by the Midianite
shepherds. We see that in the original instance, Moses
intervenes in a clash between a Jew and a non-Jew. In
the second instance, in a fight between two Jews, and
in the third instance, in a quarrel between two non-Jews.
In each instance, Moses champions the cause of justice.
Where did Moses develop this exalted sense of justice,
which seems so ingrained and natural? Perhaps we can say
that it comes from his limited, but intense training during
his formative years, when he was nursed by his mother
and cared for by his sister. As the Catholic Church is
want to say (V.I. Lenin, the communist leader expressed
a similar principle), "Give me the child for the
first five years, and you can have him for the rest of
his life." Those first, formative years that Moses
spent with his biological family were most important,
and the values instilled in the child during that period
remain ingrained in the child's persona.
Or perhaps, there's another source, an unexpected and
often unacknowledged source of Moses's exalted ethical
sense. Could it be that Moses received his training from
the Egyptian princess, Bithya? Was she the secret source
of his ethical rearing and learning? Some Midrashim actually
suggest that eventually Bithya joins the Jewish people,
and marries the legendary Kalev ben Yephuneh, who together
with Joshua were the only two scouts who returned from
Canaan with a positive report. Is the Torah, perhaps,
giving us a first glimpse of people, non-Jew people, who
would later be known as Chasiday oomot olam, the
righteous gentiles, who would risk their lives in order
to save Jews throughout Jewish history and were particularly
helpful during the Holocaust! Is that perhaps why Pharaoh's
daughter is named Bithya, Batya--the daughter of G-d?
Perhaps tradition is purposely ambiguous on this question,
because both possibilities are correct! Moses obviously
received his rearing from his mother and his sister as
a young child, but also from Bithya. And both of these
experiences prove vital. Surely, this is something for
all of us to ponder.
May
you be blessed.
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