From: Netvort@aol.com
Sent: Friday, February 02, 2007
4:43 AM
To: JoshHoff@aol.com
Subject: Netvort : parshas
Beshalach, 5767
Very Funny
By Rabbi Joshua (humorously known as The Hoffer)
Hoffman
!!!!!!!!!!! With thanks to
the Almighty, beginning our tenth year
!!!!!!!!!!
As the nation stands by the Yam Suf and watches the Egyptian
army chasing after it, apparently with the now familiar Egyptian goal of driving
them into the sea, they turn to Moshe and say, "Was it for a lack of graves in
Egypt that you took us to die in the wilderness ? What is this that you have
done to us to take us out of Egypt? " (Shemos 14:11). Moshe responds to them,"
Do not fear. Stand fast and see the salvation of God that He will perform for
you today ; for that which you have seen Egypt, today, you shall not see them
ever again" (Shemos 14:13). While the first part of Moshe's response, in which
he tells the people that God will save them, is obviously appropriate to the
situation, the second part is a little more difficult to understand. The Ramban
writes that Moshe was telling them that God commanded them that they should
never willingly return to Egypt. How did that prohibition speak to the fears
that the people had mentioned to him ? Actually, Rabbi Shimshon Raphael Hirsch,
in his Torah commentary, writes that the remark about graves that the people
made to Moshe is a typical example of Jewish wit and irony, as if to say "What!
They don't have enough graves in Egypt ?" He explains that this sense of irony
is what has enabled the Jewish people to endure over the millennia, in the face
of so many persecutions. Rav Hershel (Tzvi) Shachter explained that humor is an
effective way of relieving tension at critical moments. If we look at the
complaint to Moshe in this way, we can understand that since the people did not
mean for their remarks to be taken seriously, Moshe did not answer them
precisely to the point. However, with the background of a different incident in
the parsha, I would like to suggest a different answer, which, I believe, will
give us further insight into the minds of the nation standing at the Yam
Suf.
After crossing the Yam Suf, the people traveled for
three days in the wilderness of Shur, and could not find water to drink. They
then arrived at Marah, where they could not drink the water because it was
bitter, and so they proceeded to complain to Moshe, asking what they would
drink. Moshe cried out to God, who instructed him to throw a tree into the water
to make it sweet. Moshe followed God's instructions, and then delivered an
oration to the people, saying," If you will listen diligently to the voice of
God, and you will do what is just in His eyes, and you will give ear to His
commandments and observe all His statutes, then any of the diseases that I
placed upon Egypt, I will not place upon you, for I am God, your Healer" (Shemos
15:26). Rabbi Aryeh Leib Bakst, zt"l, in his Kol Aryeh, mentions a conversation
he once had with Rabbi Yechezkel Levenstein, spiritual advisor, or mashgiach, of
the Ponevezh yeshiva in Bnei Brak. Rabbi Levenstein asked why Moshe delivered a
'mussar shmooz,' or an ethical discourse, to the people when what they needed
was simply a glass of water? As long as we are on the topic of Jewish humor,
Rabbi Levenstein's observation reminds me of a comedy routine of the Jewish
humorist, Shelly Berman, which I heard a recording of many years ago. A student
at the University of Chicago was attending a philosophy class, and he asked his
professor if he could leave in order to quench his tremendous thirst with a
glass of water. Instead of simply answering yes or no, the professor delivered
lengthy, profound discourse on the essence of a glass of water. What, he asked,
is a glass of water. Is it really a glass of water ? He continued in this
fashion for quite some time, until the student finally dropped dead of thirst!
Moshe, however, was not a philosophy professor. Why, then, did he respond to the
people's request in this way?
Rabbi Levenstein explained
that the people were too caught up in their physical need for water, and did not
understand what was going on behind the scenes. In actuality, as Rabbi Chaim
Moshe Luzzatto says in his Mesillas Yesharim, everything that happens to us in
life is really a test from God, to see if we will place our trust in Him. Thus,
the water we drink, the bread and meat we eat, do not have intrinsic value.
Rather, they all serve as props to help us develop our connection to God in this
world. That is what Moshe was trying to tell the people. While God did provide
them with the water they asked for, Moshe was trying to get them to focus on
what was behind their need for water, and, therefore, gave them a talk on the
importance of trusting in God. With this explanation in mind, we can return to
our original question about Moshe's response to the people's remarks as the
Egyptians approached them at the Yam Suf.
The rabbis tell us
that at least eighty percent of the Jewish people died in Egypt during the
plague of darkness, because they simply did not want to leave the country. They
apparently had developed such a fascination with the place that they wanted to
stay. Part of Moshe's task in taking the remaining Isrealites out of the Egypt
was to rid them of any traces of this fascination. Perhaps this is why God
hardened Paharaoh's heart again, after allowing the nation to leave, so that he
would lead the Egyptians on a chase to catch the Jews and ultimately bring them
to a watery death at the bottom of the Yam Suf. This was all done in order to
rid the people of their fascination with Egypt, by seeing the ignoble end of
that country's proud army. When the people started complaining to Moshe and
saying that perhaps they would be better off in Egypt, Moshe realized that they
were missing the whole point of what was happening. That is why he told them
that they were prohibited from ever returning to Egypt. God, he said, would save
them from the pursuing Egyptians, but they must understand that the reason for
this entire episode was to rid them of their attachment to that country. For
this reason, they could never return to Egypt, so that their attachment to it
could never be revived. Moshe, then, was responding to the core problem that lay
behind the immediate situation, just as he would later do at Marah, as we saw
from Rabbi Levenstein.
A joyous and fruitful Tu BiShevat to all
from the entire Netvort staff.
Please address all
correspondence to the author (Rabbi Hoffman) with the following address -
JoshHoff @ AOL.com.
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