Pesach: "You Can Take A People Out of Slavery, But Can You Take Slavery Out of A People?"

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April 10 2000
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 "You Can Take A People Out of Slavery, But Can You Take  Slavery Out of A People?"


April 10, 2000


                        by Rabbi Yitzchak Blau


 


                        Speculating on the inner workings of Divine providence demands a


                        great deal of caution and humility. Nevertheless, rishonim did


                        sometimes offer suggestions as to why Hashem orchestrated


                        particular historical events. Thus, Ibn Ezra Perush ha'Arukh on


                        Shemot 2:3) ( explains why it was that Moshe Rabbenu needed to


                        grow up in an Egyptian household. If the Jewish people had seen


                        Moshe grown up as one of them, they would not have felt the


                        necessary reverence towards Moshe. The boy who played with


                        their children on the Egyptian sand could not easily be seen as the


                        redeemer of Israel and recipient of the Divine message. Instead,


                        Moshe first appeared to the Jewish people as a mature and awe


                        inspiring stranger.


 


                        While the explanation mentioned focuses on the needs of the


                        people, Ibn Ezra also offers another suggestion that focuses on the


                        needs of Moshe. The people of Israel had sunk into a slave


                        consciousness that does not conceive of freedom as a possibility.


                        Such a people lack the independence and sense of self needed to


                        stand up to an Egyptian overlord or some Midianites bullying the


                        local girls. Only Moshe, who grew up in the freedom of the royal


                        family, understood that the Jews' situation was intolerable and


                        could be rectified.


 


                        Ibn Ezra (ibid. 14:13) employs the identical idea to explain a later


                        difficulty. How is it that after seeing the Divine make a mockery


                        out of Egyptian might through ten plagues, the people still appear


                        terrified of their former masters? Six hundred thousand men did not


                        have the courage to fight a people decimated by various


                        calamities? Ibn Ezra says that the people still could not conceive of


                        the Egyptians as anything other than their masters. Two hundred


                        plus years of conditioning could not be overcome in a matter of


                        months. He even goes so far as to suggest that this factor played


                        a role in the next generation entering the land of Israel. As a slave


                        people could not be expected to withstand the rigors of settling


                        Israel, the task fell to their children. (see also Moreh Nevukhim


                        3:32).


 


                        Indeed, how does one go about transforming a slave people? The


                        first mizvah Hashem gives the people is that of the Jewish


                        calendar: "ha'hodesh ha'ze la'khem". What is the meaning of the


                        word "lakhem"? Ramban explains that the term refers to Moshe and


                        Aaron and it emphasizes that the sages control the Jewish


                        calendar. Seforno explains that the term refers to taking


                        possession of this month as only a free man can. If the last two


                        hundred and ten years of time did not belong to this people, a new


                        era begins in which the months are theirs to do as they see fit.


 


                        Thus, educating a slave people means bringing them to an


                        understanding that they are in control of their time. Rav


                        Soloveitchik takes this idea one step further. In his essay entitled


                        "Kodesh v'Hol," he explains how memory of the past and


                        anticipation for the future are crucial components of the religious


                        personality. A slave brought up on constant mind numbing routine


                        loses both the sense of a significant past and the notion of


                        aspirations for the future. This obstacle must be surmounted if


                        those who left Egypt are to become a people of destiny.


 


                        According to the Rav, this precisely explains the notion of sefirat


                        ha'omer. In counting toward the receiving of the Torah, we affirm


                        that the exodus from Egypt comes with a shift in perspective. A


                        people long frozen in a stupor of slavery suddenly recall where they


                        come from and what they are hoping for. Indeed, it is matan torah


                        itself that ends up defining the nature and purpose of the exodus.


                        Both the Seforno and the Rav see particular mizvot as crucial in


                        formulating the change in perspective.


 


                        Baalei Mussar might point out that one need not actually be a


                        slave to act as a slave to one's desires, vanity or shallowness. Let


                        our sense of a glorious past and our hopes for an even more


                        glorious future shake us out of our own forms of slavery. A people


                        of fate feeling subject to forces beyond their control can seize the


                        initiative and transform into a people of destiny.


 


 


                        Rabbi Yitzchak Blau is a Ram at Yeshivat Hamivtar Orot Lev 

Venue: Hamivtar Hamivtar

Machshava:
Pesach 

Collections: R' Yitzchak Blau Pesach

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