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We all know the story of how Moses mother, to save
him from Pharaohs decree that all newborn Jewish males
be drowned in the Nile, placed the three-month-old infant
in a basket and concealed it in the rushes that grew along
the riverbank; and how Pharaohs daughter discovered
the weeping child when she went to bathe in the river, and
raised him in the royal palace.
There is one detail in this story that is the subject of
some confusion. Where, exactly, was Moses basket placed?
In the Torahs account, we read: And she placed
it in the rushes, on the bank of the river.[1]
According to this, Moses was not placed in the Nile itself,
but on the Niles shore.[2]
A few verses later, however, the Torah tells us that Pharaohs
daughter named the child she found Moses (the drawn
one), because I have drawn him from the water.[3]
The Torah is G-ds blueprint for creation, whose every
detail is of eternal relevance to our lives. If the Torah
tells us that Moses mother placed him on the
riverbank, this means that she could not have placed him in
the Nile itself; if the Torah tells us that Pharaohs
daughter subsequently took him from the Niles waters,
this means that it was crucial that he be in the river
at that time. And if the Torah troubles itself to tell us
all this, this means that it is important to our understanding
of the event and its application to our lives today.
The Purging of the Nile
The Gaon of Rogachov (Rabbi Joseph Rosen, 1858-1936) offers
a halachic (Torah-legal) explanation for the baskets
change of location. Moses mother could not have initially
placed him in the Nile itself because the Nile was worshipped
by the Egyptians as a god, and it is forbidden to make use
of an object of idol-worship even to save oneself.[4] However, Torah law also stipulates
that if an idol-worshipper renounces his idol, it becomes
nullified and permissible for use.[5] Our sages tell us that Pharaohs
daughter came down to the river to bathe[6]
not only in the physical sense, but also to cleanse
herself from her fathers idols.[7]
Her renunciation of the paganism of Egypt nullified the rivers
idolatrous status, and its waters could now receive and shelter
Moses. It was at this point that Moses basket entered
the Nile.[8]
Why was it important that Moses should be in the Nile? The
Midrash tells us that Pharaohs astrologers had told
him that the savior of Israel will meet his end by water,
which was why Pharaoh decreed that all male Jewish babies
should be thrown into the Nile. When Moses was in the river,
the astrologers told Pharaoh, The savior of the Jews
has already been cast into the water. Thus Moses
entry into the Nile brought the end of Pharaohs decree.[9]
The Cult of the River
Very little rain falls in Egypt. Agriculture is completely
dependent on the Nile, whose overflow fills a network of irrigation
canals. The ancient Egyptians therefore deified the Nile,
regarding it as the ultimate source of sustenance and the
ultimate endower of life.
This was the deeper significance of Pharaohs decree
to drown Jewish children in the Nile. Pharaoh knew that if
the next generation of Jews were submerged in the Nile-cult
of Egyptif they were raised to regard the natural purveyors
of sustenance as godsthe Jewish faith would be obliterated.
The message of a One G-d who is the creator and source of
all, which so threatened his pagan oligarchy, would be silenced
forever.
One can say that Nile-worship is as prevalent today as it
was in the days of the Pharaohs. Todays Nile
may be a college degree, a career, social standinganything
that is venerated as a provider of sustenance and life. These
are tools of sustenance, as the Nile is an instrument
of G-ds sustenance of those who dwell along its banks;
but when the vehicle is confused with the sourcewhen
a person submerges his entire self in the Nile,
investing his choicest energies in the perfection of the instrument
rather than the cultivation of his relationship with its divine
wielderthis is idolatry.
Faith Feeder
Moses is the raaya meheimna, the faithful shepherd
of Israel.[10]
The words raaya meheimna also mean shepherd of
faithi.e., one who feeds faith to his flock.[11] Moses primary role was to nurture the
faith of his people, to broaden it, deepen it and develop
it so that they became completely permeated with a knowledge
of G-d and the understanding that There is none else
besides Him[12]that
all the Niles of the world are not forces or realities
in their own right, but merely vehicles of divine sustenance.
Moses was eighty years old when he took the people of Israel
out of Egypt, led them to Mount Sinai, and fed them the ultimate
infusion of divine knowledge, the Torah. But he was already
a shepherd of faith at the age of three months,
when he was instrumental in dethroning the arch-idol of Egypt
and putting an end to the drowning of Israels children
in its waters.
Based on the Rebbes talks on Shabbat Parshat Shemot
of 5722 (1962) and 5723 (1963)[13]
Adapted
from the teachings of the Lubavitcher Rebbe by Yanki Tauber
[2]. See Targum Onkelos on verse
[4]. Mishneh Torah, Laws of the Fundamentals of Torah
5:6; see Likkutei Sichot, vol. XVI, p. 13, note 9.
[5]. Mishneh Torah, Laws Regarding Idol-Worship
8:8.
[7]. Talmud, Sotah 12b; Midrash Rabbah on verse.
[8]. Tzofnat Paaneach on Exodus 2:3.
[9]. Midrash Rabbah, Shemot 1:24. The true import of
what Pharaohs astrologers saw was that it would be
decreed that Moses die in the desert as a result of the
waters of contention, as related in Numbers
20:1-13.
[10]. Zohar Chadash 104a, et al.
[13]. Likkutei Sichot, vol. XVI, pp. 13-19.
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