The book of Bereishit reaches its climax this week with the deaths of our father Yaakov and of Yosef. The era of the founders of our people ends in relative tranquillity and contentment, albeit on foreign soil. It will be a long and arduous journey for the descendants of Yaakov to return home to the Land of Israel.
The dark and foreboding era that is about to begin was foretold many years earlier to our father Avraham. From the simple meaning of the words of the Torah, it is apparent that the family of Yaakov made themselves comfortable and settled well in their home in Goshen. Though the promise of Yosef that the Lord would take them forth from Egypt was certainly remembered and passed on from one generation to the next, there was no sense of immediacy regarding this promise and its fulfilment; the Jews would view Egypt rather than the Land of Israel as their home for a long time. They hastened to return to Egypt after burying Yaakov in the Cave of Machpela: it was their home while the Land of Israel was a far distant goal, a dream that would somehow eventually be realized but that had no direct bearing on their day-to-day living.
This attitude persisted throughout the long history of the
Jewish people and of its various exiles, in Egypt, Babylonia, Persia, Europe—and
today the entire world—where outposts have hosted and still host the Jewish
people in our far-flung diaspora. The Jewish people were never in a hurry to
leave any of these places and return to the Land of Israel. We have seen this
in our time too.
It is difficult to understand why the holy family of Yaakov
seems so passive and unresponsive in relation to the Land of Israel. There are
commentators who state that they were aware of the heavenly decree that they
would have to be strangers in a strange land for many centuries, so they
accepted their lot and decided to make the best of it under the
circumstances. However, as Maimonides points out regarding the Egyptian
enslavement of the Jewish people, Egypt was not preordained to be the oppressor
and enslaver of Israel. Nor was it apparently preordained that those early
generations of Jews living in Egypt were to fulfil the vision of Avraham to be
strangers and slaves in a land that did not belong to them. According to
Maimonides the Egyptians had a choice as to whether to enslave the Jews, and
the Jews—before their enslavement—equally had the choice of leaving Egypt and
returning to their ancestral home in the Land of Israel. However we deal with
this baffling issue, there is no question that this represents a template for
all later Jewish exiles and for Diaspora Jewry in all times and places. Seemingly,
only tragedy moves the Jewish people and, throughout our history, tragedies
abound. Let us hope that history does not repeat itself in our time as
well.
Shabbat shalom, Rabbi Berel Wein