Sheep are among the most useful of creatures. There is literally no part of them that we cannot use one way or another. But, contrary to popular belief, it seems that the Egyptians didn't worship them at all. So what's the big deal with our forefathers killing them as a prelude to our exit from Egypt? Our member Rabbi Steven Ettinger explains.
The first act of defiance that Hashem requested from Bnei Yisrael was for each household to take a sheep on the 10th day of the newly designated first month of Nisan. They were to safeguard this animal until the 14th day of the month and then slaughter it. They would then place some of the blood on their doorways and they would roast and eat the meat that evening (Shemot 12: 3-8).
Many assume that this ritual, which has became a generational fixture as the korban pesach (Shemot 12:23) was symbolic of a rejection or conquest of the Egyptian gods especially since the process in Egypt began with the four-day period of flaunting the restrained sheep. (See, Rashi on Bereishit 46:34).
There is one problem with this. Examining
the “pantheon” of Egyptian deities, one will find many animals and human/animal
hybrids. A brief search disclosed more than 20 – ranging from crocodiles and hippopotamuses, lions, baboons, wolves, cows, rams (and even frogs) – but NO
sheep!!
Why of all animals did Hashem
specify/choose the sheep for this important moment – one that would echo
through the ages? What was the message for then and now?
The key to unlocking this message is a
strange incident that occurred many years earlier, when Yosef invited his
brothers to join him for a meal. Bereishit 43:32 relates that he sat separately
from them because it was an abomination for Egyptians to break bread with
Hebrews. This is quite perplexing. At
most there were seventy Hebrews in the entire world. How is it possible that there
was an Egyptian rule of etiquette, a harshly discriminatory practice directed
at such an insignificant family (one could not even call them a nation or a
people)?
The answer is revealed a few chapters later. In Bereishit 46:32 the Bnei Yisrael are identified as “ro’ei tzon” – shepherds. Bereishit 46:34 reveals, “ki to’avat Mitzraim kol ro’ei tzon” – shepherds were an abomination to the Egyptians. Thus Yosef could not have seated the brothers with him because they, this family of Hebrews, were known as shepherds – and thus were abominations.
When they first met Pharaoh, he segregated
them in the Land of Goshen because they were shepherds. This was Yosef’s plan
to slow assimilation, but it was also quite consistent with the core values of
Egyptian society – to keep the abominations away.
Fast forward through several hundred years.
The Bnei Yisrael have been enslaved. They are at best second-class citizens.
They are mistreated and addressed in a most derogatory fashion. In modern
times, under similar circumstances, the “N-word” garners an intense level of
emotional attention and evokes trauma. Considering that the very notion of
being a shepherd or a family/people of shepherds was considered an abomination
in Egyptian society, it is not a stretch to think that this was a pejorative
label used to diminish and dehumanize them.
Thus, when the time of their liberation
arrived and it was time for them to take their first action, what could be more
fitting than for them to flaunt their association with the lowly sheep. To
stick it in the face of the Egyptians, so to speak.
“Look here mighty Egypt – the abominable shepherds are displaying our sheep freely in our yards.” Next, “now look, we are killing it, painting our door with its blood and eating it – and sitting formally TOGETHER.” We are not compliant sheep; we are not mere shepherds: we are the masters. We are not passive, meek sheep: we are the wolves who spill the blood and eat. We are not abominable sheep; we are social units, a family, a strong nation.
The generation of Hebrews in Egypt
understood the symbolism of the sheep and likewise Hashem understood just how
defiant and empowering a message it was for them to incorporate it into process
of their redemption. For all future generations this message is, perhaps, even
more important. Every culture in every era will find an excuse to separate us,
isolate us and to identify us as abominations. But Hashem does not want us to
hide from or be ashamed of who we, His people, are. He wants us to place our
identity proudly out front and to reject any notion that we are sheep. That is
how redemption is earned and that is how it is sustained.


