Shemoth: Identity and Liberation in the Face of Oppression
Shemoth: Identity and Liberation in the Face of Oppression
The Book of Names opens with the children of Israel entering
Egypt with both their individual and collective identities intact. These are
the same brothers who had sold Joseph into slavery, now becoming slaves
themselves. Their descendants face the challenge of maintaining their otherness in
the face of systemic oppression.
The Hebrews kept their collective identity, and this very
distinctiveness marked them as a potential threat in Pharaoh's eyes. This is
perhaps the first documented instance of replacement theory—the fear that a
successful minority might somehow overtake the majority. The need for quotas
and ghettos was born with Jewish identity and remained part of that legacy.
This recognition of Jewish competition as a threat has unified Hebrew
communities throughout history, from ancient Egypt to modern times.
The story turns on the production of bricks, mentioned at
both the beginning and end of the parsha. These bricks create a symbolic
connection between Egyptian bondage and the Tower of Babel—both massive
projects that earned divine disapproval. The manufactured uniformity of bricks
replaced the natural irregularity of stones, creating a lower class of brick
makers and degrading the status of builders. Industrialization, the production
of uniform, replaceable parts, is a tool of subjugation. It transformed the
Hebrews into an exploited workforce. The altar was built with uncut stones.
When Pharaoh orders the murder of Hebrew male infants he is
reverting to the common method of dealing with a threatening foreign people. Until the secret decree commanding the drowning
of the first born sons, the guest population was tolerated. The murderous turn
of the host country against the guest Jews is a major theme in our history and
a foundation of Zionism.
Here, the story
introduces its first heroes: the midwives who refuse to carry out this
genocidal decree. Whether they were Hebrew (as the Talmud and Rashi suggest) or Egyptian (Sforno, Kli
Yakar, Malbim), their moral courage is an important model for resistance against evil. They hide behind a
flimsy excuse, claiming Hebrew women, being more animal-like than Egyptian
women, give birth before the midwives arrive;
yet their rebellion is tolerated. Like the Germans who refused to participate
in the Einsatzgruppen during the Holocaust, they demonstrated that standing up
for good over evil can sometimes succeed and without punishment.
Into this world comes Moses, saved by Pharaoh's daughter in
an act of rebellion against her father's decree. An act that also substantiates the kindness and sense of
justice in some Egyptians. She knows exactly what she's doing when she rescues
a circumcised (ibn Ezra) Hebrew child, and her actions, including returning him
to his mother early in his life, shape Moses' development. Moses grows up with an intertwined, dual
identity: Hebrew by birth, Egyptian by upbringing, equipped to be both
oppressor and oppressed; and understand neither.
When Moses kills the cruel overseer, he acts from this
unique position. His attempt to make peace between fighting Hebrews reveals his
true nature—they recognize him as different because anyone else would have
enjoyed their battle or wagered on the winner. It is Moses’ behavior that betrays
him as the killer. Moses must flee, becoming a stranger in Midian where he
marries and names his son Gershom: "I was a stranger in a foreign
land." I was an Egyptian in Midian;
I was a Hebrew in Egypt. What will I be if I go to the Promised land?
The divine revelation at the burning bush introduces a new
mysterious appelation: a Gd whose name means "I will be what will
be." This cryptic answer suggests that the future, in all its dimensions
and possibilities, will happen. If you have the goal in mind, you can ride the
waves of events. But all of the events that Gd has planned will come to pass.
Gd’s signs and wonders will convince Pharaoh to let the
Israelites go. Moses must convince the Israelites to leave their place of birth and employment.
They had become invested in the great project, their life's work, and will not leave until Pharaoh himself sends them
away.
The Jews have continued to build names for themselves in
great transnational human endeavors: in medicine with Paul Ehrlich and Jonas
Salk, in science with Einstein and Bohr, in politics with countless others.
This role in humanity's great projects is an aspect of Egypt that we carry with
us. Our connection to Torah prevents the
work of achievement from dominating our
lives and enslaving us.
The story of Shemoth reminds us that resistance to evil is
possible, that identity evolves over a lifetime, and that liberation requires
not just freedom from external bondage but freedom from internal guidelines..
As the old masthead of the Jewish Daily Forward proclaimed: "The
liberation of the workers depends upon the workers themselves." Choose
your meaning.