Do Something About It
By Rabbi Pinchos Lipschutz
In Parshas Yisro, we learn of Kabbolas
HaTorah. Following the makkos, Krias Yam Suf and the accompanying revelations of
Hashem’s might, Klal Yisroel was prepared to become the Am Hashem and receive the Torah.
It is
interesting to note that the parsha
that depicts Matan Torah is named for
a foreigner, Yisro. Another
intriguing anomaly is that the Torah interrupts the account of the exodus from
Mitzrayim and the apex of the journey at Midbar
Sinai to tell the seemingly tangential story of Yisro’s arrival.
The portion
of the parsha that discusses Matan Torah should have continued from
the conclusion of Parshas Beshalach, having described the
miraculous crossing of the Yam Suf, the deliverance of the
life-sustaining monn and Hashem’s
intervention saving the newly freed people when challenged in battle by
Amaleik. Why is the story of the redemption depicting the journey to Midbar Sinai to receive the Torah interrupted by the story of Yisro’s
arrival?
What
lessons are implicit in the narrative of Yisro that justifies its insertion between
the description of Krias Yam Suf and Matan Torah? Apparently, there are lessons involved in his tale that are
necessary for a proper acceptance of the Torah at Har Sinai.
The parsha begins with the words “Vayishma Yisro - And Yisro heard.” Rashi quotes the Gemara in Maseches Zevochim, which asks what Yisro heard
that prompted him to leave Midyon and join the freed slaves in the desert. The Gemara answers that he heard about Krias Yam Suf and Milchemes Amaleik.
We can
understand that upon hearing about Krias
Yam Suf, a thinking person can be motivated to go find out about a
people for whom the laws of nature were abrogated. The open and evident display
of Hakadosh Boruch Hu’s care for His people and the awe and
power He displayed to bring about their independence could convince an observer
that this group of freed slaves was a chosen nation.
However,
the second stimulus for Yisro’s trip is more difficult to comprehend. Why would
Amaleik’s vicious attack draw someone close to Klal Yisroel?
Yisro
was a spiritually sophisticated person. From the vehement opposition expressed
by the wicked people of Amaleik toward the nascent nation, he reasoned that
there must be something truthful about the Jewish nation in order to arouse
such strong antagonism. Truth is never universally lauded. In fact, it is often
condemned and bitterly opposed. The fierce opposition alerted him to the fact
that Judaism is worth an examination. A meaningful connection to the Creator
comes with resistance from those who deny the truth.
The
truth carries responsibilities and forces people who follow it to act a certain
way. Amaleik, the classic scoffer, disdains truth and attacks it with a
vengeance. Admiring and recognizing the existence of a Creator and the superiority
of the way of life He prescribed means that the observer may have to reject an
immoral, hedonistic lifestyle. Thus, the truth is commonly ignored and battled.
Yisro,
who always sought to find the truth, understood that a nation with a purpose will,
by its very nature, draw hatred. When he saw the vehemence with which this
group of people was hated, he set out to discover for himself what truth they
beheld that aroused such enmity.
Throughout
the ages, Klal Yisroel has always
felt the uniqueness of its role as Hashem’s people. Being the chosen ones has
engendered much kinah and sinah. As Chazal say, the mountain upon which the Torah was given to man is
called Har Sinai, because along with
the Torah, sinah yordah le’olam, a
supernatural hatred for the Jews descended upon the world.
Obviously,
Yisro was not the only one who heard about Krias
Yam Suf and Milchemes Amaleik.
One would imagine that there were few people who hadn’t heard about these two
earth-shattering events. Why did the miracles galvanize only Yisro?
The
whole world heard about what happened. Krias
Yam Suf was a viral event. People the world over were impressed and awed.
The world might have been inspired,
but it was for a mere moment, not long enough for the miracle to impact them. A
fleeting impression was all they experienced, before quickly returning to their
old habits. They reverted to the way they were before they were amazed by the
power of Hashem. They refused to permit their momentary inspiration to have a
lasting impact on their lives.
The
only person who heard about Krias Yam Suf
and Milchemes Amaleik and was
affected long-term by the events was Yisro. He was the only one who permitted
the experience to transform his life.
The pesukim recount: “Vayichad Yisro… And Yisro rejoiced over all the goodness that Hakadosh
Boruch Hu did for the Jews and rescued them from Mitzrayim… And he said, ‘Now I
know that Hashem is greater than all the gods…’ And he brought korbanos to
Hashem…”
No one
else came to the Bnei Yisroel in the midbar saying, “Atah yodati
kee gadol Hashem.” Everyone else remained with their pagan beliefs. They
couldn’t be bothered to explore anything that might require them to abandon an
easy life.
This
is why the Torah interrupts the chapter of the Bnei Yisroel’s excursion
in the midbar to tell the tale of
Yisro’s arrival. A prerequisite for Kabbolas
HaTorah is to let the experience of
Hashem’s majesty envelop the mind and the senses so that one draws closer to
Torah and G-dliness.
My
grandfather, Rav Eliezer Levin zt”l,
would often refer to a concept he absorbed in Kelm of “kelbeneh hispaalus,” referring to cows that feed on the grass that grows
on train tracks. When they hear the train approaching, they frighteningly run
from the tracks, only to find their way back after the train passes.
Divine
acts are intended to teach us the power of Hashem. Torah demands that hisorerus have a lasting impact, leading
to improvement and growth.
That
was the lesson of Yisro, and that is why his parsha was placed before Kabbolas
HaTorah. That is why the parsha
of Kabbolas HaTorah is named for
Yisro, the convert.
Vayishma Yisro. We have to be
open to hearing and examining what is going on and learn from what transpires
to dedicate our lives to the truth and living honest and upstanding lives. We
must study the lesson of Yisro and be affected by what transpires in our
communities and around the world. We must not be apathetic, unaffected and
untouched by what is going on.
The
Torah further recounts that Yisro noticed that Moshe Rabbeinu was teaching halachos and judging the Jewish people
from morning until night. Yisro advised Moshe that the system was improperand
counterproductive. He urged Moshe to set up a well-functioning court system in
which other people would adjudicate the simpler cases and the more difficult
ones would be brought to him.
Yisro
told Moshe that the present system was too difficult to sustain and would end
up destroying him. Yisro advised him to choose competent dayonim whom he could teach the halachos
so that they would be knowledgeable enough to educate the people.
Yisro
urged Moshe to get Divine approval for the new system and thus be able to
function optimally.
Yisro
was a newcomer to the Bnei Yisroel’s
camp. He wasn’t the first person to see what was happening to Moshe Rabbeinu.
Everyone saw that Moshe was consumed all day long with dinei Torah. Anyone could have observed that it wasn’t sustainable.
Anyone could have devised a more effective system to allow Moshe Rabbeinu to
spend his time more productively. Anyone could have realized, as Yisro did,
that Moshe would become exhausted from the grueling regimen and unceasing
pressure.
Everyone
saw it. Anyone could have realized where it would lead, but no one did anything
about it. It took Yisro to internalize what he saw and to do something
constructive to address it.
Yisro
saw, Yisro cared, and Yisro spoke up. Hakadosh
Boruch Hu and Moshe Rabbeinu accepted his proposal.
Yisro
saved Moshe from becoming physically exhausted. The Torah honored him for this worthy
deed by naming the parsha for him.
This is why the lessons imparted by Yisro’s deeds are inserted into the
narrative describing the supernatural events leading up to Matan Torah.
Yisro
taught that everyone has the potential for greatness to the point of being
worthy of inserting his deeds into the Torah and having a parsha in the Torah named for him. One must care enough to notice
what is going on around him, draw the right conclusions, and try to remedy the
situation.
Every
one of us has the ability to improve the world. Each of us can reach out and
help others. We can all bring meaning and warmth to the lives of our neighbors,
friends and fellow Jews. If only we cared, if only we tried. If only we took
Yisro’s example to heart. There are so many people in this world hungering to
grow and become better people and Jews, but they need our help. We should be
there for them. We should always seek to be giving without taking, striving to
help prepare the world for Moshiach,
helping improve people’s lives.
Yisro
taught us that we can all make a difference.
When
Amaleik perceives that he can’t destroy us, he slanders us and tells the world
that we don’t know how to treat animals or people. He says that we are mean,
vicious and heartless. The media promotes the canards.
It
wasn’t that long ago that pogroms were perpetrated against the Jewish
population by illiterate peasants egged on by the Church and government
authorities.
Today,
thankfully, they don’t come after us with sticks, knives and guns. Blood libels
are a thing of the past. Today, instead of knives and spears, the warmongers’
implements of battle are words put forth by compliant media outlets.
Examples
abound. Just last week, Vice President Mike Pence, in a historic step, visited
the Kosel during a most friendly trip
to Israel. Amaleik wasn’t happy. Headlines bewailed the fact that female
reporters and photographers were placed behind the mechitzah at the Kosel. “It
was an act against women,” they said. “The Orthodox hate women and treat them
as second-class beings. They don’t permit them to do their jobs.” They threw
the ultimate put-down at us, writing that the Orthodox are misogynists. So are Trump
and Pence, of course.
The
leftist Jewish media, never missing a chance to attack President Trump and his
administration, as well as the religious community, took full advantage of the
opportunity.
“How
dare they!” they wailed.
“This
was a new low for women,” The Forward
cried, adding, “Rather than taking a stand against Pence’s misogyny, Israel was
quick to accommodate it with their own. In the space of an hour at the Kotel,
Pence’s visit became the occasion for sending women back even further than
usual by preventing professional women from working side by side with their
male counterparts.
“When
both radical religious Judaism and radical religious Christianity intersect on
the oppression of women, we are all in trouble.
“Pence’s
visit became yet another example of the spread of radical misogyny in political
leadership. This should be alarming not only to those who want to hear women’s
ideas or who believe women deserve to live freely in the world. It should also
be of grave concern to anyone who cares about values such as moderation,
freedom, equality, or peace in the Middle East.
“And
it was a huge betrayal of these values when Israeli President Rivlin gave Pence
the highest praise by calling him a ‘mentsch.’ In so doing, he betrayed women
most of all.”
The
Torah relates how Yisro went to Moshe “to the desert.” Obviously, if he went to
Moshe, he went to the desert, for that was where Moshe and the Jews were to be
found. Rashi explains that the Torah
is actually saying this in praise of Yisro.
Yisro
was sitting “bichvodo shel olam.” He
enjoyed prestige and fame as a leading light among the cognoscenti of that age.
Yet, he was prepared to venture out into the barren desert in order to seek out
the truth of the Torah.
Journalists
and self-styled intellectuals whose self-respect is dependent on viewing
themselves as progressive, socially-engaged, examples of enlightened Jews
unshackled by ancient traditions cannot perceive the derocheha darchei noam
inherent in Torah and mitzvos. They
make a career out of painting ehrliche
Yidden as backward, insensitive and
unsophisticated people who are incapable of their own refined sensibilities. If
we learn, we are parasites. If we work, we cheat. If we own a business, we take
advantage of our employees. Somehow no matter what we do, we are depicted as
being dishonest, careless and heartless.
We
must have the courage to stand up to people who seek to undermine us. We have
to follow Yisro’s example and not be afraid to withstand the ridicule of the cynical
scoffers, as we endeavor to live of life of truth.
The posuk (19:5-6) states, “Im shomoa tishmeu bekoli - If you will follow My word and heed the
Torah, you will be treasured to Me from all the nations of the world. Ve’atem
tihiyu li mamleches kohanim vegoy kadosh - And you will be unto Me a priestly
kingdom and a holy nation.”
No
matter what we encounter, we must follow the precepts of the Torah. We must
honor the interests of the poor and the downtrodden, be honest in all our
dealings, seek to be mekadeish Sheim
Shomayim in all we do, remain loyal to each other and to the laws of the
Torah and the land.
We
must know and remember that America is a gift from Hashem. Never in our history
has there been as charitable and welcome a host as this country. We came here
as poor refugees, streaming in to escape pogroms and the Nazi Holocaust. Barely
surviving, we limped in. With the help and backing of this magnificent country,
we have become a thriving community. We must always remember to be thankful for
the opportunities and freedoms offered us.
Based
on Kabbalistic sources, the Vilna Gaon describes how the neshomah of Klal Yisroel, the
Torah itself, left the collective body of our nation at the time of the churban Bais Hamikdosh. The structure of
the body remained, and through years of golus,
it has been slowly rotting, its bones decaying. The longer we are in golus, the more we lose. During the
period leading up to the geulah, the
Torah slowly returns to us and we get our breath back. When Moshiach comes, the neshomah of Am Yisroel
will once again be invested in us and we will flourish as before.
We,
keepers of the sacred covenant, look forward to returning the Torah to its home,
when the neshomah of our people will
return to its guf and the weary body of Am Yisroel will be
resurrected.
As we
deal with the twin destinies of Am
Yisroel, greatness engendering enmity, exile begetting deliverance, and the
ongoing battles of Amaleik, we await the collective and personal Krias Yam Suf, may it take place
speedily in our day.
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