Tapestry of Redemption
By Rabbi Pinchos Lipschutz
This week, we begin Sefer
Shemos, the Sefer Hageulah. It is the sefer that tells the
story of how a broken, enslaved people rose from the depths of despair to stand
at Har Sinai to receive the Torah. It carries us from the bitterness of bondage
to the ecstasy of redemption, from drowning terror at the Yam Suf to the highest
spiritual moment in human history.
But Sefer Shemos is not
merely a historical account. It teaches us what destroys a nation — and what
saves it.
The Alter of Kelm would explain
that just as Avrohom, Yitzchok and Yaakov are called the avos because
they laid the foundations of Yiddishkeit, so do the parshiyos of Sefer
Shemos function as avos, forming the bedrock of our emunah
and guiding us how to live as Jews.
How we treat other people defines
us. It shapes our souls and announces, louder than any slogan, who we are. When
we are attentive to others, when we notice them, value them, and appreciate
them, we grow. We become capable of achdus. And through that unity, we
become capable of far more than we ever could accomplish alone.
Hashem designed human beings to
need one another. A person cannot thrive in isolation. From the moment we enter
the world, we survive only through connection. As infants, we are utterly
dependent. Even as adults, nearly everything we require to sustain our lives —
food, shelter, education, health, security — comes from the labor and kindness
of others. Every act of care, every hand extended, is part of the invisible
network that sustains us.
Arrogance blinds people to this
reality. Those who refuse to acknowledge how much they owe others imagine
themselves self-made. It should be obvious that without the contributions of
many other people, they would be hungry, lonely, ignorant, and lost. Everything
we know, everything we have, exists because someone else cared enough to give.
Appreciating even the smallest kindness is part of the lifeblood of community.
A meaningful life cannot be lived
alone. Peirud — division — is not merely a social flaw. It is spiritual
corrosion. It weakens communities and hollows out the people who cause it.
The Torah is filled with mitzvos
that cultivate humility and gratitude, mitzvos that remind us that the
world is sustained by kindness and that Hashem showers us with blessing every
day. Whatever we pursue in life, we must remember the ultimate goal. Not
winning arguments. Not momentary triumphs. But building something enduring. Unity
makes our efforts last.
The Torah tells us in Devorim
(7:7) that Hashem did not choose us because we were many. We are, in fact, the
smallest of the nations. And yet, when we are united, we become greater than
the sum of our parts. Our deeds combine. Our merits accumulate. Other nations
may be larger, but when we have achdus, no one can overtake us.
We must learn how to move forward
together, not as individuals who happen to share a label, but as a people bound
by shared purpose. Loving another Jew does not require agreement, and
appreciating another Jew does not require seeing the world through the same
lens. What matters is the shared neshomah beneath the surface, the spark
that unites us despite our differences. When we recognize that spark, unity
becomes real, lived, and enduring.
Even before Moshe Rabbeinu was
born, this lesson was already being written. Shifra and Puah, his mother and
sister, risked their lives to save others. They were renowned for their
righteousness and rose to achieve levels of nevuah. Yet, despite their
overarching greatness, the Torah refers to them by the names given them for
their acts of kindness involving infants. Their identity was chesed. In
reward for their chesed, they merited dynasties of Kehunah, Leviyah,
and Malchus.
Kindness is greatness.
Moshe Rabbeinu survived because
of chesed. A helpless infant, placed in a basket among the reeds, was
saved by Basya, the daughter of Paroh. She named him Moshe, “because I drew him
from the water.” The Maharal teaches that although Moshe had many names,
this is the one by which he is eternally known, because it reflects an act of
compassion. The Torah is Toras Chesed. Even Hashem calls Moshe by a name
rooted in kindness.
Moshe’s greatness did not come
from the palace. It came from his heart. The Torah says, “Vayigdal hayeled —
And the youth grew.” How? “Vayeitzei el echov vayar besivlosam.” He left
comfort behind and went out to feel the pain of his brothers. Though raised as
royalty, walled off from what was going on, he took it upon himself to leave
the blissful comfort of the royal palace to view what was happening in the
lives of the lower classes. The suffering that he saw changed him forever.
When he saw a Jew being beaten,
he intervened. When he saw a Jew striking another Jew, he recoiled in horror. “Achein
noda hadovor,” he cried. Now I understand. Redemption cannot come where
Jews fight one another. Disunity locks the gates of geulah.
That day’s events forced him to
leave Mitzrayim. Upon escaping to Midyon, Moshe’s first act was chesed,
standing up for vulnerable strangers at a well. That kindness led to his
future, his family, and his destiny.
The Sefer Hachareidim
writes at the conclusion of the sefer that prior to his passing from
this world, Yaakov Avinu called for his sons, the twelve shevotim, and
said to them, “Hikovtzu v’shimu bnei Yaakov — Gather together the sons
of Yaakov.” He then told them that they should rid their hearts of jealousy,
hatred, and competition, and view each other as if they are one person with one
soul. Yaakov told them that if they could not achieve that unity, the Shechinah
would not be able to rest among them.
The Rishonim (Rashi,
Rabbeinu Bachya, Ibn Ezra, Rashbam) explain the pesukim (Shemos
29:45–46) which state that Am Yisroel “should know that I, Hashem
Elokeihem, took them out of Mitzrayim so that I can dwell among them.” They
write that this means that Hashem took us out of Mitzrayim in order for us to
build the Mishkon. This denotes that they were unified at the time of Yetzias
Mitzrayim or else they would not have been redeemed, for the Shechinah
can only rest among us, and in the Mishkon, where we are united. Had we
not been b’achdus, and had there been peirud, Hashem would not
have removed us from there.
The pattern repeats throughout
history. In every golus and every geulah, chesed and achdus
are decisive. They carried us out of Mitzrayim, and they will carry us forward
again.
If we remember who we are, if we
reach for one another instead of turning away, we can build something radiant
and enduring. Even small acts of appreciation — a kind word, a gesture of help
— ripple outward, strengthening the bonds that protect and sustain the klal.
Our Torah is Toras Moshe,
the inheritance of a gentle shepherd who led with compassion. It must be taught
and lived in a way that builds people, not breaks them. Greatness is tied to
sensitivity to the klal and to every individual within it. Such
sensitivity awakens Heavenly mercy. Greatness is formed through many small acts
of kindness born of an appreciation for every person and their needs and
emotions.
The Torah says that after the
passing of all the shevotim, there arose a “new” Paroh who did not know
Yosef. Rashi explains that according to one view, this was not a new
king at all. It was the same Paroh, who chose to pretend that Yosef had never
existed. Gratitude became inconvenient. History was rewritten.
This tactic is ancient and
familiar: Isolate, discredit, demonize.
The newly installed president of
Venezuela and other leftists and anti-Semites blamed “the Zionists” for
President Trump’s takedown of the dictator Nicolas Maduro. Facts were
distorted, history was bent, and Jews were once again cast as convenient villains
for events they did not create.
Actions concurrent with the
inauguration of New York City’s new mayor were disconcerting to many Jews who
are concerned about the direction he will take.
As Shabbos departs and the
melava malka candles flicker, we feel the ache of transition, from light
to labor, from holiness to struggle. We sing, “Al tira avdi Yaakov.” Do
not fear. With the voice, restraint, and faith of Yaakov, we can endure.
Together, we hold the key to
redemption. We come from different lands, speak different languages, and follow
different customs. But beneath it all, we are family. One on one, Jews get
along. We must not allow labels to tear us apart.
Where others bring darkness, we
must bring light. Where others sow loneliness, we must offer brotherhood. When
we are divided, Amaleik gains strength. When we stand k’ish echad b’lev
echad, no force can overcome us.
We cry together. We rejoice
together. We live for one another. We have tasted what redemption feels like.
Let us hold onto that taste. Let
us strengthen achdus, deepen love, and remember that we are part of
something larger than ourselves so that we can merit the geulah.
Unity does not mean sameness. Achdus
does not demand that we think alike, dress alike, or experience life in the
same way. Klal Yisroel has always been a tapestry woven from different
strands, from the time of the twelve shevotim, each distinct in nature
and approach, each bringing a different koach to the same sacred
mission. Yehudah’s leadership, Yissochor’s depth, and Zevulun’s support are not
competing paths, but complementary ones.
Our diversity is not a sign of
weakness. It is a source of strength. A people built from many perspectives is
more resilient, more complete, and better able to meet complex challenges. When
different strengths stand together, blind spots are covered, balance is
created, and the whole becomes greater than the sum of its parts. Achdus
is not forged by erasing difference, but by weaving difference into a shared
purpose.
Loving another Jew does not
depend on agreement. Appreciating another Jew does not require us to see the
world through identical lenses. It asks only that we recognize the shared shoresh
beneath the surface, the common destiny that binds us together even when our
paths look different. We do not have to blur distinctions in order to maintain
connection.
When differences are handled
gently, they enrich us. When they are handled harshly, they wound. Achdus
is sustained not by winning debates, but by preserving dignity. It grows when
we listen a little longer, judge a little less, and remember that the person
before us is more than a position or a label.
Every Jew carries a cheilek
Eloka mimaal, a spark of the Divine worthy of care and respect. When we
speak kindly, when we give the benefit of the doubt, when we assume sincerity
even where we disagree, we create an environment in which unity can breathe.
Disagreement does not have to fracture us. Handled with warmth, it can deepen
understanding.
Achdus is often built
quietly, through patience, restraint, and small acts of consideration. It is
found in choosing compassion over suspicion and connection over distance. When
we relate to one another as people rather than categories, unity becomes not an
ideal, but a lived reality.
There are many lessons for us in
the parshiyos of Seder Shemos, but the need for achdus to
bring about geulah is a primary one, especially during these times of
darkening clouds as we pine for the geulah and Moshiach.
We don’t always have to agree,
but when we disagree, it needs to be with respect and without hatred, as bnei
and bnos Torah and not as people devoid of middos and derech
eretz. Let us work to make ourselves worthy of having the Shechinah
dwell among us, so that Hakadosh Boruch Hu can feel confident enough to
bring us all home, surrounding the Bais Hamikdosh, with the coming of Moshiach,
speedily in our day.
