Parashat bo
Summary
In Parashat Bo (Exodus 10:1-13:16), God inflicts the last
three plagues upon the Egyptians and gives the instructions
for the observance of the festival of Passover. The previous
Parasha - Va'era covered the first seven plauges - those of
blood, frogs, lice, swarms of insects, pestilence, boils, hail
and fire. The Torah portion begins with God telling Moses "Bo
el Paraoh," "Go to Pharaoh," in order to warn
Pharaoh that unless he lets the Israelites leave Egypt to worship
God, Pharaoh and all of Egypt will learn that the God of the
Hebrews is, indeed, God of all.
Once again (as God did in last week's Torah portion), God
hardens Pharaoh's heart so that he denies freedom to the Israelites.
Locusts, the eighth plague, devour all the grass and trees so
that nothing green is left in all of Egypt. Then darkness covers
the land for three days. Before the tenth and final plague,
God tells Moses and Aaron to instruct each Israelite family
to slaughter a lamb, put some of its blood on the doorposts
and lintels of their homes so that God will pass over their
houses when God kills every first born child in the land of
Egypt.
The Israelites did exactly as they were told and in the middle
of the night, God killed all of the first born children in the
land of Egypt - from Pharaoh's first born to the first born
of the slaves and even the cattle.
Finally, acknowledging God's power over him, Pharaoh tells
Moses and Aaron to leave with the people so that they may worship
God. They leave hurriedly, before their dough can rise, without
any provisions. The people are told that this day, the 14th
day of the first month of the Jewish calendar, will be a day
of remembrance throughout the ages, to be celebrated once they
enter the land flowing with milk and honey which God has promised
them. For seven days the people shall eat unleavened bread and
shall tell their children that this observance "is because
of what Adonai did for me when I went free from Egypt (Exodus
13:8)." They will also redeem their first born children
and animals in remembrance of their salvation.
Commentary
This week’s commentary is from Rabbi Mark Goldsmith
(Rabbi of Finchley Progressive Synagogue and brother of Paul
our guitarist!) with whom I shared a session at Limmud. Mark
writes:
As the horrifying extent of the Tsunami tragedy gradually
became known in the week after December 26th I was participating
as both presenter and student in Limmud, the extraordinary gathering
of 2000 Jews of all denominations seeking to learn and build
their Judaism for the year ahead including nine people from
Finchley Progressive Synagogue.
Limmud began early on Sunday 26th at Nottingham University
before the news reports of the Tsunami reached England. Then
like many conferences people were so absorbed in the delight
of the wonderful choice of Jewish educational, cultural, political
and spiritual sessions that virtually no-one had turned on a
television, listened to a radio or gone out of the University
campus to buy a newspaper.
I went up to Limmud on the 28th very much aware of the horror
unfolding in South East Asia but quickly found that most people
at Limmud had no idea about it. At session after session on
that day people who, like me, had come to visit for a day or
two revealed what the rest of the world knew but the Limmud
bubble did not. I found considering the impact of the tragedy
in a Jewish setting helpful. For Jews fatalism can never be
a response to misfortune. As Jews we are mandated never to accept
other people's suffering but rather to provide help and aid
and so we join with all who care to give money or supplies.
You will have seen it written in many places by now
that the numbers of people killed in the Tsunami tragedy are
on the same scale as the number who lose their lives to AIDS
in the African continent each month. This does not reduce our
responsibility to help in South East Asia - but rather means
that we should always consider a proportion of our income to
be set aside to be given to the poor and the desperate as well
as responding to the immediate disaster that the world has suffered. |