Terumah- February 19th, 2021
This Shabbat:
Friday Candle Lighting: 5:23 PM
Shabbat Ends: 6:20 PM
Torah Message:
Throw Away Your Mask!
“You shall place in the Ark the Testimonial-tablets that I shall give you.” (25:16)
The holiday of Purim is about throwing away your mask.
There is an ancient custom for us to wear masks on Purim. Queen Esther masked her Jewishness. Her husband, King Achashverosh, did not know that she was Jewish. But at the crucial moment, when the Jewish People were threatened by Haman’s genocide, she removed her mask and counted herself as a Jew. By doing this, she saved the Jews of Persia and everywhere from annihilation. By being proud of her Jewishness, she saved her nation.
Do not think that our enemies will be persuaded that we are good by listing the vast contributions that Jews have made to civilization. The hatred of the anti-Semite is illogical, and something that defies logic cannot be reasoned with. The Jew-hater hates us because we are “the filthy rich and the filthy poor, the bastions of the bourgeoisie and rootless cosmopolitans, the communist and the capitalist. The only thing that the Jew-haters of the world can agree upon is their hate.
We will never ingratiate ourselves among the nations by aping them. Never was the cause of assimilation stronger than at the turn of the nineteenth century in Germany. The more the Jew pushes to be like everyone else, the more everyone else will turn around and remind us that we are different — sometimes with murderous results.
Do not expect the love of the Nations of the world – but we will earn their respect by being what we are supposed to be. The Midrash says that when Hashem was giving us the Torah, everything stopped. Everything was silent. The nations of the world, fearing another giant flood, sent for Bilaam, their prophet, to ask him what was happening. Bilaam replied with the words of Psalm 29, that Hashem was not bringing a flood or destruction, but “Hashem was giving “Oz” — the Torah — to His People. To which the Nations replied, “May Hashem bless His people with peace.”
When we, as proud Jews, throw away our masks and sanctify the name of the Torah, the whole world will proclaim, “May Hashem bless His people with peace.”
Mishpatim- February 12th, 2021
This Shabbat:
Friday Candle Lighting: 5:17 PM
Shabbat Ends: 6:14 PM
Torah Message:
Handle With Care
“If a person steals an ox…” (21:37)
People are sensitive. I know… I’m one of them. Having been educated in the Empire-Building English Public (i.e. Private) School system, where “big boys don’t cry,” I can tell you that however stiff your upper lip may be, inside we are all softies.
In this week’s weekly Torah portion, the Torah tells us that a thief who slaughters or sells a stolen ox has to pay five times the value to its owner. However, if he does the same with a sheep, he only has to pay four times, because he has already paid part of his penalty with the embarrassment and humiliation he felt during the theft by carrying the sheep across his shoulders. One would not place sheep-stealers among mankind’s most sensitive beings, yet the Torah evaluates a sheep-stealer’s embarrassment as calculable in hard cash.
The Talmud (Yevamot 44b) permits or even mandates birth control in the case of a widow who is breast-feeding her deceased husband’s child and then re-marries. We are concerned that should she become pregnant and her milk sour, the current husband might be unwilling to pay for milk and eggs to feed the baby. Then she will have to go to Beit Din to claim child support from the beneficiaries of the dead husband. She may be too embarrassed to do this, and there is danger that the baby may not receive adequate nutrition and die.
Is there any greater love than a mother for her baby? And yet we are still concerned that embarrassment and humiliation may vie with motherly love.
It is certainly much easier to be sensitive to ourselves than to others. But at some level, even those who seem the least sensitive feel embarrassment and hurt. Everyone deserves to be “handled with care.”
- Source: Rashi, Chidushei HaLev
Yitro- February 5th, 2021
This Shabbat:
Friday Candle Lighting: 5:10 PM
Shabbat Ends: 6:08 PM
Torah Message:
Moshe-San
“You shall not recognize the gods of others in My presence.” (20:4)
As every believing Muslim knows, “Eid al-Adha, the Feast of Sacrifice dates from the historic event when Prophet Abraham was commanded by God, in the form of a dream vision, to sacrifice his son, Ishmail. But while he was in the act of sacrificing his Ishmail, God sent the angel Gabriel with a huge ram. Gabriel informed Abraham that his dream vision was fulfilled and instructed him to sacrifice the ram as a ransom for his son.” Sound familiar? But it’s not just Islam that has a rather different version of world history than us. Are you familiar with the belief that Moses actually came to Japan to learn the wisdom of ancient Shinto during the forty days that the Bible says he was on Mount Sinai, receiving the Torah from God? Or that the Japanese are one of the ten ‘Lost Tribes’ of Israel?
The supposed common ancestry of the Jews and the Japanese makes fanciful reading but maybe Hashem allowed this idea currency to rescue His People from what could have been a murderous encounter.
In Tokyo in 1941, Rabbi Moshe Shatzkes and the Amshenover Rebbe sat facing four Japanese admirals in dress uniforms. Heads shaven, arms folded stiffly across their chests, they sat motionless. The opening formalities were brief. In fact, considering the usual time-consuming graciousness that customarily began such formal encounters, they were just short of insulting. “We appreciate your coming today; we appreciate your cooperating with us…” Then, suddenly, the opening shot. “What is the inherent evil of your people that our friends the Germans hate you so much?” None of the admirals, not even the one who had spoken, deigned to look at the objects of the question. The Amshenover Rebbe said to the translator in Yiddish, “Tell him the Germans hate us because we are Orientals.”
Scarcely three seconds had passed between the posing of the question and this calm response. The admiral involuntarily shifted his eyes to look directly at the rebbe. “What does this mean? You are Asians? We are Asians!” “Yes,” the rebbe agreed. “And you are also on the list. In Berlin, not many years ago, perhaps three or four, a young German girl fell in love with a fine young man, a Japanese man who was working at the Japanese Embassy. Naturally enough, the two young people wanted to marry, but such a marriage was forbidden by the laws of ‘racial purity’ that prohibit a fine German girl from marrying a Japanese person.”
“You are lying,” the first admiral said. “No,” the rebbe said calmly. “Consider for yourself: What is the image of Hitler’s ‘master race’? How does he describe it? In films, documentaries, newspapers, who is shown bringing victory home to the German fatherland? Always, always, the so-called Aryans. Tall, broad-shouldered, blond hair, blue eyes. I am not six feet tall. I do not have blue eyes. I don’t have blond hair — even before it turned white. The reason they hate me, the reason they hate all of us, is because we don’t fit the image of the Aryan master race.”
He said no more. There was no need to point out the scarcity of tall, broad-shouldered, blond, blue-eyed Japanese. Silence. Then one of the admirals said, “Tell our Jewish guests there will now be a brief recess. Tell them we have been inexcusably inconsiderate in not allowing them time to rest from their long trip and in not offering proper refreshments. Tell them we will meet in two hours’ time in a more comfortable place.”
When, several hours later, the Jews were shown into a large conference room lined with windows — the atmosphere was entirely different. Again, the four admirals were lined up proudly on one side of a table but now, seated beside them were two newcomers, resplendent in long white robes and tall stiff black hats tied decorously under their chins. They were high-ranking Shinto priests. The discussion centered almost exclusively on religion: comparisons and contrasts between Shinto and Judaism, extended explanations of the theory of common origin that the Japanese were descended, in part, from one of the “ten lost tribes” that had come to Japan, and the theory that Moses had actually come to Japan to learn the wisdom of ancient Shinto during the forty days when he was on Mount Sinai, receiving the Torah from G-d. For over an hour, Rabbi Shatzkes described the basic principles, ideas and ceremonies of the Jews.
It was late afternoon before the meeting drew to a close. As a final note, the Amshenover Rebbe repeated the gratitude of the refugees to the Japanese for taking them in and treating them so well. “Go back to your people,” said one of the admirals. “Tell them they have nothing to fear. We Japanese will do our utmost to provide for your safety and peace. You have nothing to fear while in Japanese territory.”
Apart from receiving the Torah on Sinai, Moshe was incidentally providing a scenario, which thousands of years later would rescue his great-grandchildren from the Nazi inferno — even if the Japanese got their geography a bit wrong and mistook Mount Sinai for Mount Fuji.
- Source: “The Fugu Plan: The Untold Story Of The Japanese And The Jews During World War II” by Marvin Tokayer
Beshalach- January 29th, 2021
This Shabbat:
Friday Candle Lighting: 5:03 PM
Shabbat Ends: 6:01 PM
Torah Message:
The Bridge to Change
“G-d did not lead them by way of the land of the Philistines, although it was nearer…” (13:17)
It’s very difficult to change things we don’t like about ourselves. We are creatures of habit.
One of the hardest aspects of modifying negative behavior is breaking the patterns we weave for ourselves. How long do our “New Year’s resolutions” last? A day? A week? Not through lack of resolution, but because resolution is no match for habit.
Resolution is not the solution. To succeed, we must do something much more fundamental.
When Hashem took the Jewish People out of Egypt, He did not take them on the quickest and easiest and most direct route from Egypt to Eretz Yisrael — northeast, along the coast of the Mediterranean, through what is today Gaza. Rather, He took them on a long, difficult and tortuous path across a sea and through a major desert. Why?
As the saying goes, “Easy come, easy go.” When the Jewish People left Egypt, they had not entirely freed themselves from the clutches of the negative drive, the yetzer hara. If Hashem had brought them on the easy way, they would have been in danger of being lured back to the constricting but comfortable life of slavery in the fleshpots of Egypt. Hashem, as it were, burned their bridges. He made it virtually impossible to return to Egypt — which was just as well. For, as we see, when the going got tough in the wilderness, the Jews were more than willing to return to Egypt. Had that been an easy option, the history of the Jewish People might have been very different.
Ostensibly, then, when faced with trying to escape the clutches of our negative drive, we must burn our bridges. If we want to separate from bad company, we must be prepared to leave and move to a different neighborhood. If we have a serious weight problem, we must put a lock on the fridge and entrust the key to our spouse (unless he’s/she’s trying to lose weight as well).
However, in Parshat Vaera (8:23), the Torah presents an apparent contradiction to this logic. When Moshe tells Pharaoh that the Jews are leaving, he talks of “only a three-day journey.” Moshe knew full well that once they were out, they were not coming back, so why did he tell Pharaoh it was for only three days?
Part of Moshe’s intention was to appease the latent negative drive still lingering in the hearts of the Jewish People. Leaving for three days is a far less daunting prospect than leaving forever. The Jews thus felt they had a “get-out clause,” if they needed it, and were prepared to go along with Moshe. For three days, at least.
But was this bridge-burning?
The Exodus was effected then both though a bribe to the negative drive, the lure of a three-day round-trip ticket on the one hand, and on the other, an iron-fisted scorched earth policy of no return.
When we wish to leave our own personal “Egypts” — our personal prisons that the negative drive constructs for us — which is the correct course to follow?
The answer is that we need both. For someone who smokes forty cigarettes a day, the idea of going cold turkey is horrendous. But tell him that if after two weeks he’s not happy, he can go back to smoking like a chimney, you will see a different picture.
Seduction and bribery are our opening guns against the negative drive. Afterwards we have to follow up by burning our bridges. It was the lure of a round-trip ticket that got the Jewish People as far as the edge of the water, but it was only Nachson ben Amiadav’s jumping headlong into the sea, showing there was no turning back, that made the waters divide.
- Sources: based on Rabbi E. E. Dessler and Lekach Tov
Bo- January 22nd, 2021
This Shabbat:
Friday Candle Lighting: 4:57 PM
Shabbat Ends: 5:55 PM
Torah Message:
Not Quite Kindled
“…and you shall not break a bone of it (the Pesach offering).” (12:46)
Living in Israel makes it somewhat difficult to buy and read English language books. Even before Corona, buying a real paper book and shipping it out from the States or the UK could take a month. Kindle promised to change all that. Amazon Kindle is a series of e-readers, devices that enable users to browse, buy, download and read electronic books, newspapers, magazines and other digital media via wireless networking to the Kindle Store — pretty much instantly.
I bought a Kindle over a year ago and I must have read twenty or more books on it. It is very convenient and certainly instant, but I realized after a while that there is something lacking in my reading experience. Having a real book, picking it up, seeing it age and spilling coffee on its pages — create a relationship with the reading matter of the book itself. The way we interface with the objects in our lives has an impact on our intellectual experience. The form influences the content.
When I cast my eyes over my bookshelves, I sense a visceral relationship with the physical books there, and I feel in some way more connected to the content of their pages.
What remains from the Kindle experience of reading is somehow more abstract, more distant, and cold. It is not just the lack of a good cover. I do not have the same connection to the material of the book because I did not have the physical experience of touching it, opening it, cracking its cover and remembering it whenever I see its spine of my shelf.
The Sefer HaChinuch (Mitzvah 16) asks a famous question about why we need so many mitzvahs to remember the Exodus. One entire volume out of four of the Shulchan Aruch — Orach HaChaim — is devoted to the minutiae of every aspect of the observance of Pesach. Says the Chinuch, surely to remember our leaving Egypt all we should need is to eat a bit of matzah each year. He then outlines a key principle of human psychology: Feelings are created by actions. Our actions influence the way we feel about something. A mitzvah is a physical embodiment of a spiritual reality. The experience of the spiritual reality can only be “kindled” by physical experience.
Tu B’Shevat
The Torah likens man to a tree: “For man is a tree of the field” (Deut. 20:19). Man is like a tree in that his head is rooted in the Heavens, nestled in the spiritual soils of the Eternal, and nourished by his connection to his Creator. His arms and legs are like branches, through which he accrues good deeds, and upon which the “fruits” of his labor are laden.
Therefore, on Tu B’Shevat one should revitalize his connection to G-d, and rejuvenate his commitment to keep the mitzvahs (Midrash Shemuel on Pirkei Avot
Vaera- January 15th, 2021
This Shabbat:
Friday Candle Lighting: 4:50 PM
Shabbat Ends: 5:49 PM
Torah Message:
The Pandemic and the Endemic
“…but with My Name Hashem I did not make Myself known to them” (6:3)
One of the side-effects of the COVID-19 pandemic is claustrophobia. Recently, I went to visit my mother (who, bli ayn hara, is more than half-way through her nineties), in England, and as the plane left the sky and we crested the white cloud cover and broke through to the blue, I had a feeling of exhilaration that reminded me of the first time I ever travelled in a plane. I realized that I was feeling the liberation from being cooped up like a battery hen. The psychological effects of this disease may turn out to be more pervasive and long lasting than the illness itself.
Even before the pandemic, our generation was already suffering from endemic low self-esteem. Enforced isolation has exacerbated this to new levels.
The name of two of the Tribes of Israel bear a striking resemblance: Yehuda, the most exalted of the tribes, is called “Yehuda Gur Aryeh” — “A lion cub is Yehuda.” (Ber. 49:10) However in the Book of Devarim, the lowliest of the tribes, Dan, is also called Gur Aryeh, “Dan Gur Aryeh” (33:22). (Midrash Tanchuma, Ki Tissa 13)
Dan was the tribe that was so steeped in the idol worship of Egypt that they carried their idols with them into the sea when it split. Idol worship was so endemic in the tribe of Dan that the mystical “Clouds of Glory” that accompanied and protected the Jewish People in the desert would not accompany them. (Pesikata d’Rav Kahana – Piska 3:12)
What can link the lowest with highest?
In the Torah portion of Vayechi, in the middle of his blessing to Dan, Yaakov seems to suddenly stop and exclaim, “For Your salvation do I long, Hashem!” Ostensibly, this sudden exclamation has no connection to the blessing that Yaakov is giving. On a deeper level, however, this is the essence of Yaakov’s blessing to Dan.
There’s a famous Midrash that compares different kinds of Jews to the four species of Succot. The lowliest is the Jew who has neither Torah nor good deeds, who is compared to the Arava — the Willow that has no fruit, no taste and no aroma. Why is the lowly Arava part of the four species? And more, why does it have its own special day during Succot — Hoshana Rabba?
The awesome power of the Arava is that despite its lowliness, it yearns and it thirsts for connection to Hashem, just as the Willow thirsts for water and typically grows by a river.
The Tribe of Dan, despite its lowliness, yearns for connection to Hashem: “For Your salvation do I long, Hashem!”
It is this yearning that makes the Tribe of Dan worthy to be given the same name as Yehuda, the Prince of the Tribes.
We are now reading the Book of Shemot, literally the Book of Names. In our current situation, it is easy to lose track of our identity — of our value, our place in this world — of our name. We may be in the lowest part of world history, cut off and lonely, but our yearning for connection, for spirituality, to be close to Hashem, can raise us to the levels of the greatest.
Shemot- January 8th, 2021
This Shabbat:
Friday Candle Lighting: 4:43 PM
Shabbat Ends: 5:43 PM
Torah Message:
Traitor to Whom?
Pharaoh said, “Come let us deal cleverly with it (the People of Israel), lest it become numerous, and it may be that if a war will occur, it too may join our enemies and wage war against us and go up from the land.” (1:10)
A couple of weeks ago, I wrote that the majority of the scientists who built the American atom bomb were Jewish. Among others: Leo Szilard, Niels Bohr, Aage Bohr, Lise Meitner, Rudolf Peierls, Otto Frisch, Walter Zinn, Edward Teller and J. Robert Oppenheimer. It’s interesting that more than one or two of the atom spies for the Soviet Union were also Jewish. Even though Klaus Fuchs was the son of a Lutheran pastor and John Cairncross, one of the “Cambridge Five” wasn’t a Jew, Morris and Lona Cohen, Theodore Hall, George Korval, Saville Sax, Oscar Seborer, Morton Sobell, Irving Lerner, Arthur Adams, David Greenglas, Harry Gold and Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were all Jewish.
Sometimes we are faced with a choice that makes us a traitor no matter what we decide. This type of decision will make us either a traitor to our country or a traitor to our principles. Before Stalin murdered his millions, many looked towards Russia as a Utopia. To the mind of a Jew, much was right about Communism. Typically, Jews have been at the front of every social revolution in history. The idea of a social contract, the idea of equality under the law, of society’s responsibility to care for the poor and sick, the downtrodden and the dispossessed, are some of the Torah’s most outstanding gifts to mankind — and to Socialist thought. In addition, these spies also saw the exclusive American possession of atomic weapons as a threat to world peace in the post-World War II world.
Typically, the Jewish atom spies received no financial reward except for their expenses. (Mind you, several received the Red Star and a lifetime pass to travel on Moscow’s public transport — not too much use in Brooklyn…)
Pharaoh said, “Come let us deal cleverly with it (the People of Israel), lest it become numerous, and it may be that if a war will occur, it too may join our enemies and wage war against us and go up from the land.” (1:10) Pharaoh sensed that the Jews march to a different drum — the drum of conscience, even when the drum may lead to treachery.
True, there have been few whose conscience has lead to such tragic mistakes. But, how many incomparably more is the number of those who have used that gift of conscience, a gift from Above, to serve their country, society and humanity with total loyalty and fidelity!
Vayechi- January 1st, 2020
This Shabbat:
Friday Candle Lighting: 4:38 PM
Shabbat Ends: 5:37 PM
Torah Message:
Striving and Thriving
“And he lived…”(47:28)
The national census for Jews living in Israel was approximately 6,700,000 in 2019. That of the United States was approximately 6,543,820 in 2018. If you add all the other places in the Diaspora, from France with around 450,000 Jews, to El Salvador, or North Macedonia, or the Philippines, who have around 100 Jews, and factor in the Israeli birth rate together with the increase in aliya to Israel from places like France — the Jewish population of the Land of Israel will exceed that of the Diaspora in the foreseeable future. This will trigger a number of halachic events and laws that have not occurred for nearly two thousand years.
We are coming to the end of our longest exile. The story of the Jewish People in the Diaspora has not been one of unremitting misery, despite horrific and terrible events. For much of our time in exile, we have managed to live and prosper without losing our identity among our hosts. Where did this ability come from?
Yaakov’s intention when he came down to Egypt was only to “sojourn” — not to live there permanently. However,“And he lived,” the beginning of this week’s Torah portion, tells us that Hashem told Yaakov to live out the rest of his life there. Also, the verb “to live” here suggests that Yaakov finally found peace in Egypt. At the end of his difficult life, he finally found tranquility. But didn’t the Torah implicitly criticize Yaakov for wanting to dwell in tranquility, as we see at the beginning of the Torah portion of Vayeshev?
“The actions of the Patriarchs are a sign to their children.”
Yaakov’s living and thriving in happiness in exile was a sign for the generations that you can live — and prosper — even in exile, by the diligent learning and the inspired living of the Torah, the qualities epitomized by Yaakov.
- Sources: Abarbanel, Akeidah, ArtScroll Chumash – Stone Edition
Vayigash- December 25th, 2020
This Shabbat:
Friday Candle Lighting: 4:33 PM
Shabbat Ends: 5:32 PM
Torah Message:
Nuclear Fusion
“And you, son of man, take to yourself one piece of wood and write upon it ‘For Yehuda and the Children of Israel, his associates,’ and take another piece of wood and write upon it, ‘For Yosef, the stem of Ephraim and the whole House of Israel, his associates.’” (Haftarah, Yechezkel 33:16)
One of the fascinating facets of the A-bomb story is that the vast majority of the players were Jews. Albert Einstein’s Theory of Relativity paved the way for investigation into nuclear fission. In 1939 he urged President Roosevelt to build an atomic bomb before Nazi Germany did so. Leo Szilard (1898-1964), born in Budapest, helped Italian Enrico Fermi (married to a Jew) conduct the first controlled nuclear chain reaction. Niels Bohr (1885-1962) was the first to apply quantum theory to explain nuclear structure. Born in Denmark to a Christian father and Jewish mother, Bohr won a Nobel Prize in 1922, and narrowly escaped Denmark in 1943, pursued by the Nazis. He worked on the Manhattan Project with his son Aage. Lise Meitner (1878-1968) was born in Vienna and became a pioneer of research into nuclear fission. She analyzed her results with her nephew, Otto Frisch. Walter Zinn and Fermi directed the first controlled nuclear chain reaction in 1942 at the University of Chicago. Hungarian-born Edward Teller led the US team that developed the first hydrogen bomb. And the list goes on.
But maybe the most fascinating of the all those who built the atom bomb was J. Robert Oppenheimer (1904-1967), the US-born theoretical physicist who was chosen to direct the Manhattan Project at Los Alamos in 1942. It was his team that, on July 16, 1945 exploded the world’s first atomic bomb. Three months later he resigned as project director and opposed development of the H-bomb. Oppenheimer was accused of being a Communist, he was vilified in public, and, although exonerated, the experience broke him. Oppenheimer came from a wealthy, assimilated New York Jewish family. He was an aesthete, an intellectual and a philosopher. His colleague I. I. Rabi once wrote about him:
“He reminded me very much of a boyhood friend about whom someone said that he couldn’t make up his mind whether to be president of the B’nai B’rith or the Knights of Columbus. Perhaps he really wanted to be both, simultaneously. Oppenheimer wanted every experience. In that sense, he never focused. My own feeling is that if he had studied the Talmud and Hebrew, rather than Sanskrit, he would have been a much greater physicist.” (From “Dark Sun: The Making of the Hydrogen Bomb” by Richard Rhodes)
Commenting on this week’s Haftara, Rabbi Shimshon Raphael Hirsch bewails the continuing strife between the “Ephraim” Jew and the “Yehuda” Jew. The “Ephraim” Jew, “by his systematic disavowal of the Divine Torah, seeks salvation in political greatness and tries to find a substitute for the lack of protection from G-d by vain efforts to obtain alliance with the nations, among whom it hopes to ‘blossom out in brotherhood’ (Hoshea 23:15) by complete assimilation. But, for giving up all Jewishness, he only experiences contempt and repulsion.”
On the other hand, “Yehuda, who in principle certainly acknowledges Hashem as its G-d… is still far off from unreserved trust in G-d.” Rabbi Hirsch criticizes the “Yehuda” Jew for failing to apply the same standards in his relation with his fellow man as he does with regard to his kashrut.
“And you, son of man, take to yourself one piece of wood and write upon it, ‘For Yehuda and the Children of Israel his associates,’ and take another piece of wood and write upon it, ‘For Yosef, the stem of Ephraim and the whole House of Israel, his associates.’ And bring them near… and they will become united to one union in your hand.”
The two chips of wood representing the two tribes will eventually be united, not in a watered-down compromise but in a genuine elevation “in an everlasting faithfulness towards G-d.”
When we look at our divided nation, how we long for that “nuclear fusion” that will bathe the whole world in Hashem’s light!
Mikeitz- December 18th, 2020
This Shabbat:
Friday Candle Lighting: 4:29 PM
Shabbat Ends: 5:29 PM
Torah Message:
A Candle in the Dark
“Yet the chamberlain of the cup bearers did not remember Yosef, but forgot him.” (40:23)
“Raiders of the Lost Ark” was one of the biggest box-office hits of all-time. As the title suggests, the story centers on the “Lost Ark,” which is none other than the Holy Ark that Moshe constructed to house the original Torah and the tablets of the Ten Commandments.During the movie’s climax, the villain garbs himself in the vestments of the Kohen Gadol (High Priest) as he battles with the movie’s hero, Indiana Jones.
Truth, as they say, is stranger than fiction, for there seems to be a fascinating real-life connection between the Jewish People and Indiana Jones!
In 1911, Hiram Bingham III discovered the legendary Inca city of Macchu Picchu in Peru. Indiana Jones, the hero of “Raiders of the Lost Ark”, was patterned after Hiram Bingham. Hiram had a son called, not very imaginatively, Hiram Bingham IV.
A number of years ago, the American Secretary of State Colin Powell gave a posthumous award for “constructive dissent” to Hiram (or Harry) Bingham IV. For more than fifty years the State Department had resisted any attempt to honor Bingham. To them, he was an insubordinate member of the US diplomatic service, a dangerous maverick who was eventually demoted. Yet now, after his death, he has been officially recognized as a hero.
In 1939, Bingham was posted to Marseille, France as American Vice-Consul. The USA was then neutral, and, not wishing to annoy Marshal Petain’s puppet Vichy regime, Roosevelt’s government ordered its representatives in Marseille not to grant visas to any Jews. Bingham decided that this was immoral, and, putting his conscience before his career, did everything in his power to undermine the official US foreign policy.
In defiance of his bosses in Washington, he granted more than 2,500 US visas to Jewish and other refugees, including the artists Marc Chagall and Max Ernst, and the family of the writer Thomas Mann. He sheltered Jews in his Marseille home and obtained forged identity papers to help others in their dangerous journeys across Europe. He worked with the French underground to smuggle Jews out of France into Franco’s Spain or across the Mediterranean. He even contributed to their expenses out of his own pocket.
By 1941, Washington had lost patience with Bingham. He was sent to Argentina. After the war, to the continued annoyance of his superiors, he reported on the movements of Nazi war criminals. Not unsurprisingly, eventually he was forced out of the American diplomatic service completely.
Bingham died almost penniless in 1988. Little was known of his extraordinary activities until his son found a series of letters in his father’s belongings after his death.
Subsequently, many groups and organizations, including the United Nations and the State of Israel, honored Bingham.
Bingham is like a candle in the dark.
Many are the stories from the Spanish Inquisition onward of Jews who gave away their fortunes to sea captains for the promise of safety, only to find themselves robbed and betrayed by those they trusted. Change the year to 1940 and the same story could be repeated, with equally chilling results, in Nazi Europe.
“Yet the Chamberlain of the Cup bearers did not remember Yosef, but forgot him.”
If the chamberlain “did not remember” Yosef, why did the Torah also write “but forgot him“?Rashi comments that the chamberlain “did not remember” him that same day, and subsequently he also “forgot him.”
One could perhaps forgive the chamberlain for forgetting Yosef on the day of his release. It is human nature to be so overjoyed at escaping the purgatory of prison that one might forget his benefactor. However, when the excitement had died down, why didn’t the chamberlain keep his promise to Yosef?
This classic ingratitude echoes to us down the ages, in Spain, in Europe, in Russia and in Arab lands.
When we find a Hiram Bingham, we should proclaim his kindness to the hills.