Welcome to the short, practical Lelamed Weekly Dvar. Please consider
forwarding this to others, and I hope you enjoy...
The Parsha describes the story of Yosef's deteriorating relationship with
his brothers, and their resulting plot to kill him. The brothers ultimately
settle on selling him to Ishmaelites – as soon as they finish their lunch.
While they callously break bread away from the pit where Yosef was begging
for mercy, a gang of Midianites come by, see Yosef, pull him out, and sell
him to the Ishmaelites before the brothers can (37:28). If the brothers
neither killed Yosef nor sold him to Egypt, what was their crime?
Rabbi David Fohrman explains that the brothers’ insensitivity to Yosef’s
cries as they broke bread was their main infraction. Conversely, much later
in the story, when Yosef is in jail he notices that two of his fellow
inmates are distraught, and asks them why they seem sad (40:7). This act of
compassion leads to his eventual release and ultimate redemption arc. Our
Parsha seems to be demonstrating to us the dangers of indifference, and
conversely the value of empathy. A single act of kindness can change the
course of history, and all we have to do is show that we care.
Quotation of the week:
"If you don't sacrifice for what you want, what you want becomes the
sacrifice."
Welcome to the short, practical Lelamed Weekly Dvar. Please consider
forwarding this to others, and I hope you enjoy...
_______________________________________________
The Parsha describes the story of Yosef's deteriorating relationship with
his brothers, and their resulting plot to kill him. The brothers ultimately
settle on selling him to Ishmaelites – as soon as they finish their lunch.
While they callously break bread away from the pit where Yosef was begging
for mercy, a gang of Midianites come by, see Yosef, pull him out, and sell
him to the Ishmaelites before the brothers can (37:28). If the brothers
neither killed Yosef nor sold him to Egypt, what was their crime?
Rabbi David Fohrman explains that the brothers’ insensitivity to Yosef’s
cries as they broke bread was their main infraction. Conversely, much later
in the story, when Yosef is in jail he notices that two of his fellow
inmates are distraught, and asks them why they seem sad (40:7). This act of
compassion leads to his eventual release and ultimate redemption arc. Our
Parsha seems to be demonstrating to us the dangers of indifference, and
conversely the value of empathy. A single act of kindness can change the
course of history, and all we have to do is show that we care.
_______________________________________________
Quotation of the week:
"If you don't sacrifice for what you want, what you want becomes the
sacrifice."