Echoes of Eden
Hard
work is one thing, servitude quite another. Hard work is respectable, respected,
and laudable; slavery is humiliating, dehumanizing. When a person is treated
like chattel, the divine spark with which every human being is endowed is eclipsed.
More often than not, this is true not only in the eyes of the enslaver, but in
the eyes of the enslaved: Compounding the physical burden, slaves may develop
psychological and emotional scars as the slave mentality seeps into their self-image
and they begin to believe that they are unworthy, subpar human beings.
In
order to implement his plan to enslave the Jews, it was important for Pharaoh
to dehumanize his victims. Thus, the Jews’ birthrate is described from the Egyptian perspective, in language
that would have made Goebbels grin: “They multiply like vermin (vayishretzu).” (Shmot 1:7). From this starting
point, the murder of the males could be easily couched in politically correct terminology:
This would not be infanticide; it would be “pest control,” “extermination.” This dehumanization was so
pronounced and so firmly entrenched that the Jewish midwives used Pharaoh’s own bias against him: In explaining
their failure to comply with his orders, the midwives claimed that the Jewish
women were like animals, that they gave birth ‘in the wild,” as it were, before the midwife arrived, and without any
assistance. (Shmot 1:19) Captivated and convinced by his own anti-Jewish
propaganda, Pharaoh accepted the midwives’ excuse as a reasonable explanation.
As
the story of the punishments and plagues visited upon Pharaoh and his people unfolds,
this theme of dehumanization comes to the foreground of the narrative – in reverse: The plagues may be seen
as a process designed to turn the tables on Egyptian society and to punish Pharaoh
and his people for their dehumanization of the Jews. Slowly, relentlessly, the
Egyptians themselves are reduced to the level of animals – and the higher their original
station, the more dramatic the fall proves to be.
Pharaoh
was a self-anointed deity. He presented himself as god of the Nile – the life force of Egypt:
“Thus says Almighty God: Behold, I am against you, Pharaoh
king of Egypt, the great crocodile (tannin) that lies in the midst of
his streams, who has said, ‘My river is my own, and I have made it for myself.’ (Yehezkel 29:3)
For
the Jews, the affliction of the Nile may have been perceived as Divine
retribution for the murder of their innocent babies, but the Egyptians may have
seen this plague very differently: The transformation of the Nile’s waters to blood was a severe strike
against the power of Egypt – the Nile and, by extension, Pharaoh, the god of the Nile.
For Pharaoh himself, this first plague began the process of devolution from
deity to man, and with subsequent plagues, from human to subhuman. Pharaoh’s fall would be the furthest and the
hardest of all.
Other
elements of Moshe’s
confrontation with Pharaoh point to the steady devolution and eventual
dehumanization of the Egyptian monarch. The verse from the Book of Yehezkel
quoted above gives an additional clue to this general theme: Yehezkel’s prophesy refers to Pharaoh as a tanin (crocodile) – the same word used to describe the
miraculous omen performed by Aharon. When Moshe instructed Aharon to throw down
his staff before Pharaoh, it was no coincidence that the omen took the form of
the very creature Pharaoh chose as his symbol. The message was unavoidable:
Pharaoh’s
specious claims of power and supernatural ability were no more than smoke and
mirrors. Aharon’s
tanin swallowed up all the others
(Shmot 7:12), just as the power Moshe and Aharon represented would soon swallow
up Pharaoh and all his minions.
The
omen of the tanin is, in fact, an
evolution of a sort: At the burning bush, Moshe’s staff was transformed into a nachash (serpent); now, standing before Pharaoh, in a reversal of
the events in the Garden of Eden, the serpent becomes a crocodile; its legs are
(at least partially) restored. The primordial serpent had caused man to sin by
claiming that eating the forbidden fruit could make him like God. The serpent
was punished by being stripped of its human features; specifically, the serpent
lost its voice and its legs. With each successive plague, Pharaoh, whose symbol
was a serpent with legs (a tanin or crocodile),
who saw himself as a deity, would lose not only his claim to divinity but his humanity
as well.
As
the plagues build up to a crescendo, confusion reigns - particularly when the Egyptians
bring their cattle into their homes for shelter. (Shmot 8:20) Egyptian society,
the hierarchical construct par excellence,
the economic and political structure visually represented by the pyramid, is
upended: Who is the master and who the slave? Who leads and who is led? Who is
human and who is animal? In this context, Pharaoh’s eventual loss of free will comes into sharper focus: The
ability to make conscious, intelligent decisions is a human trait, whereas the
animal world is for the most part driven by instinct. Pharaoh had enslaved
others by labeling them as sub-human. God’s response is to bring Pharaoh down, one rung at a time:
First, Pharaoh is stripped of the trappings of divinity in which he had cloaked
himself. Then, like the serpent in the Garden of Eden, he is stripped of the
symbols of humanity that he has forfeited through his own dehumanizing
behavior. Pharaoh loses the quintessential defining trait of humanity, free will.
When this final devolution is complete, the road to Pharaoh’s doom is a short one indeed.
For a more in-depth analysis see:
for
“Echoes of Eden” Sefer Shmot click here