Difference between revisions of "Reparations and Despoiling Egypt/2/en"
(Original Author: Neima Novetsky, Rabbi Hillel Novetsky) |
(Original Author: Neima Novetsky, Rabbi Hillel Novetsky) |
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<opinion name="Remuneration">Remuneration | <opinion name="Remuneration">Remuneration | ||
<p>The items served as partial remuneration for hundreds of years of slave labor.</p> | <p>The items served as partial remuneration for hundreds of years of slave labor.</p> | ||
− | <mekorot><multilink><a href="Jubilees48" data-aht="source">Jubilees</a><a href="Jubilees48" data-aht="source">Ch. 48</a><a href="Jubilees" data-aht="parshan">About Jubilees</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="Wisdom10-15" data-aht="source">Wisdom of Solomon</a><a href="Wisdom10-15" data-aht="source">10:15–18</a><a href="Wisdom of Solomon" data-aht="parshan">About Wisdom of Solomon</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="PhiloLifeOfMosesI-XXV" data-aht="source">Philo</a><a href="PhiloLifeOfMosesI-XXV" data-aht="source">On the Life of Moshe I:XXV</a><a href="Philo" data-aht="parshan">About Philo</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="SifreDevarim120" data-aht="source">Sifre</a><a href="SifreDevarim120" data-aht="source">Devarim 120</a><a href="Sifre" data-aht="parshan">About Sifre</a></multilink>, Geviha b. Pesisa in <multilink><a href="MegillatTaanit" data-aht="source">Scholion Megillat Taanit</a><a href="MegillatTaanit" data-aht="source">25 Sivan</a><a href="Megillat Taanit" data-aht="parshan">About Megillat Taanit</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="Sanhedrin91a" data-aht="source">Bavli Sanhedrin</a><a href="Sanhedrin91a" data-aht="source">Sanhedrin 91a</a><a href="Talmud Bavli" data-aht="parshan">About the Bavli</a></multilink> and <multilink><a href="BereshitRabbah61-7" data-aht="source">Bereshit Rabbah</a><a href="BereshitRabbah61-7" data-aht="source">61:7</a><a href="Bereshit Rabbah" data-aht="parshan">About Bereshit Rabbah</a></multilink>,<fn>There are some variations between these three sources. In Megillat Taanit and the Bavli, Geviha b. Pesisa responds on behalf of the Jews and he claims wages for a full 430 years of slavery in Egypt, as per the Biblical verse. In Bereshit Rabbah, though, his name is given as Geviah b. Kosem and he speaks of only 210 years in Egypt. For more on how many years were spent in Egypt, see <a href="Duration of the Egyptian Exile" data-aht="page">Duration of the Egyptian Exile</a>.</fn> <multilink><a href="IbnEzraShemotShort3-21" data-aht="source">Ibn Ezra Short Commentary</a><a href="IbnEzraShemotShort3-21" data-aht="source">Shemot 3:22</a><a href="R. Avraham ibn Ezra" data-aht="parshan">About Ibn Ezra</a></multilink>,<fn>In contrast to his position in his Long Commentary cited below.</fn> <multilink><a href="RadakBereshit15-14" data-aht="source">Radak</a><a href="RadakBereshit15-14" data-aht="source">Bereshit 15:14</a><a href="R. David Kimchi (Radak)" data-aht="parshan">About Radak</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="RalbagShemot3-22" data-aht="source">Ralbag</a><a href="RalbagShemot3-22" data-aht="source">Shemot 3:22</a><a href="RalbagShemot3Toelet15" data-aht="source">Shemot 3, Toelet 15</a><a href="R. Levi b. Gershom (Ralbag, Gersonides)" data-aht="parshan">About Ralbag</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="Ran11" data-aht="source">Ran</a><a href="Ran11" data-aht="source">Derashot HaRan 11</a><a href="R. Nissim Gerondi (Ran)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Nissim Gerondi</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="AbarbanelShemot3" data-aht="source">Abarbanel</a><a href="AbarbanelShemot3" data-aht="source">Shemot 3</a><a href="R. Yitzchak Abarbanel" data-aht="parshan">About R. Yitzchak Abarbanel</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="HarekhasimShemot11-2" data-aht="source">HaRekhasim Levik'ah</a><a href="HarekhasimShemot11-2" data-aht="source">Shemot 11:2</a><a href="R. Yehuda Leib Frankfurter (HaRekhasim Levikah)" data-aht="parshan">About HaRekhasim Levik'ah</a></multilink>,<fn>He adds that the Egyptians forfeited their legal claims on their possessions when they expelled the Israelites – see below.</fn> <multilink><a href="ShadalShemot3-22" data-aht="source">Shadal</a><a href="ShadalShemot3-22" data-aht="source">Shemot 3:22</a><a href="R. Shemuel David Luzzatto (Shadal)" data-aht="parshan">About Shadal</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="CassutoShemot3-22" data-aht="source">U. Cassuto</a><a href="CassutoShemot3-22" data-aht="source">Shemot 3:22</a><a href="Umberto Cassuto" data-aht="parshan">About U. Cassuto</a></multilink>, and many others<fn>This may also be the approach taken by <multilink><a href="Ezekiel" data-aht="source">Ezekiel the Tragedian</a><a href="Ezekiel" data-aht="source">Cited by Eusebius 9:29</a><a href="Ezekiel" data-aht="parshan">About Ezekiel</a></multilink>. However, it is difficult to determine whether he viewed the items as a loan or a gift. Cf. R. Saadia, Chizkuni and R. Bachya above who explain that the Egyptians themselves gave gifts willingly as remuneration / הענקה.</fn></mekorot> | + | <mekorot><multilink><a href="Jubilees48" data-aht="source">Jubilees</a><a href="Jubilees48" data-aht="source">Ch. 48</a><a href="Jubilees" data-aht="parshan">About Jubilees</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="Wisdom10-15" data-aht="source">Wisdom of Solomon</a><a href="Wisdom10-15" data-aht="source">10:15–18</a><a href="Wisdom of Solomon" data-aht="parshan">About Wisdom of Solomon</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="PhiloLifeOfMosesI-XXV" data-aht="source">Philo</a><a href="PhiloLifeOfMosesI-XXV" data-aht="source">On the Life of Moshe I:XXV</a><a href="Philo" data-aht="parshan">About Philo</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="SifreDevarim120" data-aht="source">Sifre Devarim</a><a href="SifreDevarim120" data-aht="source">Devarim 120</a><a href="Sifre Devarim" data-aht="parshan">About Sifre Devarim</a></multilink>, Geviha b. Pesisa in <multilink><a href="MegillatTaanit" data-aht="source">Scholion Megillat Taanit</a><a href="MegillatTaanit" data-aht="source">25 Sivan</a><a href="Megillat Taanit" data-aht="parshan">About Megillat Taanit</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="Sanhedrin91a" data-aht="source">Bavli Sanhedrin</a><a href="Sanhedrin91a" data-aht="source">Sanhedrin 91a</a><a href="Talmud Bavli" data-aht="parshan">About the Bavli</a></multilink> and <multilink><a href="BereshitRabbah61-7" data-aht="source">Bereshit Rabbah</a><a href="BereshitRabbah61-7" data-aht="source">61:7</a><a href="Bereshit Rabbah" data-aht="parshan">About Bereshit Rabbah</a></multilink>,<fn>There are some variations between these three sources. In Megillat Taanit and the Bavli, Geviha b. Pesisa responds on behalf of the Jews and he claims wages for a full 430 years of slavery in Egypt, as per the Biblical verse. In Bereshit Rabbah, though, his name is given as Geviah b. Kosem and he speaks of only 210 years in Egypt. For more on how many years were spent in Egypt, see <a href="Duration of the Egyptian Exile" data-aht="page">Duration of the Egyptian Exile</a>.</fn> <multilink><a href="IbnEzraShemotShort3-21" data-aht="source">Ibn Ezra Short Commentary</a><a href="IbnEzraShemotShort3-21" data-aht="source">Shemot 3:22</a><a href="R. Avraham ibn Ezra" data-aht="parshan">About Ibn Ezra</a></multilink>,<fn>In contrast to his position in his Long Commentary cited below.</fn> <multilink><a href="RadakBereshit15-14" data-aht="source">Radak</a><a href="RadakBereshit15-14" data-aht="source">Bereshit 15:14</a><a href="R. David Kimchi (Radak)" data-aht="parshan">About Radak</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="RalbagShemot3-22" data-aht="source">Ralbag</a><a href="RalbagShemot3-22" data-aht="source">Shemot 3:22</a><a href="RalbagShemot3Toelet15" data-aht="source">Shemot 3, Toelet 15</a><a href="R. Levi b. Gershom (Ralbag, Gersonides)" data-aht="parshan">About Ralbag</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="Ran11" data-aht="source">Ran</a><a href="Ran11" data-aht="source">Derashot HaRan 11</a><a href="R. Nissim Gerondi (Ran)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Nissim Gerondi</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="AbarbanelShemot3" data-aht="source">Abarbanel</a><a href="AbarbanelShemot3" data-aht="source">Shemot 3</a><a href="R. Yitzchak Abarbanel" data-aht="parshan">About R. Yitzchak Abarbanel</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="HarekhasimShemot11-2" data-aht="source">HaRekhasim Levik'ah</a><a href="HarekhasimShemot11-2" data-aht="source">Shemot 11:2</a><a href="R. Yehuda Leib Frankfurter (HaRekhasim Levikah)" data-aht="parshan">About HaRekhasim Levik'ah</a></multilink>,<fn>He adds that the Egyptians forfeited their legal claims on their possessions when they expelled the Israelites – see below.</fn> <multilink><a href="ShadalShemot3-22" data-aht="source">Shadal</a><a href="ShadalShemot3-22" data-aht="source">Shemot 3:22</a><a href="R. Shemuel David Luzzatto (Shadal)" data-aht="parshan">About Shadal</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="CassutoShemot3-22" data-aht="source">U. Cassuto</a><a href="CassutoShemot3-22" data-aht="source">Shemot 3:22</a><a href="Umberto Cassuto" data-aht="parshan">About U. Cassuto</a></multilink>, and many others<fn>This may also be the approach taken by <multilink><a href="Ezekiel" data-aht="source">Ezekiel the Tragedian</a><a href="Ezekiel" data-aht="source">Cited by Eusebius 9:29</a><a href="Ezekiel" data-aht="parshan">About Ezekiel</a></multilink>. However, it is difficult to determine whether he viewed the items as a loan or a gift. Cf. R. Saadia, Chizkuni and R. Bachya above who explain that the Egyptians themselves gave gifts willingly as remuneration / הענקה.</fn></mekorot> |
<point><b>Wages or הענקה</b> – Most of these sources view the borrowed items as a replacement for owed wages. However, the Sifre, HaRekhasim LeVik'ah, and Cassuto suggest that it was intended to guarantee the fulfillment of the practice of a slave owner giving parting gifts (הענקה) to their slaves upon their emancipation. Cassuto points out that the language of the laws of הענקה in Devarim, "וְכִי תְשַׁלְּחֶנּוּ חָפְשִׁי מֵעִמָּךְ לֹא תְשַׁלְּחֶנּוּ רֵיקָם" is parallel to the language used by Hashem here,"וְהָיָה כִּי תֵלֵכוּן לֹא תֵלְכוּ רֵיקָם"‎.<fn>Cassuto in a different work, ספר בראשית ומבנהו, (Jerusalem, 1990): 202-204 (a translation of the Italian original published in 1934), points to a further parallel in the story of Yaakov's acquiring of a significant portion of Laban's herds. There, too, Yaakov's actions seem morally questionable, and Cassuto explains that Hashem was simply ensuring that Yaakov would receive the parting gifts deserved by a departing servant (as Lavan himself had no intention of giving them). He notes that Yaakov's words "כִּי עַתָּה רֵיקָם שִׁלַּחְתָּנִי" (Bereshit 31:42) are similar to the verses in Shemot and Devarim, and that the root נצל appears in both Shemot ("וְנִצַּלְתֶּם אֶת מִצְרָיִם") and in Bereshit 31:9 ("וַיַּצֵּל אֱלֹהִים אֶת מִקְנֵה אֲבִיכֶם וַיִּתֶּן לִי").</fn></point> | <point><b>Wages or הענקה</b> – Most of these sources view the borrowed items as a replacement for owed wages. However, the Sifre, HaRekhasim LeVik'ah, and Cassuto suggest that it was intended to guarantee the fulfillment of the practice of a slave owner giving parting gifts (הענקה) to their slaves upon their emancipation. Cassuto points out that the language of the laws of הענקה in Devarim, "וְכִי תְשַׁלְּחֶנּוּ חָפְשִׁי מֵעִמָּךְ לֹא תְשַׁלְּחֶנּוּ רֵיקָם" is parallel to the language used by Hashem here,"וְהָיָה כִּי תֵלֵכוּן לֹא תֵלְכוּ רֵיקָם"‎.<fn>Cassuto in a different work, ספר בראשית ומבנהו, (Jerusalem, 1990): 202-204 (a translation of the Italian original published in 1934), points to a further parallel in the story of Yaakov's acquiring of a significant portion of Laban's herds. There, too, Yaakov's actions seem morally questionable, and Cassuto explains that Hashem was simply ensuring that Yaakov would receive the parting gifts deserved by a departing servant (as Lavan himself had no intention of giving them). He notes that Yaakov's words "כִּי עַתָּה רֵיקָם שִׁלַּחְתָּנִי" (Bereshit 31:42) are similar to the verses in Shemot and Devarim, and that the root נצל appears in both Shemot ("וְנִצַּלְתֶּם אֶת מִצְרָיִם") and in Bereshit 31:9 ("וַיַּצֵּל אֱלֹהִים אֶת מִקְנֵה אֲבִיכֶם וַיִּתֶּן לִי").</fn></point> | ||
<point><b>"מֵאֵת רֵעֵהוּ"</b> – As compensation was exacted from individual Egyptians, the Israelites must have been slaves to private Egyptians. See <a href="Slavery in Stages" data-aht="page">Slavery in Stages</a>.</point> | <point><b>"מֵאֵת רֵעֵהוּ"</b> – As compensation was exacted from individual Egyptians, the Israelites must have been slaves to private Egyptians. See <a href="Slavery in Stages" data-aht="page">Slavery in Stages</a>.</point> |
Version as of 21:20, 14 January 2015
Reparations and Despoiling Egypt
Exegetical Approaches
Overview
Commentators disagree as to whether the Egyptians intended to give the gold, silver, and clothing to the Israelites as gifts or only as loans. The dispute hinges on the meaning of the verb שאל in Biblical Hebrew, but is also impacted by the world outlooks of the various exegetes.
Viewing the articles as gifts is the simplest way of addressing the ethical issues involved in keeping the objects, but it raises the question of why the Egyptians would give presents to their former slaves. To account for this, Josephus and R. Hirsch look to the Egyptians' emotional state and their relationship to the Israelites after the plagues. They propose that some of the Egyptians viewed the nation with newly found respect and gave gifts as tokens of friendship, while others feared them as enemies and bribed them to hasten their departure. Rashbam also focuses on the immediate context of the departure, but he posits that the gifts were given in sponsorship of the Israelite worship, presumably to curry favor with their God. On the other hand, R. Saadia and Malbim look to the larger frame of the story, suggesting that the gifts served as reparations for the Israelite slave labor or were in exchange for the property left behind for the Egyptians.
The commentators who view the articles as a loan assume that they were lent to the slaves for use in their religious worship, but must deal both with the ethical issues involved in deceiving the Egyptians and with why Hashem would command this. Numerous exegetes justify the episode by looking to the larger context of the Israelite suffering, and seeing in the articles remuneration for centuries of slavery or compensation for expropriated property. Others, such as Philo and R. Yosef Bekhor Shor, focus instead on the more immediate bellicose behavior of the Egyptians, viewing the items either as spoils of war or as property forfeited by the Egyptians when they expelled the Israelites. In contrast, Ibn Ezra claims that no justification is needed, as Hashem can do as He wants with His possessions.
The various approaches have implications for understanding a number of related questions. How did the Egyptian masses relate to the Israelites, both during the enslavement and the Exodus itself? Was there only state slavery or were the Israelites also subjugated by individual Egyptians? Did each of Paroh and the Egyptians know that the Israelites were departing forever and not just for three days? Finally, did the borrowed or gifted articles have substantial value, are they connected to Hashem's promise at the Covenant of the Pieces of departing Egypt with "great wealth," and does this story impart any insights about the morality of accepting reparations?
In explaining the nature of the transfer of possessions, commentators offer two main approaches, each of which further subdivides:
Gifts
According to this approach, the root שאל in this story means to ask for a gift1 – see שאל for a discussion of the lexical issue. As the articles were outright gifts, there was no moral problem with the Israelites keeping them. This position subdivides regarding the nature of the gifts and what motivated the Egyptians to give them:
Friendship
The gifts were given as tokens of friendship.
Fear
The gifts were given out of fear and to hasten the Israelites' departure.
In addition to their first explanation, they suggest that other Egyptians gave merely so that the Israelites would leave quicker and the plagues would cease.19
Reparations
The articles were given as reparations for centuries of unpaid wages.
Property Swap
The items were given in exchange for Israelite property left behind in Egypt.
Chizkuni and Malbim propose that the Israelites were instructed to make a swap with their Egyptian neighbors, according to which the Egyptians would give the Israelites portable valuables in exchange for all of the property the Israelites were leaving behind in Egypt.
Religious Sponsorship
The gifts were given to sponsor the Israelites' religious worship.
Loans
According to this approach, the root שאל in this story means to borrow (i.e. ask for a loan), and the objects were originally given only as a loan for the Israelites' religious worship. See שאל for elaboration on the lexical issue. This approach subdivides in explaining the moral and legal justification for deceiving the Egyptians and ultimately keeping the objects:50
Remuneration
The items served as partial remuneration for hundreds of years of slave labor.
- Ibn Ezra Short Commentary suggests simply that otherwise the Egyptians would not have loaned the objects,58 and Shadal Shemot 3:2259 provides other instances in which Hashem ordered the use of a ruse.
- Ran, though, assumes that Hashem could have enabled the Israelites to take the Egyptians' possessions by force. He therefore proposes that the entire stratagem as well as the 3 day ruse itself60 was intended to induce the Egyptians to chase after the nation (in order to retrieve their loaned belongings)61 and drown in Yam Suf.62 According to Ran, Hashem worked his plan through natural means (דרך הטבע). For more, see A Three Day Journey.63
Property Compensation
The objects were partial compensation for all of the property the Israelites were forced to leave behind in Egypt.
Spoils of War
The items had the status of spoils of war.
- Philo and the Netziv view the Egyptian enslavement of the Israelites as creating a state of "as if they were at war", thus validating the Israelites' right to "carry off the treasures of the enemy, according to the laws of conquerors."72
- Seforno and Michaelis, in contrast, focuses on Yam Suf as an actual battle.73 At Yam Suf, the Egyptians schemed to despoil the Israelites,74 and are thus despoiled themselves measure for measure.
- Philo and the Netziv present a fundamental moral justification for borrowing the items with no intention of returning them.
- According to Seforno, the items originally needed to be returned, and it was only a subsequent legal loophole which obviated that obligation.
- Michaelis maintains that the Israelites initially intended to return the objects.
- According to Seforno, the Israelites themselves knew, but the Egyptians did not know and thus gave chase to retrieve their valuables.75
- The Netziv Shemot 7:5, 11:1–2, 12:35 posits that Paroh expelled the Israelites for good, but that the rest of the Egyptians were not aware of this.76 See Three Day Journey.
- According to Michaelis, it would seem that the Israelites themselves may not have known.
Forfeited Claims
The Egyptians actively forfeited their claims to the objects or their hostile actions prevented the Israelites from returning them.
No Need to Justify
No justification is needed for Hashem's command since He owns everything in the world and is entitled to take from one nation and give to another.