Difference between revisions of "Where in Egypt Did the Israelites Live/2"

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<li><b>Arrived later</b> – According to Lekach Tov, in contrast, it was only later that Egyptians moved in, and they did so at the behest of Paroh.&#160; In the aftermath of Paroh's decree to kill male babies, he relocated Egyptians to live amidst the Israelite population to spy and enforce the law.<fn>This is how Lekach Tov understands the phrase, "וַיַּעַשׂ לָהֶם בָּתִּים".&#160; For details, see <a href="ויעש להם בתים" data-aht="page">ויעש להם בתים</a>.&#160; Cf. R. D"Z Hoffmann who also suggests that even if the Children of Isarel were mainly segregated from Egyptians, of necessity, there would have been some Egyptian administrators dispersed among them.</fn> Alternatively, it is also possible that at some point Egyptians on their own moved into Goshen.</li>
 
<li><b>Arrived later</b> – According to Lekach Tov, in contrast, it was only later that Egyptians moved in, and they did so at the behest of Paroh.&#160; In the aftermath of Paroh's decree to kill male babies, he relocated Egyptians to live amidst the Israelite population to spy and enforce the law.<fn>This is how Lekach Tov understands the phrase, "וַיַּעַשׂ לָהֶם בָּתִּים".&#160; For details, see <a href="ויעש להם בתים" data-aht="page">ויעש להם בתים</a>.&#160; Cf. R. D"Z Hoffmann who also suggests that even if the Children of Isarel were mainly segregated from Egyptians, of necessity, there would have been some Egyptian administrators dispersed among them.</fn> Alternatively, it is also possible that at some point Egyptians on their own moved into Goshen.</li>
 
</ul></point>
 
</ul></point>
<point><b>Borrowing from Egyptian neighbors</b> – Ibn Ezra, Ralbag and R. D"Z Hoffmann point to this as evidence that Egyptians must have lived near the Israelites.&#160; Ibn Ezra and Ibn Kaspi add that the term "וּמִגָּרַת בֵּיתָהּ" proves that in some cases the Egyptians had even moved into the Israelite homes.&#160; This is more likely in Goshen, where the Israelites had a stronghold (אחוזה)&#8206;<fn>See Bereshit 47:27, "וַיֵּשֶׁב יִשְׂרָאֵל בְּאֶרֶץ מִצְרַיִם בְּאֶרֶץ גֹּשֶׁן וַיֵּאָחֲזוּ בָהּ".</fn> and owned the houses,<fn>One might question why Egyptians would want to live surrounded by Israelites, but if Goshen was really the "best of the land" and the influx took place when the Israelites were still honored by Paroh (before the enslavement), the choice is understandable.</fn>&#160;than in Egypt proper where they likely could have moved in with other Egyptians or bought their own dwelling</point>
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<point><b>Borrowing from Egyptian neighbors</b> – Ibn Ezra, Ralbag and R. D"Z Hoffmann point to this verse as evidence that Egyptians must have lived near the Israelites.&#160; Ibn Ezra and Ibn Kaspi add that the term "וּמִגָּרַת בֵּיתָהּ" proves that in some cases the Egyptians had even moved into the Israelite homes.&#160; This is more likely in Goshen, where the Israelites had a stronghold (אחוזה)&#8206;<fn>See Bereshit 47:27, "וַיֵּשֶׁב יִשְׂרָאֵל בְּאֶרֶץ מִצְרַיִם בְּאֶרֶץ גֹּשֶׁן וַיֵּאָחֲזוּ בָהּ".</fn> and owned the houses,<fn>One might question why Egyptians would want to live surrounded by Israelites, but if Goshen was really the "best of the land" and the influx took place when the Israelites were still honored by Paroh (before the enslavement), the choice is understandable.</fn>&#160;than in Egypt proper where they likely could have moved in with other Egyptians or bought their own dwelling</point>
 
<point><b>Hiding Moshe</b> – Ibn Ezra suggests that it is likely that Yocheved could no longer keep Moshe in the house because their Egyptian neighbors in Goshen heard him cry.</point>
 
<point><b>Hiding Moshe</b> – Ibn Ezra suggests that it is likely that Yocheved could no longer keep Moshe in the house because their Egyptian neighbors in Goshen heard him cry.</point>
 
<point><b>Skipping over doorposts</b> – The need to mark the Israelite doors is further as evidence that Egyptian homes bordered on those of the Israelites.<fn>The verse alone, however, can not be used to prove that this integration was in Goshen rather than in Egypt at large.</fn>&#160; These sources could suggest that the preface, "וְעָבַרְתִּי בְאֶרֶץ מִצְרַיִם" does not limit the killing and passing over to Egypt proper, but is rather a general term for all the places where Hashem struck.</point>
 
<point><b>Skipping over doorposts</b> – The need to mark the Israelite doors is further as evidence that Egyptian homes bordered on those of the Israelites.<fn>The verse alone, however, can not be used to prove that this integration was in Goshen rather than in Egypt at large.</fn>&#160; These sources could suggest that the preface, "וְעָבַרְתִּי בְאֶרֶץ מִצְרַיִם" does not limit the killing and passing over to Egypt proper, but is rather a general term for all the places where Hashem struck.</point>
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<point><b>Religious Identity</b></point>
 
<point><b>Religious Identity</b></point>
 
<point><b>Hiding Moshe</b> – This position might assert, as do Rashbam and R"Y Behor Shor, that the Egyptians actively sent people to check the homes of women who had been pregnant.&#160; Yocheved did not fear that the baby's cries would be overheard (since there were no neighboring Egyptians), but these officials who were due to visit.<fn>According to this understanding, it is possible that when Yocheved hid Moshe in the reeds, she had not planned that anyone would find him, but rather that she would retrieve him after the danger had passed and the officials left.</fn></point>
 
<point><b>Hiding Moshe</b> – This position might assert, as do Rashbam and R"Y Behor Shor, that the Egyptians actively sent people to check the homes of women who had been pregnant.&#160; Yocheved did not fear that the baby's cries would be overheard (since there were no neighboring Egyptians), but these officials who were due to visit.<fn>According to this understanding, it is possible that when Yocheved hid Moshe in the reeds, she had not planned that anyone would find him, but rather that she would retrieve him after the danger had passed and the officials left.</fn></point>
<point><b>Borrowing from Egyptian neighbors</b></point>
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<point><b>"וְשָׁאֲלָה אִשָּׁה מִשְּׁכֶנְתָּהּ וּמִגָּרַת בֵּיתָהּ"</b> – This approach would have to suggest that the word "שכן" need not refer to a neighbor who lives close by, but can refer to people who one knows from the larger vicinity.&#160; Thus, it is equivalent to the term "רֵעֵהוּ" in the parallel verse in <a href="Shemot11-2" data-aht="source">Shemot 11:2</a>.</point>
 
</opinion>
 
</opinion>
 
</category>
 
</category>

Version as of 03:00, 1 January 2016

Where in Egypt Did the Israelites Live?

Exegetical Approaches

This topic has not yet undergone editorial review

Throughout Egypt

The Israelites were not confined to Goshen and settled throughout Egypt.

Original settlement in Goshen
  • According to R"E Ashkenazi, Malbim, and Netziv the Israelites originally settled in Goshen so as to prevent assimilation and preserve their national identity.  Since the region was isolated from the Egyptians, it was easy to avoid mingling with Egyptians and being influenced by their idolatrous ways.  However, this original plan did not last.
  • Alternatively, this position could suggest that the nation settled in Goshen for more practical reasons, either due to the economic benefits of Goshen's grazing land, or its proximity to Yosef.  With the passage of time, though, both of these advantages might have become irrelevant.  See Why Live in Goshen? for more.
"וַתִּמָּלֵא הָאָרֶץ אֹתָם"
  • Egyptian cities – Most of these sources understand the word "הָאָרֶץ" to refer to Egypt as a whole and maintain that this verse describes the spread of the Israelites out of Goshen into other Egyptian cities. 
  • Fields – Maasei Hashem, in contrast, does not think that the term refers to Egypt proper, but rather more literally to fields.2  The nation multiplied, and without sufficient housing, sprawled out to live in the fields surrounding Goshen and on the Nile.
Why move out? These sources offer several possible reasons for the people's moving out of Goshen:
  • Involuntary Move
    • Proliferation – Malbim and R"E Ashkenazi assume that, due to the nation's great proliferation, Goshen could no longer contain them.  According to R"E Asheknazi, however, they did not on their own buy houses amidst the Egyptians.  It was Paroh who built urban housing for them so that the midwives would arrive in time for the delivery of their babies, enabling his plan of genocide.3  For more, see ויעש להם בתים.
    • Slavery – RambanShemot 1:11About R. Moshe b. Nachman posits that the Israelites were not just slaves to Paroh, but also to individuals.  If so, it is possible that a percentage of Israelites were forced to live as house servants in Egypt proper.
  • Voluntary Move
    • Desire for integration – Netziv asserts, in contrast, that the move was voluntary and related to the Israelites' desire to mingle with Egyptian society.  They disregarded Yaakov's wish that they be "a nation that lives alone" and preferred to acculturate.
    • Goshen lost its advantages – Alternatively if the original settlement was motivated by the presence of Yosef nearby, when he died, the location was no longer particularly desirable. Similarly, with the passage of time it is possible that the Israelites broadened their occupations beyond shepherding, and no longer looked only for good grazing land.
Assimilation of Israelites – Netziv emphasizes how the move promoted the assimilation of the nation, leading them to worship idolatry like their neighbors and forego circumcision.  This, he claims, was one of the causes of the enslavement.4  For elaboration, see both Religious Identity in Egypt and Purposes of the Egyptian Bondage.
Borrowing from Egyptian neighbors – R. Ashkenazi points to this as evidence that the nation lived in Egypt proper.  He claims that the neighbors cannot refer to Egyptians living in Goshen since the region was too small to house a significant enough number of them5 so as to enable the enrichment of the Israelites.6  Moreover, the phrase "וַיְנַצְּלוּ אֶת מִצְרָיִם" suggests that the Israelites exploited those in Egypt itself.
Skipping over doorposts – R. Ashkenazi points out that the need to "skip" over Israelite homes only makes sense if they were spread out among the Egyptian dwellings.  Since Hashem says אֲנִי יוֹצֵא" בְּתוֹךְ מִצְרָיִם", it sounds like both groups were in Egypt proper and not Goshen.
"רַק בְּאֶרֶץ גֹּשֶׁן אֲשֶׁר שָׁם בְּנֵי יִשְׂרָאֵל" – This verse and the similar one in Shemot 8:18 would seem to suggest that Goshen, rather than Egypt at large, was where the Israelites lived.  This position could explain that the verses simply emphasize that it was an Israelite rather than Egyptian neighborhood,7 or that it was where the majority (but not all) of the Israelite nation lived.
Separation during the Plagues – The geographic distinction between Goshen and Egypt mentioned by the plagues of  ערוב  and ברד is difficult for this position as it suggests that one was home to the Egyptians and one to the Israelites.
  • Ethnic distinction – Philo asserts that in reality the plagues differentiated based on ethnicity rather than geography,8 and would likely explain that these verses are simply speaking in general terms according to the majority in each place and did not mean to specify the two locations.
  • Geographic split – Alternatively there really was only a geographic distinction in these plagues, and those Israelites living outside Goshen suffered along with the Egyptians. If it was this part of the nation that had assimilated, maybe they needed to learn the lessons of the plagues firsthand just like their neighbors.9
Slaves to individuals or the State

Only in Goshen

The Nation of Israel lived in the region of Goshen and never spread throughout the rest of the country.  This position subdivides regarding whether or not any Egyptians lived in Goshen with them:

Integrated with Egyptians

Egyptians lived alongside the Israelites in Goshen.

Original settlement in Goshen – According to Ralbag, the Israelites initially settled in Goshen both because of its rich grazing lands and because it was mostly uninhabited by Egyptians.  This allowed the nation to remain united and protected from both anti-Semitic acts and the detrimental influence of Egyptian culture and beliefs.12
"וַתִּמָּלֵא הָאָרֶץ אֹתָם" – These sources maintain that the land spoken of in this verse is Goshen rather than Egypt.  As they multiplied, the nation filled the entire region.
Egyptians in Goshen
  • Always a presence – According to R. D"Z Hoffmann, when Yosef settled the nation in Goshen, he had not emptied it of its original inhabitants and from the very beginning some Egyptians lived alongside the Israelites.13
  • Arrived later – According to Lekach Tov, in contrast, it was only later that Egyptians moved in, and they did so at the behest of Paroh.  In the aftermath of Paroh's decree to kill male babies, he relocated Egyptians to live amidst the Israelite population to spy and enforce the law.14 Alternatively, it is also possible that at some point Egyptians on their own moved into Goshen.
Borrowing from Egyptian neighbors – Ibn Ezra, Ralbag and R. D"Z Hoffmann point to this verse as evidence that Egyptians must have lived near the Israelites.  Ibn Ezra and Ibn Kaspi add that the term "וּמִגָּרַת בֵּיתָהּ" proves that in some cases the Egyptians had even moved into the Israelite homes.  This is more likely in Goshen, where the Israelites had a stronghold (אחוזה)‎15 and owned the houses,16 than in Egypt proper where they likely could have moved in with other Egyptians or bought their own dwelling
Hiding Moshe – Ibn Ezra suggests that it is likely that Yocheved could no longer keep Moshe in the house because their Egyptian neighbors in Goshen heard him cry.
Skipping over doorposts – The need to mark the Israelite doors is further as evidence that Egyptian homes bordered on those of the Israelites.17  These sources could suggest that the preface, "וְעָבַרְתִּי בְאֶרֶץ מִצְרַיִם" does not limit the killing and passing over to Egypt proper, but is rather a general term for all the places where Hashem struck.
"רַק בְּאֶרֶץ גֹּשֶׁן אֲשֶׁר שָׁם בְּנֵי יִשְׂרָאֵל" – This verse supports the position that Goshen was the abode of the Israelites.
Separation during the Plagues – Since Egyptians lived together with the Israelites in Goshen, the geographic distinction mentioned by the plagues of ערוב, ברד and חושך is somewhat difficult if one assumes that the Egyptians were the target of the plagues.. 
  • Ethnic component – Ralbag explains that by ערוב the verse adds also "וְשַׂמְתִּי פְדֻת בֵּין עַמִּי וּבֵין עַמֶּךָ"  to limit the salvation afforded by Goshen;18 despite Goshen as a whole being spared, Egyptians living there were nonetheless affected. Similarly, by the Plague of Dakrness, the verse states "וּלְכׇל בְּנֵי יִשְׂרָאֵל הָיָה אוֹר בְּמוֹשְׁבֹתָם", to teach that only in Israelite houses, not Goshen as a whole, was there light.19  It is possible, too, that even though Goshen was spared the Plague of Hail, the Egyptians living there were affected by it as well, not during the storm, but the following year via lack of crops.
  • Pure Geograhic – Ibn Kaspi suggests, in contrast, that in reality the plagues did differentiate only geographically, and any Israelite who happened to be on work detail in Egypt proper found himself endangered.20 Since Israelites did not live outside of Goshen, however, only a minority would have been harmed.21 This assumes that Hashem differentiated in a more natural manner, looking only at the majority, and allowed both collateral damage and salvation.
Slaves to the State or to individuals? According to this position, slavery in Egypt was only state sponsored and individual Egyptians did not take Hebrews as house servants. Thus, the Israelites lived in their own homes in Goshen and traveled to work for Paroh.

Segregated from Egyptians

Goshen was reserved for the Israelites and no Egyptians dwelt there.

Settlement in Goshen – This position could suggest that the original move to Goshen was motivated by a desire to live apart from the Egyptians so as to best prevent acculturation into Egyptian society.
Why no Egyptians? It is possible that while the Children of Israel had looked to create a sheltered shtetl,  eventually the region became a ghetto.  Egyptians, viewing shepherds as an "abomination" had no desire to move into the area, and likewise prohibited the Israelites from living with them.  When the Israelites were further degraded with the enslavement, the desire for segregation intensified.
"וַתִּמָּלֵא הָאָרֶץ אֹתָם" – R. Hoffmann asserts that this refers to filling the land of Goshen, not Egypt as a whole.
Religious Identity
Hiding Moshe – This position might assert, as do Rashbam and R"Y Behor Shor, that the Egyptians actively sent people to check the homes of women who had been pregnant.  Yocheved did not fear that the baby's cries would be overheard (since there were no neighboring Egyptians), but these officials who were due to visit.23
"וְשָׁאֲלָה אִשָּׁה מִשְּׁכֶנְתָּהּ וּמִגָּרַת בֵּיתָהּ" – This approach would have to suggest that the word "שכן" need not refer to a neighbor who lives close by, but can refer to people who one knows from the larger vicinity.  Thus, it is equivalent to the term "רֵעֵהוּ" in the parallel verse in Shemot 11:2.