Parasha
VaYigash ‘to come closer’ is the eleventh Torah Portion in the yearly Torah
cycle, and it is read after Hanukkah. Vayigash means to come closer to the
light, of the Creators, There are
certain things we can do to help us move closer to the light, while others
things causes us to become more distant.
Sharing brings us closer, for instance, while doubt and anger push us away.
This reading gives us the power to move closer to the light of the Creators.
At the
end of Parasha MiKeitz, Benjamin was an apprehended as a thief who had been
caught red-handed with the viceroy’s cup. The eleven brothers stood haplessly
at the mercy of this supposingly hostile all powerful Egyptian, who determine
that Benjamin would have to remain in Egypt as a slave while his brother
could return to their father.
Judyah
step forward risking his life, while the other brother stood dumbfounded! His
speech was simple yet eloquent; controlled yet emotional; respectful yet firm. Judyah
petitioned without debasing himself; He could not protest the fairness of the
verdict, because the cup was found in Benjamin’s sack. Like a true leader he
offered up himself as a substitute, not realizing that he was speaking to the
very brother whose life he had save in 37:26 and settle to sell him as a slave.
In 167
BCE, Hebrew rebels led by Judyah Maccabees rose up against the Greek ruler,
Antiochus, who had desecrated the Temple in Jerusalem. In a series of
battles lasting some twenty-five years, the Maccabees defeated the much larger
and better trained Greek army.
They
reentered the Temple and purified it, after which a few night’s oil
miraculously kept the Temple Menorah lit for eight days, which would become the
basis for our contemporary celebration of Hanukkah, which was last week.
It is no coincident that the story of Vayigash is generally read on the Sabbath after
Chanukah, because there is a link between the Maccabees who defeated the Greek and
the consciousness espoused by the Torah portion of Vayigash.
Vayigash
begins with the words “Vayigash elav
Yehuda,” or Yehuda stood up to Joseph. This alluded to Judyah’s resistance
to Joseph’s demand that Benjamin, their youngest brother be a slave in Egypt. Judyah
protested that if Benjamin was forced to come to Egypt, Jacob, would die of grief.
What
this Torah Portion Vayigash made clear is that like so many Torah Portion it is
more than it appears to be, a story about events that took place thousand of
years ago. Below the surface, it is describing the process of redemption, which
can come only when enough righteous believers rise up, just as the Maccabees
did against the Greeks, and Judyah did to the Egyptians.
Vayigash
elav Yehuda speaks of our elevation through what the sages name azut dekedushah,
or holy audacity. Rising up with holy audacity eventually led to the
restoration of the Temple
and the creation of the miracle of Hanukkah; where a few thousand dedicated
Hebrews were able to defeat a more powerful Greek army. This victory had
nothing to do with military proficiency, the miracles occurred because the
Maccabees had Azut dekedusha and vayigash
elav Yehuda. They had the holy audacity to stand up to the Greek.
In the
previous Torah portion of Miketz, we saw the brothers brought low by Joseph and
by the challenging events they faced. This, unfortunately is our situation
today. We are constantly been beaten down by the Galut, the darkness of the
world.
This
Torah portion Vayigash shows us how to challenge that. The great gift of the Sabbath
of Vayigash is that it awakens within us the courage to stand up for ourselves
when we are being oppressed; from victim to victory.
Spiritual
courage and tenacity is a rare commodity in our world today. The bravery and
audacity require to raise our hearts in our spiritual work is the hidden
blessing of the Sabbath of Veyigash.
In
Vayiash, Judyah was able to bring an end to the pain of his brothers, not
because his spirit was so elevated, but because he had awakened the holy
bravery within himself. One of the gifts of the Sabbath of Vayigash is that it
gives us access to the consciousness of Judyah, to help us who lack the
spiritual ability to awaken within us the righteous indignation. The Maccabees
did it. Judyah did it. We can do it too.
Everything
we want to achieve in our spiritual life has already been done by someone
before us. We are not required to simply discover a new trail to the miracle of
past generation. We are simply finding the trail to the miraculous that the
spiritual giants of history have blazed for us.
How do
we achieve holy audacity? We do it by reminding ourselves that our action
reawaken what those before us accomplished, that we are only reconnecting to
what they did. Because they opened up this channel for us, we can create
miracles.