Parashat Miketz
PARSHA OVERVIEW
It is two years later. Pharaoh has a dream. He is unsatisfied with all attempts to interpret it. Pharaoh's wine chamberlain remembers that Yosef accurately interpreted his dream while in prison. Yosef is released from prison and brought before Pharaoh. He interprets that soon will begin seven years of abundance, followed by seven years of severe famine. He tells Pharaoh to appoint a wise person to store grain in preparation for the famine. Pharaoh appoints him as viceroy to oversee the project. Pharaoh gives Yosef an Egyptian name, Tsafnat Panayach, and selects Osnat, Yosef's ex-master's daughter, as Yosef's wife. Egypt becomes the granary of the world. Yosef has two sons, Menashe and Ephraim.
Yaakov sends his sons to Egypt to buy food. The brothers come before Yosef and bow to him. Yosef recognizes them but they do not recognize him. Mindful of his dreams, Yosef plays the part of an Egyptian overlord and acts harshly, accusing them of being spies. Yosef sells them food, but keeps Shimon hostage until they bring their brother Binyamin to him as proof of their honesty. Yosef commands his servants to replace the purchase-money in their sacks. On the return journey they discover the money, and their hearts sink. They return to Yaakov and retell everything. Yaakov refuses to let Binyamin go to Egypt, but when the famine grows unbearable he accedes. Yehuda guarantees Binyamin's safety and the brothers go to Egypt. Yosef welcomes the brothers lavishly as honored guests. When he sees Binyamin, he rushes from the room and weeps. Yosef instructs his servants to replace the money in the sacks and to put his goblet inside Binyamin's sack. When the goblet is discovered, Yosef demands Binyamin to be his slave as punishment. Yehuda interposes and offers himself instead, but Yosef refuses.
PARSHA INSIGHTS
A Cow-Eat-Cow World?
“And the emaciated and inferior cows ate up the first seven healthy cows.” (41:20)
Is altruism possible? It’s often said that true altruism is impossible, because all acts of generosity and kindness leave the doer with a feeling of self-satisfaction. And we are not just talking about people who are virtue-signaling or trying to prove that they are holier-than-thou. This view says it is impossible not to feel good about doing good, and true altruism cannot exist because we always get a kick-back.
The Talmud (Pesachim 68b) relates that Rav Sheishet reviewed all his learning every thirty days. He would then say to himself, “Rejoice my soul! For you I learned (the Written) Torah! For you I learned (the Oral) Torah!” This is seemingy difficult to understand, as the gemara goes on to question: Rabbi Elazar said, “Were it not for Torah, the Heavens and the Earth would not exist.” Torah is not merely a matter of self-satisfaction. It is the raison d'être for the universe. How, then, can Rabbe Elazar learn Torah just for himself?
The gemara gives an answer, “The root of action is self-interest.”
This answer begs the question, “Should not Rav Sheishet’s motivation have been to perpetuate the world, the creation? Is it possible that he was motivated by selfishness?”
Let’s answer this with another question.
The Shema says that we must love
“How does one serve
In rabbinic literature, Esav is associated with the yetzer hara — the negative drive — and Yaakov with the yetzer hatov – the positive drive.
Esav is the first-born.
True, the beginning of all motivation is selfishness, but the job of the positive drive is to reeducate the negative, selfish drive with a redefinition of self — a redefinition of “I.”
The Talmud in Succah uses a measurement called a ‘tefach sameach.’ A tefach is a handbreadth. A ‘tefach sameach’ is a slightly larger tefach, but literally means ‘a happy tefach.’ Why didn’t our Sages name this slightly-larger tefach “a large tefach” or “a maxi-tefach”? Why call it a ‘happy tefach?’ How can a measurement be happy?
Happiness is the perception that I have expanded, become enhanced. When we marry, our perception of “me” is not just me, but myself and my spouse. When we have children, our “I” encompasses our family, and then our grandchildren, and then,
Avraham Avinu saw himself as the entire creation. He expanded his concept of “I” to the maximum degree possible.
The job of the positive inclination is not to vanquish the negative drive but to reeducate it, to teach it who “I” really is. But if the negative drive refuses to readjust its worldview, it becomes a scrawny cow that devours the most beneficent and opulent altruism.