These Are The Names--Where Is Yours?
By listing the
names of Jacob’s family members who went into Egypt the Torah reminds us of the
number of people who affect our lives and our potential to affect the lives of
numerous others.
By Rabbi Bradley Shavit Artson
The following article
is reprinted with permission from University of
Judaism.
In many ways, Sefer Sh'mot (the Book of Exodus) is the most
Jewish book of the Torah. It begins with the origins of the Jewish People as a
nation--newly liberated from Egyptian slavery by the God who created the
Universe, led to Mt. Sinai, where that same God established an eternal covenant
with the Jewish People.
The remainder of Sefer Sh'mot details the content of that
covenant in the many mitzvot
(commandments) that comprise Jewish practice and then authorizes the building
of a place of worship, the Mishkan
(Tabernacle) so that God can dwell amidst the Jews.
Sh'mot has it all--a wonderful story of God's saving love,
extensive mitzvot so Jews can reciprocate and concretize that love, and a form
of worship where both God and Jews can celebrate their relationship together.
Why, with all those great details, would Sefer Sh'mot start with a long list of
names?
The book begins "These
are the names of the sons of Israel who came to Egypt with Jacob, each coming
with his household..." The narrative proceeds to list each of those
children, even though the list already appeared throughout the Book of Genesis.
In fact, this is not the only place in the Tanakh (Hebrew Scripture) where a long
list of names appears. These boring lists are the first to go whenever Reader's
Digest or some other user-friendly group tries to streamline the Holy Book!
Why, if lists are so boring, would there be so many of them? And why start an
otherwise promising book with one? Jewish commentators provided several answers
to that problem.
Midrash Sh'mot Rabbah states that listing the names
"adds new praise for the 70 souls who are mentioned, indicating that all
of them were righteous." Here, listing names is a way of affirming the worth
of each individual listed. In a similar vein, that same Midrash equates the
importance of the People Israel with the stars in the heavens, noting that the
same Hebrew word "Sh'mot" (names) is used to apply to both.
Rashi summarizes these midrashim when he informs us that
"even though they were recorded during their lifetimes by their names, the
Torah returned and recorded them after their deaths to proclaim how beloved
they were." Lists only matter if those listed matter. All of us can remember
reading an author's lengthy acknowledgment that stretched over several pages,
or can recall enduring a retirement speech or a Bar Mitzvah speech during which
a long list of names consumed an endless amount of time. ("I'd like to
thank my Uncle Milt and Aunt Esther for flying all the way from Atlanta to be
here today.")
For the family involved, and for those whose names were
read, the time passed pleasantly and quickly. It was only for those who didn't
know the people being thanked that the list seemed excessively long. Certainly
when you are singled out for special praise you enjoy having your name listed
publicly. Look at all the plaques and dedications which festoon our synagogues,
community centers, and federation buildings. Those names are there because the
honorees and those who love them care about seeing people who perform good
deeds recognized by the community.
In precisely the same way, the long lists of the Torah
represent an assertion of human worth. We may not care about every name listed
there, but the author of the Torah does and wants us to learn to care as well.
Those names teach us that more people are involved in our lives than we care to
acknowledge, that we are more deeply imbedded in our society than we will ever
know.
Just think, for a moment, about all the people who have had
an effect on who you are today. Your parents, siblings, grandparents, and close
family are only a beginning. Include your preschool teachers and classmates.
Add the parents of your preschool friends. Then all the teachers and friends in
grade school. Don't leave out your favorite TV characters and books. That
inclusion means adding the names of many people you don't even know--the
authors of those books and the producers of the television shows.
Include those special teachers of your Religious School
days, culminating in your Bar/Bat Mitzvah teacher, your childhood rabbi and
cantor. In high school, the list broadens to include even more authors and
thinkers who influence your life, athletic coaches, drama instructors, art
teachers, people who give you summer and afternoon jobs, people who run your
summer camp or summer vacations. And of course, your first romantic awakenings.
A lengthy roster already, and this one only goes through high school!
You can see that a list of those people who contributed to
who you are today would be tremendously long. To other people, your list would
also be boring. But each of us cherishes such a private list of gratitude,
since that list represents the many facets of our own personality. By insisting
that we endure several such lists, the Torah opens us to recalling our own
dependency on others, and also spurs us to be such influences for those people
whose lives we can touch.
Whose lists are you on? How many lists could you be on that
you have simply not bothered with--getting involved with your synagogue,
donating blood with the Red Cross, becoming active in teaching religious
school, or working with a homeless shelter, a political campaign, or an art
festival? There are so many lists waiting to be assembled. All of them have a
space available for your name, and only you can place you name where it should
be.
We depend on each other to be able to blossom into the best
that we can be. Not only as human beings, but as Jews--a small minority
wherever we live--the deeds that we do for each other, the energy and insight
we give to building a sensitive, caring, and stimulating Jewish community, the
ways we demonstrate our love for our fellow Jews and for all humanity, such
deeds can bless innumerable lives in unpredictable ways. "These are the
names." Where is yours?
Rabbi Bradley Shavit
Artson is the Dean of the Ziegler School of Rabbinic Studies at the University
of Judaism in Los Angeles. He is the
author of The Bedside Torah: Wisdom, Dreams, & Visions (McGraw Hill). For a free subscription to his weekly email Torah commentary,
please send an email request to bartson@uj.edu.