Did you ever play the game “pin the tail on the donkey?” The way it works is that an image of a donkey without a tail is placed on the wall, the player is blindfolded, given a paper image of the missing tail and must work out exactly where to put the tail on the donkey.
I was reminded of this old game when reading this week’s Torah portion, Bo. Here, we have the last three of the 10 plagues visited upon Egypt. Number nine was darkness. During this plague, many Jews lost their lives, though the Egyptians never knew.
Why? There were many Jews who, even after seeing many of God’s miracles performed exactly as Moses had predicted, refused to believe when Moses said their redemption was nigh and they would soon be free. As a result, Hashem felt that they didn’t deserve to be redeemed and that when the redemption came, they would not be there to experience it.
But God did not want the Egyptians to think that the Jews were suffering punishments as well. So these undeserving ones perished during the plague of darkness when the Egyptians could not see or even move, and thus they remained none the wiser.
To me, the obvious question is: How could these Jews not have grasped that there was now a new reality in Egypt? They saw the Egyptians suffering from blood, frogs, lice, attacks by wild animals, pestilence, boils and hail. Did they not see that Moses was a prophet of God and that things occurred exactly as he had warned Pharaoh? Wasn’t it blatantly obvious by then that God was sending his miracles to liberate the Israelites? How then could they continue to reject Moses’s promise of their imminent freedom? How could they have been so blind?
One insightful answer I found is that the Jews who refused to believe in Moses’s promise of freedom were under the rule of the upper class—the more enlightened Egyptians. Therefore, they were dealt with more compassionately than most of the Jewish slaves who were under the whip of cruel, sadistic torturers. And they tended to look down upon their Jewish brethren who suffered much more under their vicious taskmasters.
Hence, the Jewish servants of the enlightened Egyptians were loyal to their masters who they saw as good and kind compared to the heartless masters of their brethren. They comforted their overlords assuring them that the status quo would continue even after the plagues. “Have no fear,” they reassured them, “we are not part of that rabble. We are loyal to you and Egypt. We are not radicals or revolutionaries.”
Sadly, these Jewish slaves refused to see the light of a new dawn beginning to shine as the Israelites were about to become a proud, independent nation. They couldn’t acknowledge the new reality because of their own self-induced blindfolds. And, as we know, “there are none so blind as those who refuse to see.”
The sun could have been shining in their faces, but tragically, they walked in darkness unable to pin the tail on the donkey. Thus, not believing in the redemption, they did not merit to experience it and, indeed, it was during the plague of darkness that they died.
An ancient biblical tale? A “Once upon a time” fable? At this point, you may be wondering, what relevance does this story have today?
Since Oct. 7, 2023, we have witnessed the most vile and violent demonstrations in the United States, Europe, Australia and elsewhere by supporters of the Palestinians. And to our absolute shock, here were people openly stating that they support not just the Palestinians but Hamas itself! A terrorist organization whose members are proven perpetrators of mass murder, mutilation, rape and beheadings is being supported by people in free, democratic, Western countries!
And, in many of these ugly demonstrations, there were small groups of Jews who joined our brazen antagonists. “Jews for Palestine” and others who were determined to tell the world that not all Jews are terrible aggressors. Some Jews are nice, good people who support the poor Palestinians, etc.
Well, in my humble opinion, these Jews are the modern equivalent of those in Egypt who supported Pharaoh and not Moses. By marching with our sworn enemies, these “enlightened” Jews demonstrated nothing more than their own ignorance and insensitivity to the Jewish people, its history and destiny. Their callousness to the Jewish victims of those barbaric beasts who still hold hostage women and children in the terrible tunnels of Gaza is nothing less than outrageous.
May God forgive me for thinking that one day in the future they will be bitterly disappointed and disillusioned by their new allies and “friends” when these same liberal compatriots trample upon them, having exploited them as just another bunch of useful idiots.
Back in Russia, the early Jewish Communists gave their lives, their faith and often their families to the new “religious” ideology of communism. They, too, naively thought they were saving Russia and its people from czarist oppression. But was communism any better? Ironically, in the end, many of them were killed by Joseph Stalin and his cohorts.
I pray that those who walk in darkness may soon see the light of truth and justice and rejoin the just cause of their own people and faith.