Monday, February 28, 2022

Esther, Mordechai and Joseph

 

Our Sages drew attention to the parallels between the plot of Megillat Esther and the story of Joseph, with Midrash Breishit Rabba [87:6] commenting that "The travails of the descendants of Rachel (Joseph and Mordechai/Esther) are equal and their greatness is equal." The Midrash then points out six linguistic parallels between the description of the saga of Joseph in Genesis and the Megilla's description of the events of Purim. In point of fact, there are no fewer than twenty-seven parallels between the two Biblical stories! 

 It is axiomatic that the Bible chooses its words carefully and meaningfully, and it is clear that the abundance of similarities between the accounts of the adventures of the descendants of Rachel are intentional. The Men of the Great Assembly, who in Our Sages' tradition authored Megillat Esther (at least in its final version), chose wording similar to that of the Joseph saga in order to compare the two stories. The linguistic parallels express the parallel content.

The first general similarity is that in each of the stories, a lone Israelite (Joseph cannot be called a Jew), who hides his/her true identity rises to a position of great power and thereby is able to save the Children of Israel.

Beyond this general point, we may note additional similarities:

Y As Breishit Rabba mentioned, both heroes (for our purposes, Esther and Mordechai will be considered a single unit; some of the similarities between Joseph and the Purim story relate to Esther, others to Mordechai) are descendants of Rachel; Joseph her first-born son, Mordechai and Esther descendants of her younger son, Benjamin.

Y In each of the sagas, Israel faces annihilation: in the Joseph story, the threat is famine, and the Jews in the 127 provinces of Ahasuerus are threatened by Haman's decree to " destroy, kill, and cause to perish all the Jews." [Esther 3:13]

Y Each of the stories takes place primarily outside the Land of Israel.

Y In each of the sagas, Divine providence operates, as it were, in a natural manner, without overt intervention. This is especially notable in Megillat Esther, which is the only book of the Bible which does not mention God explicitly. In each case, when we reach the "happy ending," it becomes clear that the events were indeed guided by the hand of God.

It is clear to me that the Men of the Great Assembly, in writing, or at least editing, Megillat Esther in parallel to the Joseph story, intended to convey the basic message of the general rule of the history of the Nation of Israel. Professor Eliezer Berkovits writes that the history of Israel is on a totally different plane than that of the nations of the world. The history of the world is that of power history, while the history of Israel can be understood only as faith history. In a nutshell, the fate of Israel rests upon its faith.

Each of the stories conveys the centrality of Israel's unity. Joseph created a situation in which his brothers united in defense of Benjamin, and when they demonstrated that they would not abandon their youngest brother, the viceroy of Egypt revealed himself to his brothers. Haman's threat to Israel began with the nation's lack of unity, as the Aggagite himself announced "there is a single nation dispersed and disunited," [Esther 3:8] while the turning point comes with Israel's unity, as Esther instructed Mordechai "gather all the Jews…" [ibid.4:16] In each instance, it is Israel's unity which brings Divine salvation. Indeed, one of the most consistent lessons of Israel's history is that when the nation is disunited, it is at risk, while unity provides protection against the plots of our enemies.