So here it is:
I was asked to give this dvar Torah several weeks ago, and I started to write something long ago, look up sources and references etc, so as to make this dvar Torah something special, and more than my usual 'live in the Land, and do mitzvot' talk. And I was busily writing away about unity, and well, living in the Land and doing mitzvoth, when an event occurred this past week that made me change my whole direction. I threw away the other stuff, and decided instead to talk about 2 very special women, neither of whom is Jewish.
The reason I changed my topic for this dvar Torah is because this week Miep Gies passed away. For those who don't know, Miep was one of those who helped Anne Frank and her family hide from the Nazis for two and a half years. Born in
Yet, throughout the past 65 years, while she promoted peace and tolerance around the world, Miep refused to acknowledge that her deeds were heroic. "I'm not a hero", she would say, "I just did my human duty."
Speaking to a group of school children she said "Imagine young people would grow up with the feeling that you have to be a hero to do your human duty. I am afraid nobody would ever help other people, because who is a hero? I was not. I was just an ordinary secretary and housewife."
She claimed that she was not a hero because, as she said, "It's not as if I saved all of Dutch Jewry."
But she was wrong. We know that ordinary people can be heroes. That saving one life is as if you've saved a world. That being a hero doesn't mean being brave, or strong, or important. Being a hero means precisely doing your human duty, acting as you know G-d wants you to, as a being created as צלם אלוקים, despite your fears, your inadequacies, your unimportance. Miep Gies was a hero in all ways. Outliving Anne Frank by 65 years, Miep passed away this week one month short of her 101st birthday. May her memory be for a blessing.
The second woman I want to speak about lived a few years before Miep. Unnamed, we remember her only through her father, and as saving only one Jewish life. But what a life.
Known in the Torah only as Bat Pharaoh, the daughter of the King of Egypt, and featured in only about half a dozen pasukim, she defied all of
Bat Pharaoh openly and defiantly, in front of her maids and royal entourage, went against her father's orders. Remember, she didn't simply save a baby from drowning. She knew exactly who this baby was, and what he represented. She gave him to his mother for nursing, and took him back after several years. She could have forgotten about him, she could have changed her mind in those intervening years. But she did not. And not only did she raise the boy, but she raised him with morals, with a sense of doing his human duty. She never kept his roots from him. He visits his people, and slays the Egyptian in moral rage. He meets his brother Aaron in the desert and they already knew each other.
And yet, though she saves the most important Jew of that generation – in fact in our whole history – we're not told her name. We're not told what happens to her. She's mentioned that one time, in a few short sentences, and then she is no longer in the story. Bat Pharaoh didn't stop the slavery in
Chazal tell us that Bat Pharaoh left
Being a hero doesn't mean taking out a nest of Hamas terrorists. It doesn't mean feeding all the poor and ending all wars. It means living your life and doing your human duty despite your surroundings, despite your fears, despite your status. Miep Gies said she was a nobody, “only a secretary and housewife”; Bat Pharaoh was a princess in the house of the king. Both, doing their human duty, are heroes. And they teach us that we don't have to stop all the wars, feed all the hungry, we don't have to change the world all at once. Just one deed at a time.
In the words of Anne Frank, "How wonderful it is that nobody need wait a single moment before starting to improve the world".
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