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    ACHAREI MOT: DON’T BE SILENT ABOUT THE ANTISEMITISM THE HOLOCAUST BEGAN WITH PROPAGANDA

    In Germany they
    came first for the
    Communists, and I
    didn’t speak up
    because I wasn’t a
    Communist. Then
    they came for the
    Jews, and I didn’t
    speak up because I wasn’t a Jew. Then they
    came for the trade unionists, and I didn’t
    speak up because I wasn’t a trade unionist.
    Then they came for the Catholics, and I didn’t
    speak up because I was a Protestant. Then
    they came for me, and by that time, no one
    was left to speak up.—Martin Niemoller
    As the Jewish world still grieves from the
    heinous mini Holocaust of October 7th, 2023,
    all the soldiers slain in Gaza, and the innocent
    souls that were in Hamas captivity; as we are
    alarmed and disgusted by the horrific display
    of antisemitism in the elite US universities
    and the world over; as many survivors and
    their families commemorated Yom Hashoah,
    Holocaust Remembrance Day, to remember
    the 6,000,000 who perished in the Holocaust;
    as Jews in Israel continue to be threatened by
    nations determined to destroy it; as abuse and
    injustice often take root in our own
    communities due to the silence of good
    people—let us reflect on a stirring Midrash on

    this week’s parsha.
    The Fateful Conversation
    This week’s parsha, Acharei Mos, relates (for
    the second time, after the first time in Shmini)
    the tragic episode of the premature death of
    Aaron’s two sons, Nadav and Avihu.
    On the day the Mishkan in the desert was
    erected and Aaron’s four sons were
    inaugurated as kohanim, the two oldest
    children entered the Mishkan and did not
    come out alive.
    The Talmud relates the inside story to explain
    the cause of their death:
    “It once happened that Moshe and Aaron
    were walking along the road, Nadav and
    Avihu (Aaron’s two sons) were walking
    behind them, and all Israel was walking
    behind them. Said Nadav to Avihu, ‘When
    will these two old men die, and you and I will
    lead the generation?’ Thereupon, G-d said to
    them: ‘We shall see who will bury whom!’”
    A Cryptic Midrash
    Now, this story of Aaron’s two sons
    engendered a cryptic Midrash. It reads like
    this:
    “When Iyov heard about the death of the two
    sons of Aaron, he was seized by tremendous
    fear. This event compelled Iyov’s best friend,
    Elihu, to state: “Because of this, my heart

    trembles and jumps from its place.”
    This Midrash seems strange. Why did the
    Nadav-Avihu episode trigger profound fear in
    the heart of Iyov’s friend?

    Rabbi Chaim Yosef David Azulaei, the 18th-
    century Italian sage and mystic known in

    short as the Chida, presents the basis of the
    following interpretation of this obscure
    Midrash. He quotes it “in the name of the
    Sages of Germany.”
    Three Advisors
    The Talmud relates that Iyov served on the
    team of advisors to Pharaoh, the emperor of
    Egypt. The other members of the team were
    Bil’am and Yitro. When the Jewish population
    in Egypt began to increase significantly,
    developing from a small family of seventy
    members into a large nation, Pharaoh, struck
    by the fear that this refugee group would
    ultimately pose a threat to his empire,
    consulted his three advisors on how to deal
    with the “Jewish problem.”
    Bil’am chose a tyrannical approach. He
    suggested that Pharaoh drown all Jewish baby
    boys and force every adult Jewish male into
    slave labor.
    Iyov remained silent. He neither condemned
    the Jews to exertion and death nor defended
    their rights to life and liberty.
    Yitro was the only one among the three who
    objected to Bil’am’s plan of oppression. To
    escape the wrath of Pharaoh, who
    enthusiastically embraced Bil’am’s “final
    solution,” Yitro fled from Egypt to Midian,
    where he lived for the remainder of his
    years.
    The Talmud relates the consequences of
    the advisors’ respective behaviors. Bil’am
    was slain many decades later during a
    Jewish military campaign in the Middle
    East. Iyov was afflicted by various
    maladies and personal tragedy, while Yitro,
    the exclusive voice of morality in the
    Egyptian palace, merited not only Moshe
    as a son-in-law but also descendants who
    served as members of the Jewish Supreme
    Court (Sanhedrin) in Yerushalayim, loyally
    representing the Jewish principles of
    justice and morality.
    Iyov’s Self-Righteousness
    What went through Iyov’s mind after this
    incident? Did Iyov consider himself
    morally inferior to his colleague Yitro who,
    in an act of enormous courage, stood up to
    a superpower king and protested his
    program of genocide? Did Iyov return
    home that evening and say to his wife, “I
    discovered today that I am a spineless and
    cowardly politician who will sell his soul
    to the devil just to retain his position in the
    government.”
    Iyov, like so many of us in similar
    situations, did not entertain that thought
    even for a moment. On the contrary, Iyov
    considered himself the pragmatist and
    Yitro the idiot.
    “What did Yitro gain from speaking the

    full truth?” Iyov thought to himself. “He lost
    his position and was forced to flee. He acted
    as a fanatical zealot. By employing my savvy
    diplomatic skills and remaining silent, I will
    continue to serve as Pharaoh’s senior advisor;
    I will assist the Jewish people, subtly and
    unobtrusively, from within the governmental
    ranks of power.” For decades, Iyov walked
    the corridors of the Egyptian palace, saturated
    with a feeling of self-righteousness and
    contentment.
    Till the day he heard of the death of the sons
    of Aaron.
    Iyov’s Shattering Discovery
    When Iyov inquired as to what might have
    caused the premature deaths of these two
    esteemed men, he was answered with the
    famous Talmudic episode quoted at the
    beginning of this essay:
    “It once happened that Moshe and Aaron
    were walking along the road, Nadav and
    Avihu (Aaron’s two sons) were walking
    behind them, and all Israel were walking
    behind them. Said Nadav to Avihu, ‘When
    will these two old men die, and you and I will
    lead the generation?’ Thereupon, G-d said to
    them: ‘We shall see who will bury whom!’”
    Iyov was astounded. “I can fully understand,”
    Iyov said, “why Nadav was punished. It was
    he who uttered these disgusting words. But
    why was his brother, Avihu, punished? He did
    not say anything.”
    “Avihu?” came the reply. “He was punished
    because he remained silent.”
    Because when a crime is happening in front
    of your eyes, your silence is deafening.
    No Time for Silence
    In the face of despicable anti-Semitism,
    coming from so many academics and their
    foolish students —all good people who
    remain silent, become accomplices to the
    crime.
    Ideas have power. It was the propaganda of
    the Nazi party nine decades ago which
    allowed millions of Germans to become
    active murders of millions. When Jew hatred
    goes unchallenged and unprotested, the
    consequences can be horrific.
    Throughout history, Haile Selassie said, it has
    been the inaction of those who could have
    acted, the indifference of those who should
    have known better, and the silence of the
    voice of justice when it mattered most that
    have made it possible for evil to triumph.