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    PARASHAT SHEMOT: EVERYONE CAN SHINE BRIGHTLY!

    Parashat Shemot begins
    by listing the names of
    Yaakov Avinu’s sons who
    had come to live in Egypt.
    At first glance, this list is
    entirely unnecessary.
    We just read several parashiyot about the
    story of Yaakov’s family, and we are well
    aware of who his sons were. Why is this
    information repeated? Rashi explains that
    when Hashem brings out the stars each
    night, and when He brings them away from
    the sky in the morning, He counts them,
    calling each one by name. Similarly, He
    repeatedly lists the names of the Jewish
    People by name, showing how much He
    loves them – that they are as great as the
    stars. What does this mean? In what way
    are we compared to the stars? And how
    does this show Hashem’s love for us?
    There are an enormous number of stars, but
    each one is significant and plays a vital role
    in the galaxy. And, although a star seems
    tiny, it is actually gigantic, and critically
    important. The Torah wants us to know
    that we are each a star. Every single one of
    us plays a vital role, and each one of us can
    shine brightly, even if other people see us

    – and we might sometimes see ourselves –
    as small and insignificant. No one is
    insignificant. We are all precious and
    beloved to Hashem, we all have an
    important place in the world, and we all
    have the ability to shine brightly. Later in
    the parashah, we read that Pharaoh rejected
    Moshe’s demand that he release Beneh
    Yisrael. He shouted, Hein Rabim Atah Am
    Haeretz, V’Hashivosum Osum M’sivlosum
    – that there were many slaves with work to
    do, and Moshe was disrupting their labor
    by giving them false hopes of freedom
    (5:5). The Ben Ish Hai notes that Pharaoh
    referred to Beneh Yisrael here as Am
    Ha’aretz – “people of the land.” This
    expression, the Ben Ish Hai explains,
    means that Pharaoh saw Beneh Yisrael as
    capable of nothing more than being Am
    Ha’aretz, people who worked the land. In
    his eyes, this is who they were, and this is
    all they could ever be. He insisted that
    there was no point for them to aspire to
    anything more because this is who they
    were, slaves who worked. Moshe’s
    message was – and still is, to this very day
    that we are not destined to remain Am
    Ha’aretz. We are capable of much more,

    and we are destined to much
    more. We are like stars.
    People might see us as
    small, but we are large,
    important, talented, and
    capable of shining brightly
    like the sun. I once had the
    opportunity to visit the
    Blind Museum in Holon,
    Israel. A visit to this
    museum is a remarkable
    experience, being led by
    blind tour guides through a
    complex in the pitch black,
    getting a sense of what life
    is like as a blind person. After the tour, my
    daughter, who was with me, asked me if it
    is harder to be blind from birth, or to have
    become blind during one’s life. I decided
    to pose this question to our guide. “I don’t
    know,” the guide said, “because I was born
    blind. But I do know that I would never
    want to be able to see.” I couldn’t believe
    my ears. “You would not want to have the
    ability to see?!” I asked in astonishment.
    “No,” the guide confirmed. “I have been
    blind all my life. This is all I know. I would
    be scared to see.” I came away from this

    brief conversation with a crucial insight
    into human nature. People tend to fall into
    their comfort zones, accepting their
    condition, and are afraid to change. Their
    lives can be so much better. They can shine
    so much brighter. They can enjoy life so
    much more, and accomplish so much
    more. But they’re scared to leave the place
    where they are. They’re afraid of change,
    and so they stay stuck in place. Let’s all
    have the courage to shine as brightly as we
    can, to realize our full potential, and to stop
    being afraid. We can be better. We can be a
    star. So let’s do it.