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    PARASHAT VAERA: A PARENTS JOB

    Parashat Vaera begins in
    the middle of a difficult
    exchange between
    Hashem and Moshe
    Rabbenu. To briefly
    review, Hashem had
    sent Moshe to come
    before Pharaoh and demand that he release
    Beneh Yisrael. Moshe did as he was told, and
    Pharaoh not only refused, but increased the
    people’s workload, significantly intensifying
    their suffering.
    Moshe then turned to Hashem and asked,
    “Why have You done evil to Your people?
    Why did you send me?”
    Hashem reassured Moshe that He would force
    Pharaoh to let Beneh Yisrael go.
    In the beginning of Parashat Vaera, Hashem
    continues His response to Moshe, telling him,
    “I am Hashem; and I appeared to Avraham,
    Yitzhak and Yaakov with [the Name] ‘Kel
    Sha-ddai’.” The commentators explain this
    to mean that Hashem made promises to the
    Avot, but did not show them the fulfillment
    of these promises. He promised to produce
    from them a large nation that would inhabit
    the Land of Israel, but they never lived to see
    these promises realized. Nevertheless, they
    did not complain or protest, as Moshe did

    when G-d’s promise to free Beneh Yisrael was
    not immediately fulfilled.
    It goes without saying that Moshe had perfect
    faith in Hashem. At no point did he doubt
    that Hashem would fulfill His promise to
    free Beneh Yisrael. Rather, as Seforno (5:22)
    explains, Moshe was asking why he was
    part of this. “Why did you send me?” He of
    course realized that Hashem had his reasons
    for making Beneh Yisrael’s conditions worse.
    But he felt like a failure. He did what Hashem
    sent him to do, and he failed. His efforts had
    the precise opposite effect of what he was
    supposed to achieve. This is what troubled
    him – that his work and efforts were futile.
    Hashem responded by pointing to the example
    of Avraham, Yitzhak and Yaakov. They never
    felt like failures, even though they never saw
    the realization of their mission. Each time they
    heard Hashem’s promise of a great nation,
    they encountered hardships. Avraham had no
    children, and had to leave the land because
    of a famine. Yitzhak had to struggle with the
    Pelishtim who chased him away and then stole
    his wells. Yaakov received Hashem’s promise,
    and then had to deal with Lavan and Esav.
    Later, his daughter was abducted, and his sons
    sold their brother as a slave. But the Avot did
    not feel like failures. They recognized their
    greatness and importance, and the great value

    of their efforts, and trusted that Hashem will
    eventually fulfill His promises.
    As mentioned, Parashat Vaera begins with
    Hashem telling Moshe, “I appeared to
    Avraham, Yitzchak and Yaakov…” Rashi
    makes a very unusual remark on this verse.
    Commenting on the word “Vaera” (“I
    appeared”), Rashi writes, “El Ha’avot” – “to
    the patriarchs.” For some reason, Rashi found
    it necessary to clarify that Avraham, Yitzhak
    and Yaakov were the “Avot,” our nation’s
    founding fathers. Aren’t we already well
    aware of this? Do we not already know who
    Avraham, Yitzhak and Yaakov were?
    The answer might be that Rashi here is
    teaching us what a parent’s role is, what
    makes someone into an “Av,” a father or
    mother. A parent’s primary job is to model
    for his or her children this quality mentioned
    here in this pasuk – the quality of resilience in
    times of failure and disappointment. Avraham,
    Yitzhak and Yaakov are our “fathers” because
    they showed us how to remain confident,
    strong and determined even when things do
    not work out, even when the chips are down,
    even when our efforts do not succeed. They
    continued believing in Hashem, and – no less
    importantly – believing in themselves, even in
    times of crisis and hardship. At no point did
    they see themselves as failures, as hopeless,

    or as unimportant, even when their efforts did
    not yield the results they wanted. And this is
    what makes them our “fathers.”

    Our generation suffers from a lack of self-
    confidence and self-esteem. Youngsters today

    see other people’s success and achievements
    and feel unimportant and insignificant, like
    failures. The most critical job that parents
    have, especially in our generation, is to instill
    within their children a keen sense of their
    importance and worth, to assure them of
    their potential for greatness, to make them
    realize how much they can accomplish, and
    how much they matter. Children should
    never see themselves as failures, regardless
    of their grades, social standing, or any other
    factor. They need to know that they have
    the potential for greatness, that they have so
    much to contribute to the world, even if they
    have met with disappointment and failure. If
    we can do this, then we are doing our job as
    parents, following the example of our saintly
    Avot.