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    PARSHAS BESHALACH: SWEET’ CAN EMERGE FROM ‘BITTER

    This week’s parsha
    contains the famous
    “Song of the Sea”
    (Az Yashir). The
    Medrash says that
    Moshe told G-d “I
    know that I sinned
    against You with my
    use of the word ‘Az’ [then], as recorded in
    the Torah: ‘From the time (mei’Az) I came
    before Pharoah, you have done evil to this
    nation’ [Shemos 5:23]. Therefore I will
    praise You with the word ‘Az,’ as it is written
    ‘Then (Az) Moshe sang’ [Shemos 15:1].”
    This Medrash requires an explanation.
    The Torah section immediately following
    the description of the Splitting of the Sea —
    literally in the dawning days of the Jewish
    nation — is the incident when Israel traveled
    for three days and could not find water. They
    came to a place called Marah. However, they
    were unable to drink the water there because
    it was bitter. They complained against
    Moshe, asking what they could drink. Moshe
    prayed to G-d. G-d showed Moshe a tree.
    Moshe threw the tree into the water and the
    water became sweetened. The Jews were

    then able to drink the water.
    The Medrash adds that the bark of the tree
    that G-d showed Moshe was itself extremely
    bitter. The bitter water was sweetened
    through the addition of a bitter tree.
    G-d is not in the custom of magnifying
    miracles. Normal ‘procedure’ would be to
    sweeten the water with something sweet. So
    we see that there must be a lesson here. In
    addition, since it is taught immediately after
    the Splitting of the Sea, during the infancy of
    the nation, this lesson must be of particular
    importance.
    The lesson of these incidents is (to quote the
    words of the prophet) “From the bitter, sweet
    emerges” [Shoftim 14:14]. Sometimes,
    the sweetest outcome can emerge from the
    bitterest pain. G-d is trying to teach His
    nation a lesson. This is a difficult lesson that
    the Jewish nation, and every nation, must
    learn. And just as this is a lesson for nations,
    it is a lesson for us as individuals as well.
    Situations that sometimes appear to us as
    terribly bitter may eventually produce the
    sweetest of results. While a person is in the
    process of enduring and suffering through
    bitterness, he cannot imagine what positive

    outcome can come out of his situation.
    However, bitter wood in bitter water can
    eventually produce sweetness. This is a
    lesson that we needed to learn early on and
    that we have seen, in retrospect, over and
    over again. A situation that seemed like a
    terrible pill to swallow turned out to be the
    Salvation of G-d (Yeshuas HaShem).
    This is also the key to understanding the
    above-quoted Medrash regarding Moshe’s
    use of the word ‘Az’. Moshe was not merely
    making a play on words. Moshe was not
    merely saying “Since I used the word ‘Az’ in
    a bad way, now I will use the same word ‘Az’
    in a good way.”
    The first ‘Az’ was, in effect, a question: What
    positive outcome can emerge from all the
    pain and suffering that the Jews are enduring?
    “From the moment (mei’Az) I came before
    Pharoah, the situation of this nation has
    worsened. How can this be positive? Where
    is the sweetness here?”
    The answer is that this suffering and torture,
    in fact, eventually benefited the Jewish
    nation. Rather than living in Egypt for 400
    years, as G-d told Avraham, they only had
    to stay there for 210 years. As our Sages

    teach us, the length of the Egyptian exile
    was diminished because of the severity of
    the servitude. This ultimately saved them,
    because had they stayed in Egypt any longer,
    they would not have been able to leave at all
    — they would have spiritually sunk too far
    into the depths.
    This, then, is the explanation of what Moshe
    was saying in the above quoted Medrash.
    “With this very word ‘Az’, which represented
    a situation where I saw no possible silver
    lining — namely the bitterness of Egyptian
    servitude — I will now utter a Song of Praise
    (with this very same word ‘Az’). Now I
    can look back and see in retrospect that the
    suffering was worth it. I can see that from
    the bitterest portion can come the sweetest
    of destinies. Mei’Az (from the bitter) yatza
    masok (emerged sweetness).”