TORAH PORTION Temple Beth El and the Michigan Psychoanalytic Institute present Jewish Rites of Passage: Religious, Historical and Psychological Perspectives Three evenings of dialogue on Circumcision, Bar/Bat Mitzvah and Wedding Moses Begins A New Era Of Jewish History RABBI RICHARD HERTZ Special to The Jewish News his week's sedra intro- duces Moses, the great- est Jewish leader of all. Exodus is a continuation of Genesis, where the lives of the patriarchs, Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, and the Joseph story have been con- cluded. Exodus now tells of the beginning of the history of the nation of Israel, how the ancient Israelites went from enslavement to freedom. Exodus begins the history of the Jewish people. When the new Pharaoh saw the Israelites multiplying and becoming "too many, and too mighty for us," he organized a plan for stirring up the peo- ple against them.. History's first pogrom! "Come, let us deal wisely with them lest they multiply and become too numerous! Otherwise in the event of war they may join against us. They may join un- to our enemies and fight against us. So, let's get them up out of the land." With the new Pharaoh dedicated to building pyramids and monuments in accordance with the religion of Egypt, which was to wor- ship the dead, he gave orders to enslave the Israelites and make them work with bricks without straw, to build monuments not to life but to death. Some people think it in- teresting that scripture should remember a people's past about slavery and defeat. Usually, a nation wants to remember its victories and triumphs. The perpetuation of a story so humiliating to national self-respect is as- tounding. Yet it was all for a purpose: to reveal the hand of God and describe how God brought forth the people of Israel out of Egyptian slavery. The first two chapters of Ex- odus give the background for the main story, the liberation of the Hebrew people from Egyptian bondage. The first chapter is the prologue that tells of the birth of the Hebrew people, the story of Moses and how he was rescued by Pharaoh's daughter. With the entrance of Moses in our story, he always re- mains human though sur- rounded by legends. He never takes on the manner of superman. Mr Rabbi Daniel Polish Temple Beth El Melvin Bornstein, M.D. Michigan Psychoanalytic Institute Wayne State University Sundays, January 6, 13 & 20 • 7:00 p.m. at Temple Beth El, 7400 Telegraph Rd., Birmingham Guests - $25 Temple or Institute Members - $18 For information, call Temple Beth El, 851 1100 - You're Needed 'Ibdcry. Because Someone Will Need Us Tomorrow. Our waiting list includes a toddler. When she becomes an adult, her parents want to know her future is secure, no matter what happens to them. Help JARC last as long as it's needed with your lasting endowment gift. That little girl, and the 280 others on our list, will thank you all their lives. • A Jewish Association for Residential Care for persons with developmental disabilities 28366 Franklin Road Southfield, MI 48034 (313) 352-5272 Advertising in The Jewish News Gets Results Place Your Ad Today. Call 354-6060 38 FRIDAY, JANUARY 4, 1991 Richard Hertz is rabbi emeritus of Temple Beth El. The Torah treats the childhood of Moses briefly, ex- cept to say that he was brought up in the house of Pharaoh as an Egyptian prince. As such, he must have been exposed to the grandeur of the Egyptian palace and the lifestyle of Pharaoh's court. Somehow, Moses never forgot where he came from. He doubtlessly knew of his humble origins, yet he never forgot his people Israel. As a young man, he saw Egyptians fighting with a Hebrew whom he felt to be one of his brothers. Moses struck down the Egyptian and hid him in the sand. Pharaoh heard about the matter and tried to apprehend Moses to punish him. His position at court no longer tenable, Moses fled. Moses had rushed not only to the defense of his own Shemot: Exodus 1:1-6:1, Isaiah 27:6-28:13, 29:22-23. kinsman; he also came to the rescue of people from other tribes. Wandering on the plains of Midian, he heard the cry of seven daughters of the priest of Midian who were at- . tacked by desert poachers. He did not know the girls nor the hostile shepherds. He only saw the rights of weak women being trampled upon. Moses rose up and helped the young girls, driving off the intruders. Though he himself was a stranger at that time, he went out of his way to take the part of the persecuted. He had rescued one Hebrew from the whip of the Egyptian and the Mi- dianite women from the pirates attacking their wells. By this time, Moses already has exhibited a character of fighting for justice and for the oppressed. He has relinquish- ed his place at Pharaoh's court, with all its wealth, to join his people and their fight for freedom and justice. Moses stayed in the desert of Midian to tend the flocks of his father-in-law, Jethro, whose daughter he had mar- ried. He must have learned many lessons while tending his flocks in the desert. The Midrash tells how a kid had escaped and reached a shady place where a pool of water ran. Moses ran after the kid and, seeing it drink, said, "I did not know you ran away because you were thirsty. You