- Torah Portion and Tanach
- Shmot
There are certainly parallelisms to this condition regarding the Holocaust and the current atmosphere of anti-Semitism that pervades democratic Europe. The general population of Egypt suffered greatly from the plagues that the Lord visited upon them because of the intransigence of Pharaoh and his refusal to free the Jews. The commentators to the Chumash all raise this question of collective punishment, which on the surface may appear to be unfair and extreme. But the core of the matter and the answer to this question lies in the previous mindset of the Egyptian population that long before this Pharaoh arose already abhorred the Jewish people and resented its presence in their midst. There is an idiom in Jewish life that states: "There is no king without a people." The Holocaust, though planned and perpetrated by the Nazi hierarchy, could nevertheless never have reached the proportions that it did without the active and passive participation of the native populations of Europe. Of course, the Jewish slavery in Egypt was predicted and preordained by God and revealed to Abraham centuries before it occurred. Nevertheless, as Jewish thought continually emphasizes to us, this in no way absolves the perpetrators of evil from receiving just punishment for their behavior. Only time will tell what the bill for the Holocaust will amount to. But I have no doubt that this bill like all matters of history eventually will be paid and redressed.