Slavery and the Second
Exodus
- By; Israel Bonan
I am
first to freely admit, that I still consider myself one, a slave that
is; in my 'Personal Exodus
Story', I wrote, while commenting on the perniciousness of global
anti-Semitism, that: " ... may be I am still thinking as one of
Pharaoh's Jewish slaves of yore that wandered in the desert for 40
years, and never entered the promised land, as free people. "
We all
know the story of the First Exodus, the first generation of slaves was
not considered worthy to enter the Promised Land. Thank G_d the judgment
for us, the slaves of the Second Exodus, was less harsh.
Those of
us, Jews who fled twentieth century Egypt, found ourselves in open and
benevolent countries that accorded us full freedom to pursue our life
choices and livelihoods as free countrymen and women vested with all the
rights and opportunities an open society confers on her citizens. So
does that mean, we think free, we act free, we react as free people do
...? I will be lying if I answered yes to these probing questions. It
takes more than citizenship papers, and an oath of allegiance to our new
country to make us truly free. A lot more.
There is
a big difference between being born to freedom, to proactively having
freed oneself, or to have just found a safe haven in the land of the
free. Each freedom and its basis will shade and confer a different
texture to the human experience. It is with this hard to grasp nuance
that I address myself to my Jewish community hailing originally from
Egypt.
Like any
people thrust into the turmoil of an Exodus; our community has lived
through the agonies of being unwillingly wrenched out from their
familiar surroundings, penniless, only to start over anew in different
worlds and different cultures. The analogy resembles only too well what
happened in Egypt some thousands of years ago, we went through the same
cycle of Joseph to Moses as depicted historically in the Torah.
As a
community in Egypt, many of us for centuries, we were always at best
guests, never on equal footing with others in the eyes of the rulers;
yet we served our country in good faith, and against all odds, we rose
to unexpected heights only to find ourselves deprived of our livelihood,
at times incarcerated, and even killed.
Our
modern day version of slavery , in our pre-Second Exodus era, is over,
and finally emancipated anew we are in the land of the free; be it in
Israel, Europe, the Americas or Australia.
And yet I
want to draw our attention only to this notion of being assimilated to
freedom after being enslaved. The departure in context from the born
free or from the ones who fought for their freedoms is a very simple but
a telling one; it is based on our ultimate set of priorities, as
refugees. While we did not have to wander for too long in the desert, we
still had to establish ourselves in the new worlds we encountered; our
basic priorities were survival, of self, of family and community. We
managed to reconstitute our lives in our new surrounding but we have
fallen short in nurturing our appetite for what freedom really meant
beyond our own survival. Because it is not only about a comfortable
life, for our families and community, we needed to go further in our
growth as a community; we needed a more politically active participation
in the larger community, and we have not risen to that occasion.
It is not
surprising that until only recently, in Israel for instance, there was
not a single Jew hailing from Egypt that participated in the Israeli
political arena; and neither do we advocate for our causes in the US or
elsewhere either.
I am not
suggesting that we should drop our participation in, and neglect our own
careers or our pursuit of business affairs, or to stop supporting our
own families and communal needs. What I am asking for, is simply not to
do all of the above, to the exclusion of other pursuits that will have a
more dramatic effect on the freedoms we now enjoy. As a community that
has its own just historical rights and grievances, and that has the
means to strive for justice, we did and continue to do none of the
above. We chose to be a non-visible, rich and prosperous, but
nonetheless community of slaves.
We need
to be more vocal about our history, our culture and our rights, past and
present. In short we need to assert our uniqueness and advocate for our
causes openly and visibly. While we have the power and leverage to do
it, we still lack the will to do it. Finally we need to overcome the
residual fears instilled in us by earlier mistreatments by Egypt's
governments, and break the emotional shackles that still keep us
wandering in the desert, as lost slaves. After all we are already home,
and at the end of the day, to be free is to think and to act free. And
it is about time that we do.
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