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History of Feminism

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ismnotwasm

(42,508 posts)
Thu Apr 2, 2015, 04:25 PM Apr 2015

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg Reflects on the Women of Passover [View all]

On Passover, which begins tomorrow night, Jews are commanded to tell the story of the Exodus and to see ourselves as having lived through that story, so that we may better learn how to live our lives today. The stories we tell our children shape what they believe to be possible—which is why at Passover, we must tell the stories of the women who played a crucial role in the Exodus narrative.

The Book of Exodus, much like the Book of Genesis, opens in pervasive darkness. Genesis describes the earth as “unformed and void, with darkness over the surface of the deep.” In Exodus, darkness attends the accession of a new Pharaoh who feared the Israelites and so enslaved them. God alone lights the way out of the darkness in Genesis. But in Exodus, God has many partners, first among them five brave women.

There is Yocheved, Moses’ mother, and Shifra and Puah, the famous midwives. Each defies Pharaoh’s decree to kill the Israelite baby boys. And there is Miriam, Moses’ sister, about whom the following midrash is taught:

[When Miriam’s only brother was Aaron] she prophesied … ‘my mother is destined to bear a son who will save Israel.’ When [Moses] was born the whole house … filled with light[.] [Miriam’s] father arose and kissed her on the head, saying, ‘My daughter, your prophecy has been fulfilled.’ But when they threw [Moses] into the river her father tapped her on the head saying, ‘Daughter, where is your prophecy?’ So it is written, ‘And [Miriam] stood afar off to know what would be[come of] the latter part of her prophecy.’

http://msmagazine.com/blog/2015/04/02/justice-ruth-bader-ginsburg-reflects-on-the-women-of-passover/
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