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“And Joseph saw his brothers, and he knew them, but he made himself strange to them and spoke roughly to them” Genesis 42:7

November 26, 2021 14:29
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Each year, as the winter days get darker, we read the story of Joseph and his brothers. The darkest night of the month, the new moon of Chanukah, is this weekend, and we are heading towards the winter solstice.

The seasons mirror the rhythm of our Torah readings because Joseph’s story is a dark one. For the first time in the Torah, God does not address the protagonist. If God communicates at all, it’s only through dreams, in the dark of the night, and often only through other people’s dreams.

It’s dark in other obvious ways, too. Joseph’s brothers hate him for being his father’s favourite. They throw him into a pit, sell him into slavery and tell his father he is dead.

When it looks like things couldn’t get much worse, Potiphar’s wife gets him sent to prison. And although he does end up in charge of the other prisoners and interprets their dreams, he clearly does not inspire affection. The butler who returns to the palace forgets all about him.