by Rabbi Avi Shafran
Would it really have been enough?
Much of our Seder-night message to our children, mediated by the
Haggadah, is forthright and clear. Some of it, though, is subtle and
stealthy.
Dayeinu, for example.
On the surface, it is a simple song -- a recitation of events of Divine
kindness over the course of Jewish history, from the Egyptian exodus
until the Jewish arrival in the Holy Land -- with the refrain
"Dayeinu": "It would have been enough for us." It is a puzzling chorus,
and everyone who has ever thought about Dayeinu has asked the obvious
question.
Would it really have "been enough for us" had God not, say, split the
Red Sea, trapping our ancestors between the water and the Egyptian
army? Some take the approach that another miracle could have taken
place, but that certainly would weaken the import of the refrain. And
then there are the other lines: "Had God not sustained us in the
desert" -- enough for us? "Had He not given us the Torah." Enough? What
are we saying?
Contending that we don't really mean "Dayeinu" when we say it, that we
only intend to declare how undeserving of all God's kindnesses we are,
is the sort of answer children view with immediate suspicion, and make
faces at.
One path toward understanding Dayeinu, though, might lie in remembering
that a proven method of engaging the attention of a child -- or even an
ex-child -- is to hide one's message, leaving hints for its discovery.
Could Dayeinu be hiding something significant in plain sight?
Think of those images of objects or words that the mind needs time to
comprehend, simply because the gestalt is not immediately absorbed; one
aspect alone is perceived at first, although another element may be the
key to the image's meaning.
Dayeinu may be precisely such a puzzle. And its solution might lie in
the realization that one of the song's lines is in fact not followed by
the refrain at all. Few people can immediately locate it, but one of
the events listed is pointedly not followed by the word "dayeinu."
Can you find it? Or have the years of singing Dayeinu after a cup of
wine obscured the obvious? You might want to ask a child, more able for
the lack of experience. I'll wait...
...Welcome back. You found it, of course: the very first phrase in the
poem. Dayeinu begins: "Had He taken us out of Egypt..." That phrase --
and it alone -- is never qualified with a "dayeinu." For only it
refers, so to speak, to a "non-negotiable." The exodus from Egypt was
the singular, crucial, transformative point in Jewish history, when we
Jews became a people, with all the special interrelationship that
peoplehood brings. Had Jewish history ended with starvation in the
desert, or even at battle at an unrippled Red Sea, it would have been,
without doubt, a terrible tragedy, the cutting down of a people just
born -- but still, the cutting down of a people. The Jewish nation, the
very purpose of creation ("For the sake of Israel," as the Midrash
comments on the first word of the Torah, God created the universe),
would still have existed, albeit briefly.
And our nationhood, after all, is precisely what we celebrate on
Passover. When the Torah recounts the wicked son's question
(Exodus,12:26) it records that the Jews responded by bowing down in
thanksgiving. What were they thankful for? The Hassidic sage Rabbi
Shmuel Bornstein (1856-1926) explains that the very fact that the Torah
considers the wicked son to be part of the Jewish People, someone who
needs and merits a response, was the reason for the Jews' happiness.
When we were just a family of individuals, each member stood or fell on
his own merits. Ishmael was Abraham's son, and Esau was Isaac's. But
neither they nor their descendents merited to become parts of the
Jewish People.
That now, after the exodus, even a "wicked son" would be considered a
full member of the Jewish People indicated to our ancestors that
something had radically changed since pre-Egyptian days. The people had
become a nation.
And so the subtle message of Dayeinu may be just that, the sheer
indispensability of the Exodus -- its contrast with the rest of Jewish
history, its importance beyond even the magnitude of all the miracles
that came to follow.
If so, then for thousands of years, that sublime thought might have
subtly accompanied the strains of spirited "Da-Da-yeinu's," ever so
delicately yet ever so ably suffusing Jewish minds and hearts, without
their owners necessarily even realizing it.
In any event, it's an idea worth pondering. For now, dayeinu
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Deconstructing Dayeinu
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