

Parshat
Bo
Hints of
Transformation
V'ruach hakadim nasa
et ha'arbeh:
The east wind
carried the locusts OR, A creative spirit brings change.
-Shemot/Exodus
10:13
Bo is a parashah of transformation: the Israelites make up their
mind to leave Egypt, celebrate their first communal festival, and gather great
riches. That transformation is
previewed in the description of the eighth plague, locusts. Ruach kadim could be translated as: the east wind, the primal
wind, the wind of origination, or the spirit of originality. And
arbeh, the locusts, as the symbol of transformation. For what is a
locust but a transformed grasshopper!
Desert
grasshoppers are normally solitary animals. But when rainfall patterns cause vegetation to grow in small,
contained areas, grasshoppers are attracted to those areas. There they eat, drink, and
multiply. When conditions
become crowded, the pattern of the grasshoppers' maturation changes, and the
normally solitary animals grow up into a hungry herd without enough to
eat. Their bodies harden and
darken and together they swarm off to find food.
Scientists
believe that the mysterious origin of locusts was first understood in
1921. But the secret of the locust
is encoded in the four letter Hebrew word that the
Torah uses for "locust."
Rearrange the letters, and find the secret. The locusts, the arbeh (aleph resh
bet hey) come into being when grasshoppers travel to the well, be'erah (bet aleph resh hey)
where miraculously they multiply, arbeh (aleph resh bet hey) and become something new that God created, barah hashem (bet resh aleph hey).
A fitting preview of the journeys of the Israelites -
then and now.
Return to Reb Laura's "Taste of
Torah" list.
Return to "Teachings from Our Rabbis and
Friends" list.
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