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1) Don't Bear it Alone
The Vilna Gaon famously noticed that Moshe’s cry in our parshah, "How can I alone bear your troubles and burdens?" (1:12) shares the same root (in Hebrew) as the opening of Eichah: "How the city sits solitary." Rav Yaacov Haber notes that Moshe wasn't simply complaining about workload, needing to handle everything alone - he was also prophesying! When people refuse to share each other's burdens, the inevitable result is devastating isolation.
The solo hero who bears everything alone is often glorified, but even Moshe knew better. The destruction of the Beis Hamikdash came from sinas chinam that left people isolated from one another. The antidote, the fix, isn't grand solutions, but rather simple burden-sharing: showing up, listening, carrying a piece of someone's weight.
See Dr. Erica Brown’s article on Eichah and Loneliness from Tradition. (Yerushalayim’s loneliness in Eikha is both physical and existential, echoing a long Jewish history of isolation. While some, like Rav Soloveitchik, saw creative strength in sacred solitude, today’s loneliness risks becoming corrosive and self-fulfilling. Our task is not to embrace loneliness, but to fight it—by building community, deepening faith, and reshaping the narrative.)
2) Why Blame the People for His Own Sin?
We’re told repeatedly that God was angry with Moshe "because of you" - because of Bnei Yisrael. But wasn't Moshe responsible for hitting the rock instead of speaking to it? Why blame the nation?
Rav Soloveitchik offers a profound answer (Masores HaRav Chumash, based on Vision and Leadership): Moshe was indeed responsible for his action, but the people were responsible for creating the conditions that made his failure inevitable.
Moshe was "too great for his generation" – the Rav explains that his vision was too penetrating, his standards too high, his spiritual depth too vast for them to follow. When they complained using "the language of liberated slaves who had just parted from the fleshpots," Moshe broke down and cried. These weren't the disciples he had hoped for. The tragedy was the unbridgeable gap between teacher and student, between a leader's soaring expectations and his followers' earthbound reality.
The halachah is that "If the student was sentenced to be exiled to a city of refuge, his teacher goes with him." When we fail to rise to our teachers' level, when we close our minds to their influence and resist their transformative power, we drag them down with us. Moshe suffered the consequences not just of his own actions, but of a generation that refused to become worthy disciples.
3) One more from the Rav:
Rav Soloveitchik noticed a striking pattern in tefillah: after davening for geulah in Teka Beshofar, we don't immediately ask for the Beis HaMikdash’s rebuilding or for Messianic rule. Instead, we first pray for the establishment of perfect justice - "to defeat those who oppose it and request the triumph of those who are righteous in justice." Only then do we ask for the Bayis and Moshiach.
This sequence, the Rav taught (Yarchei Kallah, 1978), mirrors exactly what Moshe did before entering Eretz Yisrael. He interrupted his narrative about the march toward the Land to establish the Jewish judicial system first. This wasn't a tangent, but a prerequisite. As Rav Soloveitchik explains: "as soon as we mention the ingathering of the exiles, we cannot make these additional requests until a system of perfect justice is established."
Justice isn't simply a nice ideal. We cannot meaningfully pray for ultimate geulah until we've first created a society where righteousness prevails. The Beis HaMikdash and Mashiach can only come to a world that has established justice first.
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