This week’s Parashah, “Miketz,” just like “Vayeshev,” last week’s Parashah, opens with dreams. Dreams and their significance, as we encountered in Ya’akov’s monumental dream, a few weeks ago, are dispersed throughout the Biblical story.
What
makes the dreams in this Parashah more compelling, however, is their
interpretation and the imminence of their fulfillment in the context of the
time in which they occur.
In “Miketz,”
Yoseph displays his great talent of solving the dreams of others. In the past,
his own dreams were a threat to his brothers and the subject of their mockery, “Here
comes the dreamer!” (Bresheet, 37:19). His dreams also spawned their hatred of
him and evoked in them the desire to kill him “Come now, let’s
kill him and throw him into one of these cisterns and say that a ferocious
animal devoured him. Then we’ll see what comes of his dreams.”
(37: 20). Unlike his brothers, who were “jealous of him,” Ya’akov, their
father, considers Yoseph’s dreams a matter of substance, a futuristic vision
which is destined to transpire in the days to come, “but his father kept the
matter in mind.” (37: 11).
So,
Yoseph, the man who was thrown into the cistern, sold to the Yishmaelites because of his upsetting dreams, eventually rises to power by virtue of the
dreams of others which he interprets. His dreams are the reason for his exile. His
talent to decipher them gets him out of jail. Most importantly, his wisdom lends
excellent counsel based on his interpretation which ultimately earn him the second
highest position in Egypt.
A study of
the methods of dreams interpretations, in the ancient world, reveals that it
was considered a serious and established science. The way Yoseph illuminates dreams,
in this Parashah, reflects a systematic familiarity with such methods. For
instance, Oneirocriteria, a Greek treatise about the interpretation of
dreams, written by Artemidorus of Ephesius, written in the second
century, points at the significance of wine in dreams which implies their
positive or negative indication. Drinking wine in a delicate and “wisely” way,
according to Artimidorus (Oneirocriteria, book 1, 66) is always considered
“a good sign.”
Using the same technique, Yoseph recognizes the difference between the two
dreams of Pharaoh’s cupbearer and chief baker with whom he shares a prison cell.
In his dream, the cupbearer serves the wine in a noble, royal manner, and thus
improves his fate. The baker’s dream, on the other hand, in which he does not
serve the bread “wisely” and where “the birds were eating them out of the
basket on my head,” faces execution.
Prior to listening to the dreams of the cupbearer and the chief baker, Yoseph asks them, "Do not interpretations belong to G-d?" (40:8). His question suggests that Yoseph believes that dreams deliver a Divine message which G-d conveys through the interpreter.
It is this unique ability which earns Yoseph his freedom when he is invited to solve Pharaoh's dreams.
I doubt that there is anyone here who is not familiar with Pharaoh's famous dream where he sees seven well-fed and fat fleshed cows standing by the river followed by the arrival of seven lean fleshed and hungry cows that stand by the plump cows (41:3) and consume them. Likewise, I trust that most are familiar with Yoseph's prediction that the cows represent good years of economic plentitude which will be followed by bad years of famine and hunger.
It is important to note that when Pharaoh recounts his dream to Yoseph, he omits one detail which appeared in his dream and replaces it with his own perception. In the version that he unfolds, he deletes the part where the lean and fat cows first stand alongside each other. Instead, he adds, "And when they had eaten them up, it could not be known that they had eaten them; but they were still ill favored, as at the beginning" (41:21) - the well-fed cows, in this description, disappear without leaving an impression.
Yoseph, in his wisdom and outstanding talent to solve dreams,
erases this detail added by Pharaoh which would mean that the seven good years
would leave no positive mark. Instead, he interprets the original dream in
which the bad and the good cows are placed side by side. Only by acknowledging
the presence of the seven good years can one prepare oneself for the subsequent
seven bad years.
Pharaoh’s dreams occur in history itself. The
Parashah reveals the materialization of the dream, as Yoseph’s states, “What
G-d is about to do he sheweth unto Pharaoh” (41:29). In other words, the
dream is the revelation of G-d’s plan and the key to understanding the course
of history.
Pharaoh who is familiar with the original dream, becomes
aware of the latent rigor of its interpretation. He recognizes Yoseph’s wisdom
and foresight and is convinced. Moreover, Pharaoh himself, grasps the validity
of Divine guidance in our earthly matters, “Forasmuch as God hath shewed thee
all this, there is none so discreet and wise as thou art.” Later in the Parashah,
he goes one step further and refers to Yoseph as a man “in whom the Spirit of G-d”
dwells (41:39). He then sets Yoseph “over the land of Egypt” (41:41) to implement
G-d’s outlined plan which Yoseph presents to him, a plan which eventually saves
Egypt and its surrounding countries.
The term “dreamer,” as we can see, takes on a new meaning in
this Parashah. It is no longer a disparaging label, a Walter Mitty, a mild man
with fantasy life. Rather, it evokes appreciation and respect. Yoseph, who was
the subject of disdain and mockery by his brothers, turns out to be a blend of
vision, a moving force, and a strategic planner with great administrative
skills.
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