Humility
Part 4
Mordechai: Another Kind of Tzaddik
Alongside
the Jewish romantic image of the humble tzaddik
-- self-effacing, slightly bent-over, hidden,
and devoted to all -- is an alternate type
of Jewish figure -- powerful, unbending, strong,
and even stubborn.
Moshe, when
pleading the case of the Jewish people after
the sin of the Golden Calf, uses the term
stiff-necked people in a strange context.
He says to G-d, “If I have found favor in
your eyes my G-d, please, G-d, walk in our
midst, for they are a stiff-necked people,
and forgive our sins and our iniquities and
you will inherit us.” (Shemot 34:9) Our being
stiff-necked seems out of place here. It was
part of what led to the sin -- holding on
to our Egyptian ways and not accepting the
Divine authority?! The Ralbag, quoting his
father (quoted in the Malbim) explains that
the Jews’ stubbornness has two sides to it.
It takes a long time to win them over, but
once they follow Hashem they will stick with
Him forever, stubbornly.
The Jews
are a stick-necked people, and Mordechai the
Jew (Esther 2:5) typified his people. He is,
in many ways, a classic example of the tough
Jew. Mordechai is persistent, day in and day
out checking on what will become of Esther.
Mordechai is not preoccupied with appearances
-- publicly displaying his sackcloth and ashes
after Haman’s decree and letting out a great
cry in the middle of Shushan. Mordechai, most
prominently, does not bow down to Haman.
The verse
states, “Mordechai did not bow down, nor prostrate
himself (before Haman)” (Esther 3:2). The
Sfat Emet (Purim 5643) comments on a problematic
grammatical point. Rather than saying “lo
kara” -- he did not bow, using the past tense;
the verse says, “lo yichra” -- literally,
he will not bow, in the future. Mordechai,
says the Sfat Emet, was firm in his thoughts
that he would never bow. The future indicates
Mordechai’s conviction -- I will never bow.
The Sfat Emet adds a second explanation, that
every generation will have a Mordechai like
tzaddik who will neither bow down nor prostrate
himself before a Haman. Mordechai’s soul,
he quotes, is from the same source as that
of Moshe Rabbeinu, and shares Moshe’s quality
of not bucking under pressure.
The Midrash
(Yalkut Shimoni Esther) asks why Mordechai
did not bow. After all, his intransigence
ended up causing the decree to destroy the
Jews. The Midrash gives two answers. One,
that Haman affixed an idol to his garment,
causing any one who bows down to him to effectively
bow down to an idol. The Midrash’s second
answer assumes that the bowing was not idolatry
but gives the following answer: Mordechai
replied, “Am I to flatter a human? I, who
is descended from Binyamin, about whom it
says, ‘He (the Divine Presence) dwells between
his (Binyamin’s) shoulders (for the Temple
in Jerusalem was situated in the midst of
Binyamin’s territory)’ should bow down to
a man?”
Mordechai’s
sense of himself was that he provided a dwelling
place for the Divine Presence. How can one
hosting the Divine Presence bow down to a
man? In this lies the key to Mordechai’s toughness.
His struggle against Haman is not personal,
but part of protecting the Divine dignity
that Mordechai the Jew represents.
It is precisely
a Mordechai who can stand up to and defeat
a Haman. Haman has political clout, a high
standing in the empire, wealth. He is a man
of power. But the external trappings of power
cannot defeat Mordechai’s inner strength,
conviction, clarity, and sense that the Divine
power is with him and his people.
Mordechai
alone, though, was not able to bring about
the salvation in the Purim story. Divine Providence
chose Esther as the agent for reversing Haman’s
decree. But it was only through Mordechai’s
encouragement and sharp message that she was
able to gather the courage to risk her life
for her people and approach the King. It is
ultimately not Mordechai’s own courage but
his ability to pass it on to another that
brings the Purim story to its miraculous conclusion.