THE WORD OF ELOHIM
GENESIS
Chapter 43
But the famine in the land was severe, and when they had eaten up the rations which they had brought from Mitzramah; their father said to them, “Go again and procure some food for us.” But Yehudah said to him, “The man warned us, ‘Do not let me see your faces unless your brother is with you.’ If you will let our brother go with us, we will go down and procure food for you; but if you will not let him go, we will not go down, for the man said to us, ‘Do not let me see your faces unless your brother is with you.’” And Yisrael said, “Why did you serve me so ill as to tell the man that you had another brother?” They replied, “But the man kept asking about us and our family, saying, ‘Is your father still living? Have you another brother?’ And we answered him accordingly. How were we to know that he would say, ‘Bring your brother here?’”
Then Yehudah said to his father Yisrael, “Send the boy in my care, and let us be on our way, that we may live and not die—you and we and our children. I myself will be surety for him; you may hold me responsible: If I do not bring him back to you and set him before you, I shall stand guilty before you forever. For we could have been there and back twice if we had not dawdled.”
Then their father Yisrael said to them, “If it must be so, do this: Take some of the choice products of the land in your baggage, and carry them down as a gift for the man—some balm and some honey, gum, ladanum, pistachio nuts and almonds. And take with you double the money, carrying back with you the money that was replaced in the mouths of your bags; perhaps it was a mistake. Take your brother too, and go back at once to the man. And may El Shaddai dispose the man to mercy toward you, that he may release to you your other brother, as well as Binyamin. As for me, if I am to be bereaved, I shall be bereaved.”
So the men took that gift, and they took with them double the money, as well as Binyamin. They made their way down to Mitzramah, where they presented themselves to Yehoseph. When Yehoseph saw Binyamin with them, he said to his house steward, “Take the men into the house, slaughter and prepare an animal; for the men will dine with me at noon.” The man did as Yehoseph said, and he brought the men into Yehoseph’s house. But the men were frightened at being brought into Yehoseph’s house. “It must be,” they thought, “because of the money replaced in our bags the first time that we have been brought inside, as a pretext to attack us and seize us as slaves, with our pack animals.” So they went up to Yehoseph’s house steward and spoke to him at the entrance of the house, “If you please, my lord,” they said, “we came down once before to procure food. But when we arrived at the night encampment and opened our bags, there was each one’s money in the mouth of his bag, our money in full. So we have brought it back with us. And we have brought down with us other money to procure food. We do not know who put the money in our bags.” He replied, “All is well with you; do not be afraid. Your Elohim, the Elohim of your father, must have put treasure in your bags for you. I got your payment.” And he brought out Simeon to them.
Then the man brought the men into Yehoseph’s house; he gave them water to bathe their feet, and he provided feed for their asses. They laid out their gifts to await Yehoseph’s arrival at noon, for they had heard that they were to dine there.
When Yehoseph came home, they presented to him the gifts that they had brought with them into the house, bowing low before him to the ground. He greeted them, and he said, “How is your aged father of whom you spoke? Is he still in good health?” They replied, “It is well with your servant, our father, he is still in good health.” And they bowed and made obeisance.
Looking about, he saw his brother Binyamin, his mother’s son, and asked, “Is this your youngest brother of whom you spoke to me?” And he went on, “May God be gracious to you, my boy.” With that, Yehoseph hurried out, for he was overcome with feeling toward his brother and was on the verge of tears; he went into a room and wept there. Then he washed his face, reappeared, and—now in control of himself—gave the order, “Serve the meal.” They served him by himself, and them by themselves, and the Mitzrayim who ate with him by themselves; for the Mitzrayim could not dine with the Hebrews, since that would be abhorrent to the Mitzrayim. As they were seated by his direction, from the oldest in the order of his seniority to the youngest in the order of his youth, the men looked at one another in astonishment. Portions were served them from his table, but Binyamin’s portion was several times that of anyone else. And they drank their fill with him.