In the Beginning, God Created … Occupation

This Shabbat, once again, we began our annual journey through the Torah.

The book of Genesis begins with the creation of the heavens and the earth. At first blush, this seems like a reasonable place for the Torah to begin, but not to Rashi.

Rashi, the great medieval biblical commentator, was puzzled by the opening verses of the Torah. If the Torah is primarily a book of laws and commandments, he asked, shouldn’t God have skipped the whole creation thing and gotten right to the point, namely, the commandments given to the Jewish people?

Rashi’s thinking concludes with a statement that goes to the heart of the central issue in the conflict in which Israel has been embroiled for over a century: Occupation.

Regarding the charge of occupation, Rashi’s comments are astonishing, absurd and breathtaking. Let’s take a look:

Rashi’s Answer Is Astounding

Rashi says that the Torah begins with the account of creation in order to preempt a canard that will one day be leveled against the Jewish people. In his words—

[The reason the Torah doesn’t begin with the commandments is because] The nations of the world will...read more at Times of Israel