I can think of worse things than darkness
Parsha Plus | January 31, 2025
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I can think of worse things than darkness

Parsha Plus | June 27, 2025

Written by D Fine

Not so many years ago, London had its great fog. [Manchester has a mini version of this each morning.] Basically, the fog was so thick that darkness descended on London for about 3 days and people had to stay indoors. But people coped; they just chilled for 3 days! Now, this roughly seems to match the plague of darkness brought upon Egypt, so why exactly was that plague so terrible?

When archaeologists find ancient Egyptian tombs, they find riches buried with the bodies; gold, silver, etc. Why did they do this; your possessions do not stay with you after death? It seems that in Egypt (and it’s not so different nowadays), who you are was measured by what material possessions you had. So, people were buried with wealth to show that they were important.

Thus, you can imagine the sheer torture when HaShem brought the plague of darkness upon Egypt. Everyone was cut off from their possessions because they couldn’t see them; they lost their status in society, and everyone had to live with themselves and who they really were – not just what they owned. [Heard from Rav Lippa Rabinowitz]

Written by D Fine

Not so many years ago, London had its great fog. [Manchester has a mini version of this each morning.] Basically, the fog was so thick that darkness descended on London for about 3 days and people had to stay indoors. But people coped; they just chilled for 3 days! Now, this roughly seems to match the plague of darkness brought upon Egypt, so why exactly was that plague so terrible?

When archaeologists find ancient Egyptian tombs, they find riches buried with the bodies; gold, silver, etc. Why did they do this; your possessions do not stay with you after death? It seems that in Egypt (and it’s not so different nowadays), who you are was measured by what material possessions you had. So, people were buried with wealth to show that they were important.

Thus, you can imagine the sheer torture when HaShem brought the plague of darkness upon Egypt. Everyone was cut off from their possessions because they couldn’t see them; they lost their status in society, and everyone had to live with themselves and who they really were – not just what they owned. [Heard from Rav Lippa Rabinowitz]

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