A mother walks her son to the school bus on his first day of preschool. “Please behave, bubbele,” she says. “Bubbele, take good care of yourself and think about your mother who is waiting for you! And come right back home on the bus, bubbele...Remember, bubbele, your Mommy loves you a lot!”
At the end of the school day, the bus returns. The mother runs to her son and hugs him. “So, what did my little bubble learn on his first day of school?" she asks. “I learned that my name is David...”
It is more than a humorous stereotype; it’s a Midrash.
There is an obvious difficulty in the naming of Moshe. The Torah tells us he was born and immediately hidden for 3 months before being placed in a basket on the Nile. When Batya, the daughter of Pharaoh, rescued the lad, SHE names him Moshe. If that’s the case, what was Moshe called for the first three months of his life? Maybe Bubbele…
The Yalkut Shimoni quotes a tradition that Moshe had 10 other names.
1) He was called Levi because he was a member of that tribe
2) He was called Tuviyah, which has the word “tov” in it, because there was goodness that was visible from the time of his birth.
3) Miriam called her brother Yered, which means down, because she went down to the Nile to see what would happen to her baby brother.
4) Aharon called his brother Avi-Zanuach, “master of rejection,” because Moshe’s father rejected his mother, but he came back to her after the birth of Moshe.
5) Along the same lines, he was called Chever, which means to join, because he caused his parents to come back together
6) His grandfather Kehat called him Avigdor, literally “master of the fence,” because after Moshe’s birth, Pharaoh was fenced in and gave up on his decree to drown all Jewish baby boys.
7) His mother called him Yekutiel, related to the word for hope, as a prayer to one day be reunited with her son.
8) The Jewish people called him Shmaya ben Netanel from Hebrew word to hear. They hoped that God would listen to them due to Moshe’s intervention.
9) He was called Ben Avitar, son of pardon, because Moshe would facilitate pardon in the aftermath of the sin of the Golden Calf.
10) He was also called Avi Socho, master of prophecy, because he would grow up to become the greatest Jewish prophet of all time.
If Moshe had so many names, why is Moshe the only one we know?
Moshe is the name with the most important message.
The daughter of Pharaoh named the boy she saved “Moshe” because “I drew him out of the water.” (Shemot 2:10) Seforno explains her rationale: “The reason why I named him Moshe is to indicate that he will rescue others.” Batya wanted Moshe to remember that he was saved from the water so that he would feel a sense of responsibility to save others. Every time we refer to “Moshe,” we hear a call to pay forward what Batya did for Moshe.
Rabbi Dr. Abraham Twerski suggests that the most formative experience of Moshe’s life was the fact that his adoptive mother was willing to sacrifice everything to save the boy. Although he probably didn’t remember the incident, Moshe surely knew the story of how he was found and got his name.
It worked. When Moshe grew up, he went out of Pharaoh’s house and saw the pain of his brothers and sisters – “va-ya’ar b’sivlotam” (Shemot 2:11). According to the Midrash, Moshe set his eyes and mind to share in their distress. He was living his name.
Batya’s compassion and Moshe’s name resonate today. We need to realize that everything we have has meaning when we use it for the benefit of others. That’s the basis of who we are. The Talmud says that there are three characteristics that a Jew must possess: rachmanim, bayshanim, gomlei chasadim – mercy, humility, and kindness. We need to be inclined to observe and react to the needs and pain of others.
King David reminds us of this responsibility in a well-known verse in Tehillim (37:25):
“Na’ar hayiti v’gam zakanti v’lo ra’iti tzadik ne’ezav - I have been young and am now old, but I have never seen a righteous man abandoned.” Is that true? Did he never see a righteous man abandoned? Never?!
Rabbi Leo Jung explains that King David never saw a righteous person abandoned and did not respond. If he saw someone in need, he always tried to take action to help them. Maybe he couldn’t ease the pain, but he never left the person abandoned.
Moshe is Moshe because there is a Jewish need to rescue others in whatever way we can. Rabbi Sacks wrote:
“Greatness, even for God, certainly for us, is not to be above people but to be with them, hearing their silent cry, sharing their distress, bringing comfort to the distressed and dignity to the deprived. The message of the Hebrew Bible is that civilizations survive not by strength but by how they respond to the weak; not by wealth but by how they care for the poor; not by power but by their concern for the powerless. What renders a culture invulnerable is the compassion it shows to the vulnerable.” (To Heal a Fractured World, p. 37)
We need to keep our eyes and ears open for the pain of those around us as well as our brothers and sisters in Israel. Especially now as we face such a complicated range of experiences and emotions, we can’t see the pain without trying to find a way to react. We may not solve the problem, but it is our obligation to feel the pain of others and respond. As Rabbi Doron Perez put it, “We need to do everything we can to make the biggest difference we can as proactive protagonists, not passive participants.”