The Hebrew Prophets after the Shoah. Hemchand Gossai

The Hebrew Prophets after the Shoah - Hemchand Gossai


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and have survived to have a memory can never be the same; the landscape of their lives has been irreparably altered.

      One of the arguments, legitimate and arguable, is whether one can make such judgments suggesting a kind of determinism that punishments are made on the basis of what one might expect or anticipate in the future. Indeed the entire fabric of repentance would unravel if indeed a person of tomorrow would always reflect the person of yesterday particularly in terms of evil intent or actions. And this is surely a message of redemption, that is, one is not left to wither and die in one’s present reality. The reason why YHWH would have repented of the evil even after the announcement by Jonah that Nineveh would be destroyed in forty days underlines why one must attend to repentance seriously, and not make judgments on the basis that one’s repentance cannot be believed to carry over into the future. Yet, this decision by YHWH and the decision to allow Babylon to become another prison of the Israelites led to the razing of the Temple and the destruction of Jerusalem. The LaCocques argue that in fact, while this kind of dramatic change is possible, it would in fact take a miracle, and since the history of change is not predicated on miracles, this kind of dramatic change by the Ninevites is not likely.

      Memory and Shame

      There have been instances in which those who have been the victims of injustice or oppression have survived and have themselves gained power, proceed to perpetuate the cycle of violence. Victims having had the experience of what it means to be oppressed and who lived under tyranny cannot in turn become oppressors, particularly under the guidance of, and relationship with the God who delivers them from, and breaks the bonds of oppression and injustice. In this regard, one reflects on the major infra-structural undertaking by Solomon, including the building of the Temple and the manner in which the success of such a massive enterprise eventuated. Slave labor of the Hebrews by the Pharaoh was such a bane that the memory of it has lingered in the consciousness to this day and it is surely one of the defining moments in the life of ancient Israel. Yet, once again, either there is a lapse in memory at the highest level or a disregard of the lessons and experiences of history. In order to build extensively, Solomon conscripted his people and so engineered a new era of forced labor, and from all indication, those who were the principal workers were his people, those with little power to avoid such conscription. As we are aware today, those with power have the voice and position to avoid such conscription for reasons that may not be accessible to all. Certainly in ancient Israel, not everyone was viewed equally. The fact is, forgetfulness has devastating consequences, because we are destined to repeat our mistakes and have no context from which to understand the consequences of


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