Moses the Persian? Exodus 2, the ›Other‹ and Biblical ›Mnemohistory‹ 189 Moses the Persian? Exodus 2, the ›Other‹ and Biblical ›Mnemohistory‹ By H. Zlotnick-Sivan (University of Kansas, 3100 Wescoe Hall, Lawrence, KS 66045, USA) In a stunning tour de force Jan Assmann has traced the making of Moses the »Egyptian« in European intellectual history from hellenistic antiquity to Freud.1 Linking Moses’ monotheism with the suppressed memory of the religious revolution of Akhenaten (14th century BC), Ass- mann shows how Egyptomania or Egyptophobia shaped a specific com- prehension of the historical and imaginary intertwining of the fates of symbolic Israel and Egypt. Understandably, his treatment of »Moses« skips the Middle Ages. The book also leaves the Hebrew Bible aside.2 The omission likewise makes sense. After all, how is it possible to in- scribe into a ›mnemohistory‹ which is nevertheless carefully constructed around chronological sequence the work of authors and redactors who have noxiously resisted identification, let alone a date?3 Assmann’s Moses has little to do with a ›historical‹ figure, or with a specifically Jewish one. Egypt is a contrivance. Perhaps, then, a different book of ›mnemohistory‹ can explore the history of the collective mem- ories that shaped the redactional and final figure of the biblical Moses. Such a book, unlike Assmann’s Moses, cannot, at first glance, rely on precise dates, nor on external sources.4 Its point of departure, I suspect, 1 J. Assmann, Moses the Egyptian. The Memory of Egypt in Western Monotheism, 1997. 2 This is the main criticism leveled, for example, by B. Britt in an otherwise glowing review, Moses, Monotheism and Memory, RStR26 (2000), 316. For my own part, I am less comfortable with the millennial memory gap that must be bridged with modern as- sumptions about trauma and preservation. 3 The term ›mnemohistory‹ signifies, according to Assmann, the history of cultural mem- ory (15 et passim). 4 Scholarly controversies regarding the redactional stages of the Pentateuch and of the HB in general, like the intellectuals surveyed by Assmann, often reflect fashions and in- dividual concerns that have little to do with the text itself. For one recent evaluation that ›pushes‹ the final redacted HB to a ›hellenistic‹ era, N.P. Lemche, The Old Testa- ment: A Hellenistic Book?, SJOT7 (1993), 163–193. Lemche wishes to bring the HB and the NT together as products of the same period. He suggests, inter alia, (in order to demonstrate that the Persian period »does not meet the requirements of being the time when the historical books of the OT were written down«, 184) that Xenophon’s An- ZAW 116. Bd., S. 189–205 © Walter de Gruyter 2004 Brought to you by | University of Kansas Libraries Authenticated Download Date | 2/10/15 10:04 PM 190 H. Zlotnick-Sivan must be an investigation of the contrasting images of Egypt (rather than of Moses) in the Hebrew Bible itself.5 Herein lies both a contradiction and a possible key. The Egypt of Moses is the antithesis of the benev- olent and hospitable realm that had embraced the first ancestral couple (Gen 12) and the talented Joseph and his family (Gen 39f.) in time of famine. It is this charitable Genesis-Egypt that hellenistic writers pro- moted when they sought to vilify Jews by ›reviving‹ the millennium-old memory of Akhenaten. With this bizarre historical scheme of appropri- ating the past begins a process of inversion which culminates, strangely enough, in Freud. Thus far Assmann. The centrality of Egypt in the biblical Exodus account is self evidence. But its commemorative performance, at least as outlined in Deut 6,12 and 8,14, omits Moses altogether, as indeed does the poetry of Ex 15 which, however, is carefully placed in Moses’ mouth. Yet, the focality of Moses seems likewise an entrenched feature of the Exodus.6 Whether both were integral components of the fragments of memory which the redactors of the biblical texts put together remains a matter of conjecture. In this article I focus on one question: why was Moses placed in Egypt in the first place? In other words, why did the redactor(s) of this phase of Israelite ›ancient history‹ cast Moses as an Egyptian alumnus and subsequently as a deliverer from Egyptian and not, say, Babylonian or even Persian bondage, especially if one subscribes to an exilic or abasis (400 BC) reflects the »heyday of the Persian empire« (186). This is hardly the case as every scholar of Greek and Persian antiquity knows. Between 401 and 399, for example, a rebellion in Egypt led to the expulsion of the Persian rulers, an event that dominated Persian politics for another half a century (A. Kuhrt, The Ancient Near East, 1995, 673 and the various contributions in Achaemenid History vol. 1–8, 1987–94). The very success of Xenophon’s group of mercenaries suggests that the cen- tral Achaemenid government could not marshal sufficient support to eliminate such groups even after the death of a pretender. Moreover, even a cursory reading of the HB and the NT demonstrates the unlikelihood of a close date of composition. I do agree with Lemche, however, about the lamentable neglect of the Persian period among scholars. This, too, I suspect, reflect a predilection for ›western sources‹, and of course a specific linguistic framework. Following Lemche, Thompson dates the theophanies of Ex3 and6, in his mind examples of ›inclusive monotheism‹ to somewhere between 450 and 150 BC (T.L. Thompson, How Yahweh became God: Exodus 3 and 6 and the Heart of the Pentateuch, JSOT68 [1995], 57–74). 5 Cf. Friedman’s view of Israel’s history as a journey from Egypt to Egypt, R.E. Fried- man, From Egypt to Egypt: Dtr1 and Dtr2, in: Traditions in Transformation: Turning Points in Biblical Faith, eds. B. Halpern/J.D. Levenson, 1981, 167–192. 6 Recent studies of Moses, a perennial favorite of biographers and of intellectual in- quiries into the making of the Pentateuch include, J. Nohrberg, Like Unto Moses, 1995, and J. Kirsch, Moses: A Life, 1998. Brought to you by | University of Kansas Libraries Authenticated Download Date | 2/10/15 10:04 PM Moses the Persian? Exodus 2, the ›Other‹ and Biblical ›Mnemohistory‹ 191 post exilic date of Pentateuchal redaction? The selection of Egypt seems hardly a foregone conclusion. It cannot be vouchsafed by the antiquity of traditions relating to Israel in Egypt because we know nothing about either the origins or the narrative development of such traditions.7 Most of the episodes that accompany the biblical Exodus take place in a de- sert, a no man’s land that could have been situated practically anywhere in the Near East. Indeed, only the first chapters in the present book of Exodus are anchored in Egypt. Beyond the Red Sea, Egypt becomes a memory in which idolatry and plenty pose two poles of alternate revul- sion and nostalgic attraction. As my title indicates, this study deals with a latent choice. Long ago scholars have pointed to similarities between the story of Moses’ birth and infancy and archetypal patterns of heroic characters.8 Motifs of ex- posure, miraculous rescue, translation into a different environment from that of birth, ›recognition‹ and ›rediscovery‹, and the rightful gaining of the right of birth appear with frequency and repetition. Important nar- rative-inversions have also been noted, such as the presentation of the abandoning family in Ex 2 as humble rather than noble, and the find- ing/raising family as royal rather than lowly.9 Similarities with specific texts have also been drawn, primarily with one version of the ›autobi- ography‹ of Sargon of Agade (2296–2240 BC) which boasts a noble mother (but a low born father) who puts her infant son in a basket and unto the river whence he is [logically] saved by a drawer of water to be- come a gardener before the goddess Ishtar bestows her favor on him.10 Yet, the closest, most intriguing and instructive parallels between the tale of Moses’ origins and other ›heroic‹ biographies are not with Sargon’s tale but rather with the concocted biography of Cyrus the Per- sian (559–530), the creator of the Achaemenid empire and the one iden- tifiable foreign ruler whom the Hebrew Bible regards with admiration.11 7 P.R. Davies, In Search of ›Ancient Israel‹, 1995; and the various articles in Can a ›His- tory of Israel‹ be Written?, ed. L.L. Grabbe, 1997. One further notes the absence of ref- erence to Egypt in Ex15. Indeed, only Pharaoh’s chariots are mentioned (Ex15,4). 8 Assmann, 150, with S. Freud, Moses and Monotheism, trans. K. Jones, 1955, 9, and O.Rank, Der Mythus von der Geburt des Helden, 1909. See also G.W. Coats, Moses. Heroic man, Man of God, 1988, 36ff. For a recent taxonomy of heroism, D.A. Miller, The Epic Hero, 2000, esp. ch. 2 (heroic biography). I find G.S. Kirk, Myth. Its Meaning and Functions in Ancient and Other Cultures, 1970, particularly useful. 9 Assmann, ibid. 10 ANET, 119, with B. Lewis, The Sargon Legend: A Study of the Akkadian Text and the Tale of the Hero who was Exposed at Birth, 1980. Note that the earliest preserved text comes from 8th century Nineveh, Kuhrt, ANE, 46–50. 11 Similarities have already been adduced but I have not found a study that deals specifi- cally with Cyrus and Moses. Cyrus’ biography is narrated in Herodotus 1.107–130. I emphatically do not claim any relationship, direct or indirect, between Herodotus and Brought to you by | University of Kansas Libraries Authenticated Download Date | 2/10/15 10:04 PM 192 H. Zlotnick-Sivan In its Herodotean version the narrative includes orders to expose a royal baby; the transfer of baby from a loyal henchman to the hands of a herdsman; the saving of baby’s life by the herdsman’s courageous wife; and adolescence marked by the foundling imperious temper as he whips a noble playmate. Cyrus’ ›nativity‹ tale is also one of the most explicit statements of the morphology of a heroic birth. Above all, it is a myth with a date and a hero with a verifiable history. Because of such similarities the entire Moses narrative has been re- garded, not without reason, as a ›heroic saga‹, replete with the ›signs‹ that characterize a heroic male.12 Such conventionality also prompted Noth to view the early part of Moses’ biography (Ex2) as late and sec- ondary, stopping short of questioning its relevance to the narrative itself.13 But this is precisely the question that ought to be addressed. What, indeed, is the function of this apparently derivative tale which also presents similarities with other biblical tales?14 Scholars have suc- cessfully avoided this question by dealing with the entire Moses nar- rative rather than with its distinct components. If, however, the quest for Israel leads through a quest for Moses, the scholarly journey into the depth of Israelite identity must begin at the very start, with imagined biblical beginnings.15 the biblical text, unlike S. Mandell/D.N. Freedman, The Relationship between Hero- dotus’ History and Primary History, 1993, whose analysis does not rely on any detailed comparison. 12 Coates, passim. 13 M. Noth, A History of Pentateuchal Traditions, trans. B.W. Anderson, 1972, 162. 14 J. Nohrberg, Like Unto Moses, 180f., for many parallels between the biography of Moses and other biblical events. 15 A search to unravel Moses’ biblical beginning also suggests a new venue of researching the ever problematic question of Mosaic monotheism. For recent speculations about an Assyrian link and provenance, S. Parpola, Monotheism in Ancient Syria in One God or Many? Concepts of Divinity in the Ancient World, ed. B.N. Porter, 2000, 165–209, with the reservations of B.N. Porter, The Anxiety of Multiplicity. Concepts of Divinity as One and Many in Ancient Assyria, in: Eadem, One God or Many?, 211–271. Recent scholarship has tended to postpone the ›birth‹ of biblical monotheism to the Deutero- nomistic school with its insistent iconoclasm, K. van der Toorn, The Iconic Book Anal- ogies between the Babylonian Cult of Images and the Veneration of the Torah, in: Idem, ed. The Image and the Book. Iconic Cults, Aniconism, and the Rise of Book Religion in Israel and the Ancient Near East, 1997, 229–248, and other articles in the same collec- tion. For possible Zoroastrian-Persian links, O. Lorenz, Das ›Ahnen-und Götterstatuen Verbot‹ im Dekalog und die Einzigkeit Jahwes, in: Ein Gott allein, eds. W. Dietrich/ M.A. Klopfenstein, 1994, 491–527, esp.514. Concluding his account of Cyrus’ child- hood, Herodotus adds an intriguing comment: »The Persians have no images of the gods, no temples and no altars, and consider the use of them a sign of folly«. (1.131). Zoroastrianism and Exodus’ monotheism merit a separate investigation. Brought to you by | University of Kansas Libraries Authenticated Download Date | 2/10/15 10:04 PM Moses the Persian? Exodus 2, the ›Other‹ and Biblical ›Mnemohistory‹ 193 My argument runs as follows: Moses’ Egyptian biography (Ex 2), which contains significant variations on common mythic themes (as has been generally observed), also provides deliberate narrative inver- sions of Cyrus’ biography. These ›twists‹ reveal a paradox: if indeed Cyrus was the model, as seems likely, why did the redactional shapers of Moses not cast or rather recast their hero as a ›Jewish‹ version of a much-admired monarch whom the prophet »Isaiah« hails as a »mess- iah« and a »shepherd« of Yahweh (44,28; 45,1), whose fame the Per- sians celebrated in song and story and the Greeks in a lengthy biography and an imaginative educational treatise.16 In this Persian guise Moses would have become instantly recognizable and, moreover, would have fitted into an Abrahamic Mesopotamian lineage. Instead, the redac- tor(s) of Ex 2, embedding Moses in a picturesque Egyptian context, elected to depict him as a foundling on Egyptian soil and as a divinely appointed avenger of the iniquities inflicted by Egypt on a specific mi- nority. This depiction must raise suspicions on several scores. As already suggested, it is wholly contradictory to the image of the benign and hos- pitable Egyptian land of Genesis. Moreover, the Egypt of Ex1 is a led by a xenophobic regime with a self appointed mission to eliminate ›foreigners‹ who had been part of the land for at least a generation (by one account, Ex 1,6) if not for centuries (according to Ex 12,40f.). Be- sides an inexplicably induced fear of one Pharaoh, the narrative does not explain either the enslavement or the plan of annihilation. The Egypt of Ex 1f. is a new entity presided by a new and hostile monarch with a short memory (Ex 1,8). It is, however, an Egypt ripe for a change or rather a lesson. In the Bible this ›illumination‹ or learning through suf- fering is entrusted to Moses, a native of the land appointed as an emis- sary of the God of the Hebrews. In reality, the conquest of Egypt was the apogee of Persian achievements, contemplated probably by Cyrus him- self and accomplished by his son Cambyses barely five years after Cyrus’ death. With the Achaemenid annexation of Egypt the mighty history of Pharaonic Egypt came to a sudden and hitherto inconceivable end. Through a series of divinely instigated plagues the book of Exodus outlines a ›campaign‹ that demonstrates the frailty of the Pharaoh in his own land vis-à-vis a superior power (Yahweh). The resultant separation between Egypt and Israel is both permanent and painful. Its inherent drama is as powerful as the ›decline and fall of Egypt‹ in the late sixth century, at least as contemplated and presented by Herodotus. If Hero- dotus’ approach to the Egyptian debacle is colored by his knowledge of the defeat of Egypt’s conquerors on Greek soil, the redactor(s) of Ex1f. 16 Herodotus 1.107f. and below; Xenophon, Cyropaedia 1.2.1. Brought to you by | University of Kansas Libraries Authenticated Download Date | 2/10/15 10:04 PM 194 H. Zlotnick-Sivan appear(s) to have contemplated an Egypt that has just been defeated and humiliated. If acceptable, my linking of Moses with Cyrus, and the making of the »Egyptian« Moses with the Persian conquest of Egypt has far reach- ing implications. It can help us, for the first time, to date a biblical re- dactional layer with precision hitherto unavailable. Instead of consig- ning redactional enterprise to a nebulous realm of exilic or post exilic eras, it becomes possible to assign a precise date to, at least, one redac- tional thread. 1. From Cyrus to Moses: The Birth of a Hero Let me begin with a few observations. Although the Hebrew Bible is replete with scenes of annunciation, there is no announcement as such in Ex2.17 No word of God or of an angel alerts the parents to the birth of a son destined for a particular role in Israelite annals. Nor is there a dream warning a prospective parent or grandparent of the dangerous or daring exploits of an offspring. This is an important and, as I shall argue, a deliberate omission. It stands in marked contrast not only with biblical traditions of ›miraculous‹ births but also with traditional heroic accounts, such as Cyrus’, which warn an elder male of the imminent birth (or pregnancy of the mother) of a child who will one day threaten his life and throne. The child, doomed to death by decree (Ex1), is saved by a daughter of the king and, ironically, brought up in the palace itself (Ex 2). By making the royal decree a general rather than a specific one (unlike the Cyrus’ tale), Ex1 provides a deliberate twist on the theme of consigning future heroes to death. For myths deposit decisions which assign death in the hands of a relative whose very life is threatened by the predicted birth of a son (or a grandson). Ex 1f. paradoxically unites the deadly monarch with one of the objects of his deadly decree. When Ex2 records the building of the basket by one baby’s mother, the activity reflects a certain measure of compliance although the prior concealment of the baby points to a record of recalcitrance. Between royal orders, Hebrew defiance and compliance, the birth of Moses seems not merely a register of fertility but a landmark in a long history of an unequal struggle between the might of the Pharaoh and the helplessness of the enslaved Hebrews. It is precisely the absence of conventional ›her- oic‹ elements that embeds the appearance of the »Egyptian« Moses not only in the records of a specific family but in the annals of Israel in Egypt. 17 R. Alter, How Convention Helps us Read: The Case of the Bible’s Annunciation Type- Scene, Prooftexts3 (1983), 115–130. Brought to you by | University of Kansas Libraries Authenticated Download Date | 2/10/15 10:04 PM Moses the Persian? Exodus 2, the ›Other‹ and Biblical ›Mnemohistory‹ 195 Ex 2 does not conjure up separation between baby and parents di- rectly at birth, an element which constitutes a vital ingredient of heroic myths. When the Levite mother is forced to part with her baby she does not abandon him altogether but remains firmly in the picture. Cyrus’ story features a unique scheme. In order to save the royal baby the wife of the herdsman must effect a switch between a dead and a live child. The biblical redactor does not engage in narrating in what guise an Egyptian princess could introduce a Hebrew child as her own son. Yet, the story is implicitly replete with corpses of dead children, first of He- brew baby males who had not been rescued and then of Egyptian first born whose demise ushers the deliverance of the Hebrew slaves. Enclosed in a basket, in itself a sign of identity, Moses repeats in re- verse the pattern of ›heroic‹ exposure. The basket is supposed to save him but it may also cause his death. This is why the name ›Moses‹ re- flects a double play, for the act of ›drawing out of water‹ signifies de- liverance (the same that God will perform to save the Israelites out of the threatening waters of the Red Sea or the sea of Reeds), and it also suggests that the river could have engulfed the basket out of sight and out of rescue range. In shutting the infant in the basket the mother, giver of birth, becomes potentially the agent of death. But she also obeys the royal commands, thus showing herself a loyal subject of the ruler of the land. Imitation becomes reversal. The naming of the child is left to an Egyptian princess who herself remains nameless. Biblical annals often entrust the naming of the newly born to their mothers. Ex 2 transfers this maternal right into the hands of a woman who is neither the natural mother nor a Hebrew. The name she chooses designates the circumstances of her discovery. The text further implies that the child remains nameless until he is weaned and ›restored‹ to the palace. Herein lies another touch of irony: in his home of birth the child remains nameless, and consequently statusless. In other words, he is a bastard. Only in an Egyptian palace, a remote and alien environment, he gains legitimacy, a name and social status. Through Cyrus and Moses the lives of women who are far apart are intertwined. By interceding on behalf of the royal child, the herdsman’s wife who saves Cyrus’ life does what his mother could not have accom- plished, namely bring the process of birth to a successful conclusion. Through Moses, a foreign princess, apparently childless, acquires a child by deluding death. Yet, while Cyrus’ mother is removed from the tale until her son is restored to her by her own father, Moses’ mother re- cruits her daughter to help, all the while leaving the husband in the background. In the agon between the feminine and the masculine in both tales, the crucial initiative is taken by women. Cyrus’ father briefly reemerges. Moses’ father disappears from the records of his family. This is only one paradox of a story that centers on a future deliverer. Brought to you by | University of Kansas Libraries Authenticated Download Date | 2/10/15 10:04 PM 196 H. Zlotnick-Sivan Like other ›heroic‹ children, Moses is brought up away from home. Yet, and here is another significant difference, the abandoned children of myth who are destined to royalty are usually brought up in a humble surroundings (Oedipus being an interesting exception), the opposite of the palace of their birthright. Moses is brought up in a palace, a counter- landscape to the unassuming abode of his paternal home. Ex 2 maps a geography in which the home is near the palace although the royal resi- dence remains a remote entity. In this, too, the tale counters conven- tional mythical geography which tends to remove the exposed child to a place far away from his natal home. In Ex2 the separation is more men- tal than physical, more a basic gap that can never be bridged than a tem- porary distance destined to be closed. Near death and ›rebirth‹ shape the identity of Moses along a decep- tively simple course. Cyrus’ tale traces a double thread of identity, one recognizable through innate qualities which the ›shepherd’s son‹ mani- fests in contact with peers; another through a specific act of recognition by an authoritative member (usually male) of the family of origin. Thus Cyrus’ grandfather recognizes his allegedly dead grandson and bestows on him a social identity. He also believes that by reuniting him with his natural parents the danger of usurpation is averted. The recognition in Moses’ case falls to Yahweh. Moses’ own actions when he ventures out of the palace imply sympathy with the oppressed in general and an in- nate sense of justice but hardly a specific Hebrew identity. Both tales trace a chain of recognition but here, too, the biblical narrative provides a curious variation. Harpagus, the royal retainer of Cyrus’ grandfather, ›recognizes‹ the danger in exposing a child of a woman who may one day become a queen. The herdsman and his wife recognize the true identity of the baby that Harpagus had passed on to them. In Ex 2 the princess recognizes the ethnic identity of the exposed child. Then a Hebrew girl, in fact the baby’s sister, identifies a suitable agent of sustenance who happens to be the baby’s own mother. Dupli- cations overlap with confusion of temporality to produce a system of echoes in which essentials play on themselves to form internal cross ref- erences. In this ambiguous zone words are exchanged for images which are then reexchanged for words. To discover his true vocation Moses has to become a herdsman, a choice of »profession« that can only be in- terpreted as an ironic twist on the traditional role of the saving herds- men of so many heroic myths. In Ex2 the child saved by a princess turns into a herdsman, rather than into a prince, in order to save his people from his own ›grandfather‹. Brought to you by | University of Kansas Libraries Authenticated Download Date | 2/10/15 10:04 PM Moses the Persian? Exodus 2, the ›Other‹ and Biblical ›Mnemohistory‹ 197 2. The Meaning of Myth Moses’ birth tale demonstrates not only the subjecting of myth to questioning but also the flexibility of myths of origins. Because myths also provide political statements, the narratives about Cyrus and about Moses also address relations between Persians and Medes, and between ›Jews‹ and Egypt. To gain his ›rightful‹ inheritance Cyrus must be a scion of the ruling Mede family but also a member of a noble Persian clan. His career choice is determined by his birth. Herodotus suggests that such tales of nativity made Cyrus appear superhuman and account for his success in war.18 To occupy a dominant position among his own people Moses must be descended from the Hebrews. Hence the obliga- tory if contrived genealogy which obscures whatever may make him ap- pear as an imported hero. Egyptian palaces of origin and Midiantie abodes of identity are carefully concealed by insertion at a chronologi- cal distance from a Hebrew home. Cyrus’ very life seems a result of a series of choices made by persons meant to execute him. The story itself moves from one reluctant execu- tioner to another but ultimately there is no real choice because of the di- vine or fated nature of the events.19 At the opening of the book of Ex- odus an Egyptian monarch is determined to eliminate all the Hebrew male babies. The tale of one of these, likewise dictated by fate or rather by Yahweh, illustrates not only the enormity of such a royal desire but also its futility. Neither Astyages, king of Media, nor the Pharoah, ruler of Egypt, have an independent existence outside the myth of the heroic nativity and the lives they attempt to control. Myth is also at work within the narrative itself. Tinkering with myth means that the redactor could project an interplay between ›myth‹ and ›history‹, thus intertwining two versions. Herodotus’ success in pro- jecting the historical and the mythical Cyrus as a single entity can be measured by the remarkable nachleben of the character, both in an- tiquity and even in our own day.20 In Cyrus’ case the process is particu- larly intriguing for we have his own version of his origins as well as other variations on the same theme (below). Official communications assert Cyrus’ royal descent not through a mixed Mede-Persian line but through a purely bred Persian royalty. Cyrus’ propaganda further pres- 18 Her 1.201–204, with J.A.S. Evans, Herodotus, Explorer of the Past, 1991, 21. 19 T. Harrison, Divinity and History. The Religion of Herodotus, 2000, 236, with A.Mad- dalena, L’umano e il divino in Erodoto, in: Studi di filosofia greca, eds. V.E. Alfieri/ M. Untersteiner, 1950, 57–84. 20 The former is well represented by Xenophon’s Cyropaedeia (The Education of Cyrus); the latter can be seen in M. Mallowan, Cyrus the Great 558–529 BC, Iran10 (1972), 1–17, rev. version in: CHIr, ed. I. Gershevitch, 1985, 392–400. Brought to you by | University of Kansas Libraries Authenticated Download Date | 2/10/15 10:04 PM 198 H. Zlotnick-Sivan ents him as a liberator of the oppressed, clearly a motif with certain vogue: The inhabitants of Babylon, who against the will [of the gods …], a yoke unsuitable for them, I allowed them to find rest from their exhaustion, their servitude I loosened …21 In reality, his policy hardly differed from that of his Assyrian and Mede predecessors, nor indeed the rhetoric of conquest and liberation.22 To justify the conquest of Media, myth accredits Cyrus with mixed parentage, Persian and Median. In this way the annexation of Media be- comes a predetermined rather than an arbitrary act. Ex 2 ensures a double Hebrew lineage for Moses (who himself will later become the spouse of a Midianite). Such an emphasis on parentage is crucial. Be- sides consigning his parents to an ordinary and even lowly rank, the myth of Moses is careful to cast them as descendants of Jacob/Israel. Perhaps it reflects polemics against intermarriage (Cf. Ex34; Num12). Paradoxically, this very insistence on humble Hebrew parentage under- mines Moses’ claim to a royal or semi-divine status, a vital element of all the heroic myths. This, I suspect, is one reason why Moses must be brought into an Egyptian palace. The destined liberator of God’s people cannot be a mere Levite. He must know the Egyptians and the pharaoh at first hand, and not through an experience of slavery, in order to carry his divinely appointed mission of leading the Hebrews out of Egypt. And while Ex 2 refrains from casting the pharaoh’s as Moses’ grand- father, the relationship is implicit enough. The book of Exodus opens with a tribute to patrilineal filiation. Such a beginning makes the female figures of Ex1f. equivocal. In Ex 2 the mother stands in for the father, acting in place of man by exposing the child. We are not told whether the exposure of other babies had been performed by fathers. The story questions the birth itself. It postulates a distinction between birth from a same-creed couple and one by a ›mother‹ alone. And it questions lineage. For it questions the true point of origin – is Moses ›made‹ in his own natal home or in his Egyptian adoptive home? Subsequent events suggest that there is an innate knowl- edge of the self. But the tale of death and rebirth hints at the depth of the dilemma of identity when a child is taken away from home at birth. In the drama that accompanies the story of birth, exposure and res- cue women alone embody legitimacy and piety and slaves are conflated with the free. Within this subversive context even the meaning of what it means to be a Hebrew is in danger of conflation. Awareness is placed in the desert, a liminal space where Moses will have to reshape national 21 Text in A. Kuhrt, Ancient Near East, 602. 22 J. Wiesehofer, Kyros und die unterworfenen Völker. Ein Beitrag zur Entstehung von Geschichtsbewusstsein, Quaderni di storia26 (1987), 107–126. Brought to you by | University of Kansas Libraries Authenticated Download Date | 2/10/15 10:04 PM
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