parsha bit: Noach
Oct. 26th, 2006 09:05 amWhen Noach wanted to see if the flood waters had receeded enough,
he sent out a raven that went "to and fro". The rabbis say this
means the raven argued with Noach, asking "why me?". Noach replied,
"What need does the world have for you? You are fit neither for food
nor for an offering." The raven replied, "your lord hates me and you
hate me. Your lord hates me because he ordered you to take seven pairs
of some creatures but only one pair of us. You hate me because you
could have sent one from the other species instead. Should I perish,
the world will be deprived of my species." Nonetheless Noach sent
the raven, and it found a corpse to eat and did not return.
(Genesis Rabbah 33:6)
(no subject)
Date: 2006-10-27 12:23 am (UTC)The raven had a reasonable argument, but by presenting it the way he did he lost credibility. What you say is important, but how you say it is also important. By jumping to the position that he was being picked on, hated, persecuted, or whatever, instead of saying "look, this is risky -- would you consider sending one of the birds with built-in redundancy?", he lost his case. I don't view the raven in this story with sympathy, but I could have if he'd phrased it differently.
This thought brought to you by the "election day is in 12 days and maybe watching TV ads is a bad idea" committee, but it's also something we all need to keep in mind on a personal level. I've made plenty of diplomatic errors, and it's frustrating that they would have been so easy to prevent.