Everyone asks: if that’s the reason
for piercing the ear, shouldn’t it be done when the individual first gets himself
sold into slavery? Why wait until the
sentence is over and he chooses to opt for an extension?
R’ Shmuel Ya’akov Rubenstein in his
sefer She’eiris Menachem answers that when a slave is first sold, he may not
realize what he is getting himself into.
The full force of what slavery means may hit a person only after he experiences
it, after he tastes what life is like under else’s thumb, and after he has suffered
a bit. If after all that the person
still prefers slavery to living as a free man, then the Torah says this person
deserves the punishment of piercing.
The Shem m’Shmuel explains that the
eved ivri suffers from delusional thinking.
He comes to his master and claims that he prefers to remain enslaved
because he loves his wife and his children, “ahavti es ishti v’es banay…” He does not realize that “his” wife and “his”
children are merely chattel, property of his master. He entered slavery perhaps not realizing
fully what he was getting into, and after spending time as slave he is no wiser
to his circumstance than he was before.
A person sometimes cannot be blamed
for making a wrong decision. The full
import of choices are sometimes realized and felt only after the fact. But a person can be blamed for ignoring
reality and not learning from his circumstances.
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