Good 7 Fat Cow Torah From Chabad.Org

September 28, 2006

The Seven Fat Cows


Fat Cow #1: the economy.

Fat Cow #2: freedom and democracy.

Fat Cow #3: modern technology (the automobile, electric can openers, the Internet).

Fat Cow #4: modern medicine (brain surgery, Prozac, tinted contact lenses).

Fat Cow #5: American Jewry (Albert Einstein, Steven Spielberg, Joe Lieberman).

Fat Cow #6: the political state of the nation (Jews living in the Jewish homeland under Jewish rule, etc., etc.)

Fat Cow #7: the spiritual state of the nation (an abundance of Yeshivahs, synagogues, community centers, Parshah classes, Talmud classes, Kabbalah classes, rabbis, rebbes and gurus as never before).

And, behold, seven other cows come up after them out of the River, ugly and lean of flesh; and they stood by the other cows upon the brink of the River (Genesis 41:3).

Lean Cow #1: the economy.

Lean Cow #2: freedom and democracy.

Lean Cow #3: modern technology.

Lean Cow #4: health care in this 21st century.

Lean Cow #5: American Jewry.

Lean Cow #6: the political state of the nation.

Lean Cow #7: the spiritual state of the nation..


An important but much-overlooked detail of Pharaoh’s famous dream is the fact that the seven lean cows stood side by side with the seven fat cows on the bank of the river. In other words, all fourteen cows existed simultaneously in Pharaoh’s dream–unlike in reality, in which the seven years of famine came after the seven years of plenty were over.

This is why Pharaoh’s wise men, who thought up all kinds of exotic interpretations to his dream (e.g., “seven daughters will be born to you, and seven daughters will die”), did not accept the solution staring them in the face. When are cows fat? When there’s been a plentiful harvest! And when are they lean? When there’s famine. Ditto with the fat and lean ears of corn. What could be more obvious?

But Pharaoh saw the fat and lean cows grazing together. You don’t have years of plenty and years of famine at the same time, said the wise men. The dreams must mean something else–something less obvious, more metaphorical.

Joseph’s genius was that he understood that Pharaoh’s dreams not only foretold events to come, but also instructed how to deal with them: they were telling Pharaoh to make the seven years of plenty coexist with the seven years of famine. When Joseph proceeded to tell Pharaoh how to prepare for the coming famine, he wasn’t offering unasked-for advice; that advice was part of the dreams’ interpretation. If you store the surplus grain from the plentiful years, Joseph was saying, then the seven fat cows will still be around when the seven lean cows emerge from the river–and the lean cows will have what to eat.


The Chassidic masters note that the first galut (“exile”) of the Jewish people came about in a haze of dreams. Joseph’s dreams, the baker and the butler’s dreams and Pharaoh’s dreams brought Joseph, and then his entire family, to Egypt, where they were to suffer exile, enslavement and persecution until their liberation by Moses more than two centuries later. Jacob’s own earlier exile to Charan likewise began and ended with dreams.

For galut is a dream: a state of existence rife with muddled metaphors, horrific exaggerations and logical  impossibilities. A state in which fat and lean cows exist simultaneously–in which a cow can even be simultaneously fat and lean.

Galut is a place where a thriving economy is both a blessing and a curse, where the rising tide of freedom unleashes the best and the worst in man, where a globe-griding Web conveys wisdom and filth, where we’re saturated in spirituality and spiritually impoverished at the same time.

But there’s a way to deal with this cosmic mess. Listen to Joseph speak (even Pharaoh recognizes good advice when he sees it). Don’t run away from the dream, says Joseph, don’t look for some other meaning. Use it. If galut presents you with the paradox of the fat cow and the lean cow grazing together on the brink of the river, use the fat cow to nourish the lean cow. Make the dream the solution

Entry Filed under: torah. .

14 Comments Add your own

  • 1. Editor  |  September 28, 2006 at 9:40 pm

    Let’s have some Torah not punditry and wordsmithery.

    Reply
  • 2. shmutzika  |  September 29, 2006 at 7:13 pm

    B”H

    Dark Paths
    ———-

    He could have placed streetlamps along all the pathways of wisdom, but then there would be no journey. Who would discover the secret passages, the hidden treasures, if all of us homed in straight for our destination?

    A Daily Dose of Wisdom from the Rebbe
    -words and condensation by Tzvi Freeman
    Tishrei 7, 5767 * September 29, 2006

    Reply
  • 3. hanktherank  |  September 29, 2006 at 8:03 pm

    fuck chabad and fuck the rebbe

    Reply
  • 4. rockyraccoon  |  October 4, 2006 at 2:27 am

    mr tauber you are amazing. your essay is brilliant and evolved. it confronts the angst many, if not all, of the viewers of this blog seem to stress over: how do u balance “both” worlds. but in my opinion, its not complete with out a personal touch. perhaps you could elaborate? give us readers a practical example of dealing with paradox. i assume your words were born from your own life experience – do please share!

    and you are right. what a wonderful world. even egypt. joseph showed us that

    thank you mr tauber. please continue to write. you inspire

    Reply
  • 5. rockyraccoon  |  October 4, 2006 at 2:35 am

    you might even want to get it published. but in that case, i would recommend you cut straight to the chase. the whole graph describing each cow seemed elaborately constructed but a little burdensome. it might bore the reader before they get to the meat and bones of your essay. i was able to appreciate the essence of your dvar torah without it. in fact i entirely skipped the first part and only read the second part because i thought it was a new article. like i said, adding a personal stoty/epiphany would seem more exciting. youre a genius, so please take my constructive criticism lightly.

    all the best

    Reply
  • 6. mDavid  |  November 6, 2006 at 3:35 pm

    Nice! Yanki is going all the way this year, no matter how tough it is Tauber!

    Reply
  • 7. earthling  |  December 15, 2006 at 1:37 pm

    “An important but much-overlooked detail of Pharaoh’s famous dream is the fact that the seven lean cows stood side by side with the seven fat cows on the bank of the river. In other words, all fourteen cows existed simultaneously in Pharaoh’s dream–unlike in reality, in which the seven years of famine came after the seven years of plenty were over.”

    Another important but much-overlooked detail of Pharaoh’s famous dream is the fact that all forteen cows had ass-holes -unlike in reality, in which the seven years of famine and the seven years of plenty did not have ass holes.

    Reply
  • 8. hiyavrom  |  February 9, 2007 at 2:29 pm

    Or to quote Yoshpon: “The poor will always be with you”.

    Be nice, sisters, or Chabad will terminate your status as an affiliate.

    Reply
  • 9. shmutzi  |  February 18, 2007 at 10:35 am

    Can someone explain to me how this gd forsaken piece, from September is always on the top post list? I leads me to believe that this list of yours is corrupt.

    Reply
  • 10. chamukai  |  March 13, 2007 at 9:51 pm

    its not nice of y’all to try and sabatage avremel’s rishus. its just not nice. theres only one avremel and you should accept this rather than fight it!!!
    but i love ya anyway

    Reply
  • 11. fuck you  |  March 19, 2007 at 3:41 am

    in response to the poison nytimes article on cholent night party..do you want to be famous for hanging out at cholent? so you invite the fucking times in to take photos of people who don’t even know they are gonna be in the paper drinking and cavorting with boys? FAME KILLS and you just killed sacred cholent..where we could go and hang and nobody bother….now the world knows your OFF THE DERECH…feel cool and famous?

    Reply
  • 12. Judea  |  April 26, 2007 at 4:08 pm

    check http://jdo.org/pat_singer

    Reply
  • 13. the rebbe shlita  |  May 6, 2007 at 7:31 pm

    the seven fat cows represent the seven lower sfiros, the lean cows represent the same sfiros rooted in sitra achra,

    the first set of cows became fat and lazy, they were thinking we come from kedusha we have it all, we run things here. but they were not acting on it, all their torah and mitzvos didnt get them anywhere. so along came the lean cows and said “even though we come from the other side” (hence the river) “we are not fat and lazy, we will accomplish what you failed to do”

    and lo and behold, they swallowed the fat cows, but they themselves remained skinny

    Reply
  • 14. the rebbe shlita  |  May 6, 2007 at 7:37 pm

    why seven?

    because mochin does not differentiate between kedusha, tuma, tahara:

    true knowledge draws from all aspects of existence, and upon disscussion integrates them all. there is no negation, for everyone who says something has something to say. if you fail to take anyone’s opinion or concerns into account, you are left with hefech hadaas.

    tupidity is not a sefira at all, for it does not exist. it is a term which is used to signify the lack of an existance (wisdom, understanding, knowledge) not an actual existance of its own.

    Reply

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