Character ask: Miriam and Jochebed
Okay. I hope I don't get too many more Bible character asks, because I'm honestly not religious , but here goes. I'll cover both mother and daughter together, because one of my favorite pictures of them is a painting of them both.
Favorite thing about them:
Jochebed: Her love, bravery, and cleverness in protecting her son Moses, by technically following the law ("Every Hebrew boy must be thrown into the Nile") but putting him in a water-tight basket and having her daughter watch over him until he's safely found.
Miriam: Her status as a revered female prophet, who protected her brother Moses as a child, who led the Israelites in music and dance at the Red Sea, and who earned the respect and loyalty of her people. I especially like the emphasis that modern Judaism places on her holiness and position of power.
Least favorite thing about them:
Jochebed: That she had to give up her son to save his life, the poor woman, though at least she was able to be his wet nurse.
Miriam: Her possible racism in criticizing Moses "because of his Cushite wife." Although people have tried to find a more sympathetic explanation for that passage: for example, one legend has it that Miriam and Aaron were defending Zipporah, because Moses had separated from her to live a more holy life of celibacy, not objecting to Moses having married her. At any rate, at least she's punished and humbled when God strikes her with a temporary skin disease.
Three things I have in common with them:
*I have dark hair, as they must have in that time and place.
*Like Miriam with her tambourine, I believe in the spiritual power of music.
Three things I don't have in common with them:
*I've never been a slave.
*I'm not devoutly religious.
*I've never lived in Egypt.
Favorite line: From The Prince of Egypt:
Be still, love, don't cry.
Sleep as you're rocked by the stream.
So I'll be with you when you dream.
Such precious cargo you bear
River, deliver him there"
"Brother, you're safe now,
For I have a prayer just for you
Encouraging Moses as an adult:
"Moses, hear what I say. I have been a slave all my life. And God has never answered my prayers until now. God saved you from the river, He saved you in all your wanderings, and even now, He saves you from the wrath of Pharaoh. God will not abandon you. So don't you abandon us."
brOTP: Each other, Moses and Aaron.
OTP: For Jochebed, her husband Amram. For Miriam, her own husband, whoever he was, if she did marry (traditions vary).
Random headcanon: For Jochebed, she was born very late in her father Levi's life, so even though her husband Amram was her nephew, she was younger than he was. (I hope nothing in the text contradicts this.) Of course, the very fact that Levi, son of Jacob, was her father is hard to believe, because it would have made her an impossibly elderly mother when Moses was born, even older than Sarah was at Isaac's miraculous birth. But we probably shouldn't worry about whether the timeline is realistic or not – it's innately convoluted and full of contradictions, probably because it consists of multiple sources strung together over centuries.
For Miriam, I like the Jewish legend that a well or a spring followed her throughout the desert, providing water for the Israelites, and that it dried up when she died, which explains why in the Book of Numbers there's suddenly no water after her death.
Unpopular opinion: I don't think I have one.
Song I associate with them:
"Deliver Us" from The Prince of Egypt
"Miriam's Song" by Debbie Friedman
"When You Believe" from The Prince of Egypt
Favorite picture of them:
This painting of mother and daughter together with baby Moses.
These stills from The Prince of Egypt. (The first two also featuring little Miriam, little Aaron, and baby Moses.)
This modern painting, because unlike most paintings of Miriam at the Exodus with her tambourine, it shows her correct age. Most classic paintings of the scene make the mistake of portraying her as a young woman, but she was Moses's older sister, which means she would have been in her eighties! Please, artists, let elderly women play music and dance!
From The Prince of Egypt, as a child and as an adult. (Even though the movie does make adult Miriam younger at the Exodus than she would have been, that's okay, because it makes Moses younger too.)