According to the Bible, Jochebed (; , Septuagint ) was a daughter of Levi and the mother of Miriam, Aaron, and Moses. She was the wife of Amram and also his aunt. No details are given concerning her life. According to Jewish legend, she is buried in the Tomb of the Matriarchs in Tiberias. In the New Testament, she is praised for her faith in God in Hebrews 11:23.
Exodus Rabbah 1:17 argues that when first Pharaoh of Exodus instructed the midwives to throw all male children into the Nile, Amram divorced Jochebed, who was three months pregnant with Moses at the time, but Miriam soon persuaded him to remarry Jochebed. It also argues that the Egyptians estimated the date of Moses' birth by counting nine months from the remarriage, thereby allowing Jochebed to hide him for the three months that were overestimated. The Targum Pseudo-Jonathan identifies Jochebed as also having been wife of Elitzaphon ben Parnach, and the mother of Eldad and Medad;Targum Pseudo-Jonathan, Numbers 11:26 the text is ambiguous as to when this marriage occurred concerning the marriage(s) to Amram.
Jochebed's name is given various allegorical interpretations in Sotah 11b and Exodus Rabbah 1:17. Leviticus Rabbah identifies her as the person named in 1 Chronicles 4:18 as , by arguing that it should be interpreted as her founding the people by disobeying the Pharaoh's order to dispose of the firstborn males.
Some rabbinic literature attempts to resolve the textual discrepancy in which the Torah lists 34 children of Leah born in Mesopotamia, stating that two were dead, and then immediately states that there were 33 in total, by arguing that the figure referred only to the surviving children, and that Jochebed was the 33rd;Genesis Rabbah 94:8Exodus Rabbah 1:23 however, since the Book of Numbers describes Jochebed's birth as occurring in Egypt, this necessitated the further rabbinic argument that Jochebed was born exactly on the border of Egypt, in the gateway of the city. Biblical scholars have instead simply proposed that the discrepancy in the enumeration of Leah's children is due to the list not originally having included Dinah, who was added by a later editor to introduce consistency with the story of the .Richard Elliott Friedman, Who wrote the Bible?
According to traditional rabbinic biblical chronology, Moses was 80 years old when the Exodus occurred, the Israelites had been in Egypt for 210 years in total, and thus in combination with the rabbinical claim that Jochebed was born on the border of Egypt, as her parents had entered it, this would require Jochebed to have been 130 years old when she gave birth to Moses; Jewish Encyclopedia Rabbinical literature regards this to have been alluded to be the biblical description of the dedication of the Israelite altar, at which 130 shekel weight of silver was offered.Numbers Rabbah 13:19
According to Josephus Flavius, the birth of Moses was an extraordinary event because Jochebed was spared the pain of childbearing due to both her and Amram's piety. The Haggadah extends this miraculous nature to Moses' conception by marking as 130 the age of Jochebed at conception. Several rabbinic commentaries attest to this, commenting that maidenhood was restored to Jochebed at the time of her marriage to Amram. The restoration of maidenhood also included the resumption of her fertility.
It has been proposed by several biblical scholars that Ichabod and Jacob may ultimately be linguistic corruptions of Jochebed.Cheyne and Black, Encyclopedia Biblica
Stories of unusual events during the pregnancy of Amina bint Wahb, mother of the Islamic prophet Muhammad, are compared with the similar experiences of Jochebed when she was carrying Moses. The significance of this comparison is understood to spring from the affinity of Arabic folklore for Hebrew traditions.
She appears briefly in The Prince of Egypt under the name 'Yocheved', voiced by (and resembling) Israeli vocalist Ofra Haza. In the film, she sings a lullaby to baby Moses as she sets the basket carrying him adrift in the river, also pleading the river to deliver Moses "somewhere he can live free". Ofra sang the lullaby in 18 languages for the film's dubbing (including her native Hebrew). In the 2020 West End adaptation of the film, Yocheved was portrayed by Sweden actress and singer Mercedesz Csampai.
In 2014 film , she was portrayed by British Actress Anna Savva. She was only shown onscreen at the time that Moses was exiled and got to meet his biological mother.
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