The Exodus (Hebrew shemòt, “names”, from the incipit; Greek Έξοδος èxodos, “exit”, Latin Exodus) is the second book of the Jewish Torah and the Christian Bible.
All the great texts in which a privileged experience of the human spirit has been given are reserves of meaning: so are the great philosophical works, the literal masterpieces; so are the major religious texts in particular. It is not possible to understand man in his punishment for being and in his struggle to coexist, except in the light of a purpose that comes from his continuous “Research”.
And the memory of this journey will also be the place to return to whenever the route taken must be correct, whenever there is a need to reawaken that desire that had triggered the journey.