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The Israel Koschitzky Virtual Beit
Midrash
Introduction to Parashat Hashavua Yeshivat Har Etzion
Ya'akov and Rachel
By Rav Michael Hattin
INTRODUCTION
More than twenty years have elapsed since Ya'akov was forced to
flee home and hearth in order to escape the murderous wrath of his brother Esav.
At the behest of his selfless mother Rivka, Ya'akov journeyed eastward to the
family of Lavan her brother, ostensibly to find a wife from among his daughters.
There Ya'akov remained for two decades, laboring for the wily and unscrupulous
uncle who soon became his father-in-law as well. For seven years Ya'akov herded
the flocks in order to win the hand of beautiful Rachel in marriage. But to his
great dismay, under cover of darkness and the veneer of social propriety, Lavan
substituted Leah in her place. Though Rachel also became his wife, Ya'akov had
to first agree to Lavan's devious terms: a further seven years of dedicated
labor. Thus did fourteen futile years pass.
In the meantime, Ya'akov's wives and their handmaidens gave
birth, his household grew, and the thought of returning home to Canaan, prompted
by Divine communications, began to stir in his mind. Six further years of labor
for Lavan did nothing to dispel the latter's veiled opportunism and continuing
exploitation, and so Ya'akov and his family fled. Though Lavan pursued and
eventually caught up with the fugitives, a forceful dream from God prevented him
from doing them harm. In the end, the two parties tensely concluded a pact of
non-aggression, and went their separate ways.
PREPARING FOR CONFRONTATION
Ya'akov's approach to Canaan, though, is also his confrontation
with the demons of the past. His brother Esav has since established a household
of his own, displacing the indigenous Chori tribes and seizing their stronghold
of Se'ir, on the southeastern shores of the Dead Sea. Does his brother still
harbor lethal resentment towards him for having wrested the birthright and the
patriarchal blessing from their aged and blind father Yitzchak? Ya'akov prepares
to meet his brother and nemesis by adopting a multi-faceted approach. While he
sends him gifts to appease his ancient anger, Ya'akov also steels himself and
his people for battle and anxiously implores the God of his ancestors to save:
"Rescue me now from the clutches of my brother, from the clutches of Esav, for I
fear that he will smite me along with the mothers and the children..."
(32:12).
A tense night passes as Ya'akov divides his camp and transports
them over the ford of Yabok. Alone in the ominous darkness, just as he had been
that first night of exile more than twenty years earlier, Ya'akov is confronted
by a mysterious and angelic apparition. Striving mightily with the furtive
figure, Ya'akov is injured but unbowed. The imminent confrontation with Esav is
thus foreshadowed by this painful confrontation with his own past. The triumph
of Ya'akov, presaged by the promise of the rising dawn, brings with it a
transformation of his destiny: "Your name shall no longer be Ya'akov but rather
Yisrael, for you have struggled with angels and with men and have prevailed!"
(32:29)
YA'COV'S TRIALS
But Ya'akov's trials are far from over. Emerging unscathed from
his encounter with Esav, crossing the Yarden safely and arriving at Shechem in
the Canaanite hill country, Ya'akov erects an altar and pours out his gratitude
to God, but trouble lurks just around the corner. Precious Dina his only
daughter is seized and raped by the son of Shechem's governor, and the ruler and
inhabitants of the town tensely rally around the criminal. Ya'akov's sons
cleverly employ subterfuge to win the aggressor's trust and then they attack,
freeing Dina from his clutches while wreaking havoc upon the Shechemites. But
Ya'akov is not placated: "Ya'akov said to Shim'on and to Levi: you have
unsettled me and disgraced me before the inhabitants of the land, the Canaanite
and the Perizzite, for I am few in number. They shall gather against me and
strike me down, and I and my household shall be destroyed!" (34:30)
In the end, due solely to Divine intervention, Ya'akov's fears
prove to be unfounded and finally he arrives at Beit El to fulfill an ancient
pledge. The circle of his migrations is finally closed with his building of an
altar at Beit El, just as he had sworn to do more than twenty years earlier when
he had fled into the inky Be'er Sheva night alone and destitute and had
eventually arrived at this very location. Then, in the comforting vision of the
ladder and the angels, God had allayed his fears and promised His assistance
"wheresoever you shall go" and Ya'akov in turn had undertaken to give God the
only thing that he possessed: his prayers and his loyal devotion. During the
course of the intervening years, God had indeed watched over him, protected him
from harm, and now restored him to his land, and Ya'akov's heart was filled to
overflowing.
THE DEATH OF RACHEL
Journeying southwards through the hill country, towards Chevron
and a tearful embrace with his aged, blind father and the memory of his selfless
mother, tragedy strikes once again. As the family winds its way along the crest
of the range towards Beit Lechem, a short twenty five kilometers from their
destination, favorite Rachel, the wife of his youth and his only true love,
begins to labor and then dies in childbirth:
As her soul expired and she died, she called his name 'Ben oni'
(child of my mourning/affliction), but his father called his name 'Binyamin.'"
Thus did Rachel die and she was buried on the way to Efrat, it is Beit Lechem.
Ya'akov set up a marker over her grave, and it is the marker of Rachel's grave
until this very day...(35:18-20).
What a painful end to Ya'akov's journey, what a sorrowful and
anguished conclusion! More than twenty years earlier Ya'akov had journeyed
eastwards at his mother's behest and had arrived at Charan in search of a wife.
He had met youthful Rachel at the well and had immediately fallen in love with
her. To win her hand in marriage he had entered the service of Lavan, and for
seven years he had labored mightily on her behalf. Always during that time and
all through the many years that swiftly followed, he had thought of returning
home to his adoring mother and impassive father, dreaming of the day when he
could show them that he had remained true to their legacy, surpassed their
greatest expectations and made them proud. And now this! The birth of the child,
conceived enroute as an expression of the new and promising chapter about to
unfold with their escape from Lavan, their delivery from Esav, and their return
to Canaan, should have been an occasion for joy and gladness not unlike the
arrival of Yitzchak, Ya'akov's own father. Then (Ya'akov had no doubt been
told), the house had been filled with laughter and mirth, for barren Sarah had
finally conceived and given birth in her advanced old age: "Sarah said: God has
granted me laughter, for all who hear shall laugh with me!" (21:6). But now
Rachel lay dead, the child inexplicably orphaned, with Ya'akov's most fervent
hopes were shattered and broken before him.
THE LARGER CONTEXT
When we consider the larger context of Ya'akov's relationship
with Rachel, we discover to our dismay that it is in fact underscored with a
tragic quality from its promising beginning to its untimely and heart wrenching
end. Recall that when Ya'akov first met the young shepherdess, he had
immediately been smitten by her beauty. Suddenly, he was filled with superhuman
strength and alone was able to roll off the great stone that covered the well,
all in order to provide her sheep with water. Warmly received by Lavan but
entirely without means of support, Ya'akov had pledged seven years of service in
order to marry her, and "they were in his eyes as but a few days because of his
love for her" (29:20). Lavan, however, had other plans, and in a dastardly deed
of deception substituted her sister Leah under the wedding canopy. Thus were
Ya'akov's ardent dreams first dashed, and the seeds of all the later troubles in
the household were unexpectedly sown. In the end, Ya'akov would marry Rachel as
well, but the spirit of household harmony and concord required for every
flourishing marriage would never be theirs.
The marriage to Leah introduced rivalry between the sisters,
for the older one palpably felt Ya'akov's preference for Rachel. Rachel's
barrenness only compounded the situation, increasing her frustrations to the
breaking point. In her pining for a child, she cried out to Ya'akov bitterly,
but the patriarch felt utterly powerless and even resentful: "Am I then in the
place of the Lord who has withheld children from you?!" (30:2).
Finally, after many children born to Leah and more born to
their respective handmaidens, Rachel conceived and gave birth to Yosef, and
Ya'akov saw in that event a hopeful harbinger for the future. As Rashi
(11th century, France) puts it: "When Yosef was born, Ya'akov trusted
in God and wanted to return home (for Esav's adversary had now been born)"
(commentary to 30:25). Six more years were to pass in Lavan's service, but the
die had been cast. Fleeing Lavan's employ, Ya'akov was pursued but God
intervened to save him, and after the conclusion of an uneasy detente, Ya'akov
continued on his way. Encountering Esav and again escaping harm, Ya'akov then
journeyed towards Canaan, now pausing for the rainy season and erecting shelter
("Sukkot") for his flocks. It was there that Binyamin was conceived in what can
only be described as an act of faith and promise. God had preserved him and
brought him back to his land, and that child should have been linked with the
joy of homecoming. Instead, Rachel died in childbirth on the outskirts of Beth
Lechem and Ya'akov was not even able to convey her body to their ancestral crypt
at the Cave of Machpela in Chevron. Rather, she was buried by the way of Efrat
and Ya'akov tearfully left her behind.
A RELATIONSHIP OF LOVE
It should be noted that every single one of the above tragedies
associated with the destiny of Rachel concerns her relationship to Ya'akov. It
was their marriage that brought him into Lavan's employ, it was their union that
introduced Leah to the household, it was her failure to bear him children that
caused so much grief and friction, and it was her labor and birthing of his
child that caused her untimely death enroute and even her inability to be
interred next to him in the final resting place of the grave! And, to go one
step further, as she lay dying and Ya'akov's eyes welled with tears, perhaps he
could even hear the echo of the Rabbis' words concerning his own role in the
matter:
When Rachel secretly hid the terafim of her father Lavan and he
accused Ya'akov of theft, Ya'akov pronounced a curse upon the perpetrator: "With
whomever you shall find the terafim will not live! Opposite all of our brethren
recognize what things of yours are in my possession and take them!" For Ya'akov
did not know that Rachel had stolen them. From this very curse, Rachel perished
on the journey home... (brought by Rashi, 31:32).
What then are we to make of the only marriage in the Torah
concerning which there is explicit mention of longing and love? What are we to
make of the only relationship in the Torah concerning which there is explicit
mention of the fact that both partners met and then chose each other? If ever
there was a love that should have been profound and deep, it was theirs. And
indeed it was. Perhaps the message of the Torah concerning these tragic events
is precisely that: the love of Ya'akov and Rachel was sorely tested as no other
love had ever been before, but they were never defeated, either in life or even
in death. Cruel and spiteful forces from without and unavoidable circumstances
from within conspired again and again to destroy that love, but could not do so,
even as Rachel lay dying on the way to Beit Lechem. Fate may have separated them
in time and space on that dry and rocky path near Efrat, but in their hearts
they would be together always, because theirs was a love nurtured on the bedrock
of faith and trust in God and in His ways. Their ongoing faith in the face of
the many tragedies that befell their doomed relationship was not an act of
resignation and despair but rather a positive act of intense religious
engagement. Ya'akov and Rachel never lost faith even as he lost her under the
canopy, even as she could not bear him children, and even as she breathed her
last in the anguish of bringing forth new life. The words of the Ramban
(13th century, Spain) are particularly poignant on the last matter,
the naming of that new boy:
"As her soul expired and she died, she called his name 'Ben
oni' (child of my mourning/affliction), but his father called his name
'Binyamin'" (35:18) – It appears to me that his mother called him Ben Oni and
wanted to say the 'child of my mourning,' as the verse states "bread of
mourning" ('onim,' Hoshe'a 9:4) or "I have not eaten from it while in mourning"
('veoni,' Devarim 26:12). But his father understood 'oni' as 'my strength,' as
the verse states "the first of my strength" ('oni,' Bereishit 49:3), or "He
gives power to those who have no strength" ('onim,' Yeshayahu 40:29). Therefore,
Ya'akov called him Binyamin meaning the 'child of my power or strength' for the
right hand symbolizes might and success... Thus, Ya'akov wanted to preserve the
name that his mother had given him...but he interpreted that name for goodness
and for strength" (commentary to 35:18).
Grammatically, the explanation of the Ramban hinges upon the
Hebrew root 'OON (alef-vav-nun), that can be construed either as "misfortune and
mourning" ('OVeN) or else "strength and success" ('OON) simply by an insertion
of different vowels. But embedded in his brilliant comments is also the essence
of their relationship: at every step along their winding path together, and
especially when they would encounter setback or tragedy, the two were able to
overcome despair by transforming it into strength. Wasn't that the real meaning
behind Ya'akov's heroic deed at their first encounter at the well, when he
stepped forward and somehow removed the great and adamant stone that covered it?
This, then, is the truth that the Torah wishes to forcefully covey: when a
couple's marriage is predicated upon true love in each other and steadfast faith
and trust in the God who sustains, then not even death can do them part.
Shabbat Shalom |