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INTRODUCTION
TO PARASHAT HASHAVUA
PARASHAT
VAYISHLACH
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In
memory of Yakov Yehuda ben Pinchas Wallach and Miriam Wallach bat Tzvi
Donner
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RUNNING
FROM CERTAINTY, RUNNING TOWARDS DESTINY
By
Rav Yaakov Beasley
Shimon
and Levi's bloody massacre of the inhabitants of Shekhem in Chapter 34 in
response to Dina's rape does little to repair the hidden divisions in Yaakov's
family. Instead, the fragmentations
are aggravated; the father lambasts his children for their recklessness, while
the brothers mutter (possibly only among themselves and not to Yaakov – the text
is ambiguous) that their family does not understand the meaning of family
honor. While the Torah gives the
brothers the last word in this argument, it is difficult to conclude which side
the Torah supports, as Hashem is absent from the entire episode. When, at the beginning of Chapter 35,
Hashem does finally speak, he expresses neither approval nor disapproval
of the brothers' actions. Instead, he addresses his remarks solely to
Yaakov:
And
God said unto Jacob: "Arise, go up to Beit El, and dwell there; and make there
an altar unto God, who appeared unto you while you were fleeing from Esau your
brother."
Did
Hashem approve of Shimon and Levi's actions? Clearly, there is a failure here to
condemn their behavior; however, the subsequent command to build another altar
can be understood as emphasizing the need for purification after the horrific
slaughter.
Most
likely, however, Hashem's silence regarding the argument in Yaakov's
family teaches something very different.
Instead of responding to the conflict between the family's external
relations and the need to preserve respect, a question of deceit and justice and
maintaining the peace, the result of Hashem's command is something much
greater. By repeating the word
"there," referring to Beit El, Hashem implicitly condemns Yaakov's
decision to settle among the Canaanites in Shekhem, which led to the series of
unfortunate events that were set into motion.
More
importantly, the question of "harlotry," which the sons hurl back at Yaakov, is
revealed to represent a much deeper problem then suspected. Rashi states simply regarding
Hashem's command, "Since you tarried on the way, you have been punished
and this occurred to our daughter."
Rashi here summarizes a much longer midrash, which attempts to
understand the underlying psychology that led to Yaakov's
errors:
The
Holy One, blessed be He, said to Yaakov:
These bad tidings did not befall except for the fact that you tarried
amongst us. If you desire that no
more evil should occur to you or your family, "arise and go up to Beit El," the
place where you vowed an oath to me.
Rabbi
Abba bar Kahana said: In times of trouble, you make oaths and promises, and in
times of plenty, you forget them?
(Bereishit Rabba)
For
Yaakov was afraid of the land's inhabitants – "You have troubled me, and made me
odious unto the inhabitants of the land!" Therefore, the Holy One Blessed be He
said to Yaakov, "Get up for yourself!
And go up for yourself!"
(Midrash Lekach Tov)
Bereishit
Rabba
provides two explanations for what lay behind Yaakov's failure to go to Beit El
immediately. The explanation of
Rabbi Abba bar Kahana presents perhaps the most human response. When people are facing trouble, they
discover religion; as the folk saying goes, "There are no atheists in a
foxhole." However, the promises and
oaths mean little once the threat passes.
The
Midrash Lekach Tov provides a more external, tangible source of Yaakov's
inaction. Yaakov is afraid of 'what
the goyim will say?" Going
to Beit El, building an altar, and claiming ownership over the land prematurely
may provoke unnecessary strife.
Better to wait, reasons Yaakov, and dwell contently and quietly; then,
once I've won their favor, I will fulfill my vow.
The
first midrashic approach provides a suggestion regarding Yaakov's psychology
that we catch glimpses of throughout his life – his desire for certainty. When his mother first suggests that he
deceive his father, he hesitates not on moral grounds, but "perhaps my father
will find out?" When confronted by
Hashem's promise at Beit El while fleeing Esav, he immediately transforms
this revelation into a vow – "If you protect me on the way, and if you provide
me with food and clothing, and if you bring me back here safely." The exact syntax of Yaakov's response is
debated among the commentators, but one certainly gets the impression that
Yaakov is trying, as it were, to ensure that Hashem isn't just talking,
but actually "signs on the dotted line." In his relationship with Lavan, their
mutual distrust led Yaakov to place conditions upon every deal (as in his
reference to "your youngest daughter, Rachel"), yet he slowly learns that
despite his best efforts to control the situation, the only guarantee in his
life is that a guarantee from Lavan means nothing.
Returning
to the land of Canaan, facing Esav's armed hordes, Yaakov
transcends this tendency for one glorious moment. Faced with imminent danger, for the
first time he makes no deals and offers no promises. Instead, he offers to Hashem his
most heartfelt revelation, "I an unworthy of all the kindnesses that you have
shown me." For one brief moment,
Yaakov grows beyond his limitations.
However, with the threat of destruction gone to Seir, he reverts to his
old character, until the episode with Dina jolts him out of complacency.
This
reading is perhaps the deepest understanding of Rashi's comment at the beginning
of next week's parasha:
"And
Yaakov dwelled in the land were his fathers sojourned" – Yaakov wished to
dwell in peace and tranquility.
The Holy One, Blessed be He said, "It is enough for the righteous
that they dwell in serenity in the World-to-Come!!" Immediately, the strife of Yosef came
upon Yaakov …
In
Hashem's response to the episode of Dina, he tells Yaakov to change his
place, both physically and spiritually.
Yaakov, who made a half-hearted attempt to fulfill his vow earlier near
Shekhem by naming an altar "El Elokei Yisrael," must now rededicate
himself to the path that he promised that he would tread upon long ago. He must "rise up" from the mundane
affairs of dealing with the Canaanites and local politics, abandon the home that
he has prematurely tried to build for himself among them, and return to Beit El,
where his grandfather Avraham first built an altar and called upon
Hashem's name and where Yaakov himself once dreamt of angels before
departing the spirituality of the land to go to Paddan Aram. "There" he must dwell, and "there" he
must build the altar that he promised to God so long ago. There, Yaakov promised to dedicate
himself towards building God's house, not his own.
Hashem
speaks directly to Yaakov three times in Sefer Bereishit. On each occasion, He tells Yaakov to
leave one place to go to another: once, in Aram, He tells him to go back to the
land of his fathers (31:3), a second time here after the attack on Dina, and
later, He tells Yaakov to go down to Egypt (46:3). Perhaps this is due to Yaakov's own
cleverness and adaptability. As the
ultimate survivor, Yaakov has learned to fashion himself according to his
surroundings; he must at times be reminded of who he really
is.
Like
his grandfather and his mother before him, Yaakov answers the Divine call
immediately and with alacrity. He
gets up and goes, retracing Avraham's original path from Shekhem to Beit
El. He no longer argues with his
children about the need for prudence in local affairs; instead, he asserts
clearly that the major threat to their continued existence as a unique entity is
not the petty politics that surrounds them, but the question of whether or not
foreign gods have entered his household.
Dramatically, he commands their destruction and reasserts his paternal
authority. His sons may have saved
him from the danger of assimilation – and now, he must save them from the same
danger. That accomplished, he heads
towards Beit El.
As
the family journeys, "a terror of God was upon the cities that were round about
them, and they did not pursue after the sons of Jacob" (35:5). Whatever Hashem may have thought
about their actions in Shekhem, with Yaakov's moral clarity restored, and in
leading the family with new energy and devotion, Hashem clearly now
approvingly provides them with Divine protection. |