New web host, new look! Bear with me while I set things up and make sure the content and links I had before are updated in the coming weeks.

Parashat Toldot: The Voice and Hands of Yaakov

"Jews are not an electrical people."  One of my rabbinical school classmates quoted this line in a seminar, said I think by one of her friends.  It rang true at the time; I knew very few Jewish people who finished their own basement or did anything involving wiring.

Up here in New Hampshire the story is entirely different.  Here, Jews are electrical people, with a particular talent for woodworking.  And, to get to the brothers Yaakov and Esav, there are members of the tribe who hunt as well!

Our parasha this week is framed by the contrast between Yaakov, "who sat in tents", and Esav, who had "the hunt in his mouth" (Genesis 25:27-28).  Yaakov is presented as crafty and strategic, Esav as rough and tough.  Many of the traditional midrashim go a step further.  Yaakov's tent is taken as the beit midrash, the house of study.  Esav, by contrast, is spiritually and intellectually empty, all power and no soul.

In the early modern period, many Europeans denigrated Jews for being a strange kind of society — too many intellectuals, too few people who worked with the hands.  Of course, it was medieval Europe that had forced the Jews to live that way.  But modern Jewish movements picked up the same criticism.  Jewish socialism and Labor Zionism wanted to remake the Jews, as modern industrious people who did depend on others to work the land and to build things.

When Yaakov comes dressed up in animal skins with food for his blind father, Yitzchak muses, "The voice is the voice of Yaakov but the arms are the arms of Esav" (Genesis 27:22).  To Yitzchak, the combination of the two sets of qualities didn't make any sense.  But today, it's the dichotomy that doesn't make sense, or shouldn't.

It's true that Jews are overrepresented in the Wall Street wrongs of the past few years.  Some will say that it's Jews living off the real labor of others.  That it's Yaakov cleverly trading some stew today for birthright-and-blessing, booming profits down the road.  But in New Hampshire you can see that Jews in fact do everything.  Your elders and your officials….your woodchoppers and waterdrawers (Deuteronomy 29:9-11).

We're a grounded, down-to-earth community capable of big thoughts, visions, and commitments as well.  Maybe what made Yaakov and Esav as youths both so dislikeable is the fact that both were forced to play only one type.  From our vantage point, we should be proud if we can have arms like Esav's when they are attached to the voice that would eventually mature inside Yaakov.



Leave a Reply

Discover more from Rabbi Jon 's Website and Blog

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading