The Past and the Future
Parshas Chayei Sarah
Posted on November 14, 2014
(5775) By Rabbi Berel Wein | Series: Rabbi Wein | Level: Beginner
The loss of one’s beloved spouse, especially after
many years and decades of marriage and shared life, is always a traumatic and
shattering blow. Those of us, who unfortunately have also experienced this in
our own lives, can testify as to the emotional damage and even physical harm
that this sad experience can occasion.
We see from the life of our father Jacob that even
decades later he reminds his children and himself of the pain and suffering
caused by the death of his beloved wife, Rachel. In essence, it seems that
Jacob never again was the same person after the death of Rachel.
Avraham apparently dealt with
the death of Sarah in a more stoic fashion. The Torah itself indicates this by
inference. In reference to Avraham’s reaction to the tragedy, a small letter
kaf is used to describe the grief and weeping of Avraham over the death of
Sarah. It is not that Avraham is less grieved at the loss of Sarah than Jacob
was at the death of Rachel. It is rather that after all of the challenges and
trials that Avraham had endured his attitude towards life and its vicissitudes
was affected – he now always looked forward and never dwelt on the past.
Those who live exclusively in the past are doomed
to self-pity and great emotional angst. This only causes a sense of victimhood
and hopelessness. It reflects itself in every aspect of later life and stunts
any further spiritual, social, personal or societal growth.
The greatness of Avraham, as taught us by the
Mishnah, was his resilience and continued spiritual and personal growth.
Avraham constantly looked forward, ahead – never dwelling on past misfortune.
I heard an outstanding speech delivered by George
Deek, who is a Christian Arab and member of the Israeli Foreign Office. In telling
the story of his life, he describes how his family lived in Jaffa for many
generations and how they fled to Lebanon during the 1948 War of Independence.
Sensing the squalor and political manipulation of
the refugees by the Arab powers, whose sole goal was the destruction of Israel
and not saving and resettling the refugees, his grandfather escaped Lebanon and
somehow brought the family back to Jaffa and Israel. He regained his job with
the Israel Electric Company and raised generations of successful professionals,
all citizens of Israel.
He said that the Jewish refugees from Europe and
the Moslem world attempted to forget their past and build a new future for
themselves and their descendants when they arrived in Israel. The Palestinian
Arab refugees, under the misguided leadership of their spiritual and temporal
heads, reveled instead in their past defeats and in their legend of nakba.
In the main, they have
devoted themselves to attempting to destroy Israel instead of rehabilitating
themselves. This attitude and mindset has served them badly and cost them
dearly. The past needs to be remembered and recalled, treasured and instructive
to us. However, it is the future and what we make of it that ultimately
determines our worth and our fate. That is one of the great lessons to be
derived from the story of the life of our father Avraham.
Shabbat shalom
Rabbi Berel Wein
Yitzchok and Rivka Build a Family
Parshas
Chayei Sarah
Posted on November 10, 2009
(5770) By Rabbi Berel Wein | Series: Rabbi Wein | Level: Beginner
Death is not only tragic for those intimately
affected it also always poses problems of succession and reorganization of the
family, company or institution. Avraham and Sarah, the founders of the Jewish
nation pass from the scene in this week’s parsha. They are succeeded by
Yitzchak and Rivka and in fact the majority of the parsha concerns itself with
how Yitzchak marries Rivka and they establish their new home together.
In personality, temperament and action Yitzchak
and Rivka differ markedly from Avraham and Sarah. Whereas Avraham and Sarah
devoted themselves to reaching as many outsiders as they could and were
actively engaged in spreading the idea of monotheism in the surrounding
society, Yitzchak and Rivka seem to take a more conservative approach. They
attempted to consolidate what they accomplished and to build a family nation
rather than to try to attract more strangers to their cause.
As we will see in next week’s parsha the struggle
of Yitzchak and Rivka is an internal family struggle as how to raise Eisav and
Yaakov and guarantee the continuity of the ideas and beliefs of Avraham and
Sarah through their biological offspring. Eventually it is only through Yaakov
that Avraham and Sarah continue and become the blessing that the Lord promised
that they would be. The world struggle that engaged Avraham and Sarah becomes a
struggle within Avraham and Sarah’s family itself.
It becomes abundantly clear that the main struggle
of the Jewish people will be to consolidate itself and thus influence the
general world by osmosis, so to speak. The time of Avraham and Sarah has passed
and new times require different responses to the challenges of being a blessing
to all of humankind.
There are those in the Jewish world who are
committed to “fixing the world” at the expense of Jewish traditional life and
Torah law. Yet the simple truth is that for the Jewish people to be effective
in influencing the general society for good there must be a strong and
committed Jewish people. King Solomon in Shir Hashirim warns us that “I have
watched the vineyards of others but I have neglected guarding my own vineyard.”
The attempted destruction and deligitimization
of the Jewish people or the State of Israel, G-d forbid, in order to further
fuzzy, do-good, universal humanistic ideas is a self-destructive viewpoint of
the purpose of Judaism. Without Jews there is no Judaism and without Judaism
there is no true moral conscience left in the world. Therefore it seems evident
to me that the primary imperative of Jews today is to strengthen and support
Jewish family life, Jewish Torah education and the state of Israel.
We are in the generations of Yitzchak and Rivka and
therefore we have to strengthen our resources and build ourselves first. We
have as yet not made good the population losses of the holocaust seventy years
ago! If there will be a strong and numerous Jewish people then the age of
Avraham and Sarah will reemerge. The tasks of consolidation of Jewish life as
represented by the lives of Yitzchak and Rivka should be the hallmark of our
generation as well.
Shabat shalom.
Rabbi Berel Wein
No comments:
Post a Comment