The Roots of Strength
Posted on
December 3, 2020 (5781) By Rabbi Naftali Reich | Series: Legacy |
Level: Beginner
Yiddishe
nachas – two words so full of Jewish meaning that they defy translation into
any other language. Yiddishe nachas is that special blend of pride, joy and
satisfaction that Jewish parents feel when they look at their successful
children and remember all the effort that went into them. It is a sigh and a smile
grafted together.
Child rearing is never easy, especially in Jewish families
that demand so much from
their children. Even in the best of circumstances, molding a
child into a sensitive, responsible person is not only a rewarding experience
but also a harrowing ordeal that last for some twenty years. And should
problems arise – as they often do – the ordeal can become next to unbearable.
Why is this so? We don’t find such extended periods of child
rearing among any other species in the
world. The young are born, they are kept under their mother’s figurative wing for a few hours or days or weeks, and
they’re off on their own. Humans, however, are helpless for the first few years
of life and heavily dependent on their parents for many years afterwards. We
find the same disparity in childbirth itself. All species give birth quickly
and easily – except for humans. Why did Hashem see fit to bring the little
bundles of joys into the world by such a
painful process? And why did he give them such a long period of dependency?
Perhaps we can find the answers in this week’s parshah. As
Rachel feels her life ebbing away after a very difficult childbirth, she looks
at her newborn son and with her last gasping breaths she names him Ben Oni,
“the child of my affliction.” But Jacob does not accept this name for his son.
Instead, he names him Ben Yamin (Benjamin), “the child of the right hand.” Why
didn’t Jacob allow the child to carry the name his mother had given him with
her dying breath?
The Ramban explains that Jacob was not rejecting the name
Rachel had chosen. Rather, he was focusing on one specific aspect of it. The
word oni means both affliction and strength, and these two concepts are very
closely related. Strength is inevitably the result of affliction. Solid results
of lasting value can only be achieved through toil, sweat and tears. Therefore,
Jacob chose to name his son Ben Yamin, because the right hand symbolizes
strength, which goes hand in hand with affliction.
Human beings are infinitely higher than the creatures of the
animal kingdom. They cannot be formed
with a snap of the fingers. It takes years and decades of careful nurturing and
education to produce this wondrous creature known as a human being. And the
more effort invested the greater the reward.
A man once came to visit a principal of a large school. As he
waited in the office, he saw the principal in the hallway surrounded by
children clamoring for his attention. The principal responded to each of the
children with patience and a kind word. When they had all gone, he came in to greet his visitor.
“I don’t know how you manage it,” the visitor commented. “I
would go out of my mind if I had to go through every day with dozens of little
kids screaming in my ears. You must be climbing the walls!”
“Not at all, my friend,” said the principal. “Each of these
children is an unpolished diamond. I spend years shaping, smoothing, polishing
and buffing these precious little diamonds in the rough, and by the time they
leave me, I can see them glittering from within. Which of these little diamonds
would you have me discard?”
We all have our own shares of troubles in life, but we should
view them as obstacles to overcome on the road to personal fulfillment. Each
obstacle is an opportunity for growth, depending on how we respond to it. Like
Rachel, we must recognize the afflictions that are part of life, and like
Jacob, we must see in them the roots of a strength that will make it all
worthwhile.
Text
Copyright © 2006 by Rabbi Naftali Reich and Torah.org.
Rabbi Reich is on the faculty of
the Ohr Somayach
Tanebaum Education Center.
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