Sharing The
Blessing
Isaac’s decision
to bless both of his sons gives us hope for achieving a peaceful solution to
the conflict between Jews and Palestinians.
By Rabbi Dan Bronstein
The following article is reprinted with permission from SocialAction.com.
Even by biblical standards, few statements are as stark
as God's words to Rebecca after the matriarch had conceived twins. "Two
nations are in your womb," God explains, "And two peoples shall be
separated...And the elder shall serve the younger."
Indeed, few Biblical struggles,
few familial conflicts--in a book filled with stories of intra-family
struggles--are as tragic as the confrontation between Jacob and Esau.
It seems that from that moment,
the twin brothers clashed and competed over the family birthright and legacy.
The twin grandsons of Abraham and Sarah were, from their birth onwards, locked
in a constant struggle over inheriting the prophetic mantle of Abraham and
Sarah, inheriting the leadership over the family, and of course, inheriting the
riches of the land which God had first promised to Abraham.
As the Torah portion Toledot
unfolds, we witness Jacob, the younger brother, gaining through guile what had
first been granted to Esau by virtue of being born first. Together, Jacob and
Rebecca successfully conspire to transfer the blessing Isaac had intended for
Esau over to the younger brother. More than being mere words, Isaac's blessing
was critical because it served as the instrument for bestowing the family
legacy, leadership, and ownership of the land.
Yet, in the end, we read that
Isaac also rejects playing a zero sum game and grants an alternative blessing
to Esau. Although the two blessings are not identical, Isaac, nonetheless,
chooses to depart from the tradition of granting a single blessing to his eldest
son and instead blesses both of his children.
Some of the sages are puzzled over
the multiple blessings, while others attribute Isaac's actions to a father's
compassion for a grieving child. But whatever the reasons, Isaac's deed offers
us an important lesson in the contemporary struggle for peace. Far from being a
perfect analogy, there are still many elements in this story all too
reminiscent of the conflict between Jews and Palestinians.
This present-day conflict is also
the story of two nations at war with one another from the moment of conception.
And as the tragic violence continues between the contemporary nations, we are
also reminded that Jacob and Esau also fought over being blessed with the Land.
Finally, we are reminded that along with Jacob and Esau, Jews and Arabs are
also descendents of Abraham. Like Jacob and Esau, today's conflict seems
unsolvable, and we lament over being locked into what appears to be an eternal
struggle.
However, Isaac's blessings for
Jacob and Esau leave us with a measure of hope, even now when many despair of
ever achieving peace in the holy land. Isaac blesses both sons with
inheritances of fruitful land. Facing different circumstances and possessing
different traits, both twins nevertheless receive their father's blessing--and
with it a measure of hope for future descendents of Abraham.
One Jewish tradition teaches that
possession of sufficient food and drink is of itself a profound blessing.
Still, "if there is no peace," argued our sages, "there is
nothing at all, for "peace equals all else." Today, we must also
reject facile zero sum games, and find ways to share the blessings.
While we may possess sufficient
sustenance, we still live without peace. Today, against expectations and
against the odds, we also must struggle to share the blessings of our ancestors
and to share in the blessings of the land. Now more, than ever, let us remember
Isaac's deeds, and remember that ultimately, "peace equals all else."
Rabbi
Daniel Bronstein was ordained at the Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of
Religion and is presently a Ph.D. candidate in Jewish History at the Jewish
Theological Seminary of America. He also presently serves as a Program Officer
and Educator at the Jewish Life Network, and counts Rabbi Yisroel Salanter and
Groucho Marx as among his two greatest influences.