All In The
Family
Jacob’s decision
to bless each of his sons individually highlights the need to balance unity
with diversity.
By Rabbi Elyse Winnick
The following article is reprinted with permission from Hillel: The Foundation for Jewish Campus Life.
Has there ever been a more dysfunctional family recorded in
history than ours? Probably, but the fact that our forebears were distinctly
human is a source of comfort and strength, both offering us guidance in what to
do (and what not to do) and validating the challenges of our day-to-day lives.
Parshat Vayehi gives the notion of family, and the diversity therein, great
clarity.
His family reunited, Jacob calls
his sons together for a fond (mostly) farewell. Each receives a blessing of
sorts, or at least a bird's eye view into his future.
Genesis 49:1-27
Jacob called his sons and said,
"Gather together that I may declare to you what lies before you in time to
come.
Gather around, sons of Jacob, and listen; listen to Israel your father."
Reuben, you are my first-born... you shall not be foremost, for you mounted
your father's bed...
Simon and Levi are brothers, they carried out their malicious plans.... I will
scatter them among Israel.
Judah, your brothers shall praise you...
Zebulon lives by the shore of the sea...
Isachar is a strong ass.... He became a slave to forced labor.
Dan is a judge of his people....
Gad, robbers rob him, and he, he robs and pursues them.
Asher, his bread is rich, he provides food fit for a king.
Naphtali is a swift hind, dropping beautiful fawns.
Joseph is a fruitful creeper near the spring.... May [blessings] descend on
Joseph's head...
Benjamin is a ravening wolf....
Torah Navigator
1. We can look at each of
Jacob's sons, the 12 tribes of Israel and assign 12 different personality types
to our students, or even twelve different ways that each student may present
him or herself at any given time. What can we learn from Jacob's approach that
we can import into our own life's work?
2. How do we not only
effectively master the balance between communal and individual needs in our
work, but also model and teach that challenge to our students who will often
find themselves in the same position? (For an interesting insight on this
question, see page 256 in The Orchid Thief, by Susan Orlean)
3. The more difficult challenge
may actually be rendering all the individual personalities into a single klal,
or whole. The United States Army is now changing its slogan from "Be all
that you can be" to "An army of one," responding to the powerful
force of individualism in our society. What links us together? Is it religion?
Culture? Anthropologist Clifford Geertz wrote that "sacred symbols
synthesize a people's ethos." How can we present these symbols as
personally meaningful as well as communally binding?
4. As the last parashah in the
book of Bereshit, we conclude the reading of Parashat Vayehi with the words,
"Hazak, hazak, v'nithazek," "Be strong, be strong and let
us strengthen one another." How does the Torah answer our questions about
the source of that strength?
A Thought
Jacob speaks to each son
individually, offering a comment on that son's strengths, gifts and abilities,
and in some cases, weaknesses. It would have been far easier to offer a
generalized hope for their futures, but Jacob opts to make the moment
personally meaningful for each son.
I'm reminded of the recent New
York Times obituary for Millicent McIntosh, former president of Barnard
College, who completed her life's work last week at the ripe old age of 102.
The obituary noted that she initially sent each of her five children to a
different school, reflecting each child's needs and personality. She gave up
one year, after attending five different Christmas pageants at five different
schools and thinking she couldn't bear to hear "Silent Night" even
one more time. The children were consolidated into a single school. At that
point the needs of the family as a whole needed to supercede the needs of the
individual.
Whether we are talking about five, 12 or more, the effort to balance the needs
of the individual with the needs of the group is ongoing. We are most effective
when we can make the moment personally meaningful, but we are lost if we do so
to the detriment of establishing a connection to the larger whole.
It's funny to think of Parashat Vayehi as the end of the beginning. It is the
end of the stories of the patriarchs and matriarchs, but it is the precursor to
the experience of enslavement and exodus. (See the Semisonic's song
"Closing Time"--"every new beginning comes from some other
beginning's end.")
We begin the enslavement
experience as individuals, represented by Jacob's twelve sons and even after
years of bondage, we leave Egypt as an erev rav, a mixed multitude. The
incorporating experience which focuses more attention on the "Israel"
in our name rather than the "b'nei" (as in b'nei Israel, the
children of Israel) is the revelation at Sinai.
Even at Sinai, the midrash tells
us, God spoke in one voice, but each person heard God's words in a way that was
personally meaningful. Jacob's parting words are a foreshadowing of that
moment, an understanding that unity and diversity are not mutually exclusive.
They are a charge to us to leave no member of our extended family behind as we
grow forward, together, toward a greater good.
Prepared by Rabbi Elyse Winnick, Associate Director, KOACH.
Provided by Hillel’s
Joseph Meyerhoff Center for Jewish Learning, which creates innovative
educational resources based on Jewish texts and trains Hillel students,
professionals, and lay leaders to infuse Jewish content throughout their
activities. © 2002 Hillel: The Foundation for Jewish Campus Life.