A Thought on the Parasha
Feel free to download and print
the Parashat
Chaye Sarah sheet and share it with your friends and family.
This column, originally published in
2014, speaks directly to issues that have arisen this week regarding the right
of women to serve in positions of religious leadership. As such, we feel it
appropriate to rerun it now as part of the ongoing dialogue on this critical
subject.
Was
Rivka a (Gasp!) Feminist?
When Avraham charges his
servant to find a wife for Yitzchak, the servant asks a strange question:
"Perhaps the woman will not desire to follow me to this land. Should
I return your son to the land which you came from?" (Breishit,
24:5). The servant's concern that the woman might resist is unexpected.
Laws appearing later in the Torah make it clear that a father controls and
speaks for his daughter, but here, the father and his possible refusal to give
his daughter is not an issue. The possibility that Yitzchak will be asked
to go live with his wife is also considered. This is quite strange, as normally
the woman would have been taken into the husband's home. Certainly there
must have been exceptions, but the more natural question would have been:
"If she refuses, can I then find a wife from somewhere else?" It
seems that Avraham's servant knew something about this particular society that
shaped his concerns, focused as they were on how the woman would act and what
she would demand.
Questions of the place
of women in Aram society come up again when the servant arrives there and
interacts with Rivka and her family. After Rivka passes his test by
offering water for him and his camels, the servant asks her, "Whose
daughter are you?" She responds, "I am the daughter of Betuel, who is
the son of Milkah, whom she bore to Nachor." This manner of familial
identification is a departure from the norm. A classic example of identification
by father can be found at the beginning of next week's parasha:
"These are the generations of Yitzchak the son of Avraham, Avraham begat
Yitzchak" (25:19). Following this, Rivka's answer would have been,
"I am the daughter of Betuel, the son of Nachor." What is
Milkah's name doing here?
Milkah actually showed
up at the end of last week's parasha as well. "After these things it
was told to Avraham saying, behold Milkah has given birth to Nachor your
brother" (22:20). Notice again the unusual focus on the mother. It seems
that the family structure is different in Aram Naharaim. This society is not a
patriarchy, where a child is identified through his or her father and
genealogies come in the form of father-son, father-son. Aram Naharaim seems to
be a matriarchy, a society in which the family structure is defined by the
mother. (I owe this insight to Nancy Jay's book, Throughout Your
Generations Forever: Sacrifice, Religion, and Paternity.)
A matriarchal society is
not necessarily one in which mothers hold political power. In fact, there is
doubt as to whether a society has ever existed in which women are the
holders of political power. Rather, a matriarchal society is one in which
family lines are defined by matrilineal descent, one in which women do, as a
result, have more rights and a greater voice. The benefit of this
structure is obvious: In such societies, the question of the identity of a
person's father - which can always be in doubt - was nullified. It was the
identity of the mother that mattered, and this was always known. The head
of the household would not be the (presumed) father but the mother's brother or
her oldest son. Thus, while a man was at the head, the matriarchal
structure removed the anxiety around paternity that existed in patriarchal
societies. Consider Rashi's comment on the verse, "Avraham begat
Yitzchak": "Since the mockers of the generation were saying that
Sarah had been impregnated by Avimelekh....God formed Yitzchak's facial
appearance to be similar to Avraham's, so that all could testify that Avraham
had sired Yitzchak" (25:19).
We can now understand
why Rivka identifies herself as the granddaughter of Milkah. However, when
the servant repeats the story, he reframes Rivka's answer in his own cultural
norms: "And she said, 'I am the daughter of Betuel the son of Nachor, whom
Milkah bore to him'" (24:47). While Rivka said that Betuel was the
"son of Milkah," in the servant's version he is the "son of
Nachor," just as he would be described in a patriarchal society.
Similarly, the servant
asks Rivka, "Does your father's house have a place for us to
stay?" (24:24). What is Rivka's response? "And she said to him,
'We have much straw and fodder, and also a place to
sleep'" (24:25). For Rivka, there was no "father's house";
in her society the father was simply not in the picture. Thus, when Rivka
leaves the servant we read, "And the young woman ran and she told her
mother's household according to these events" (24:28). This is
perhaps the most revealing verse of all. Rashi notes how unusual it is to refer
to a "mother's household" and resolves this problem by interpreting
the phrase to mean a physical house or room that a mother had to herself,
saying that Rivka ran to such a place to confide these events to her
mother. There is no question, however, that the simple sense of the verse
is that it was her mother's household; the mother, not the father, was at the
head of, or defined, the household.
In fact, Rivka's father,
Betuel, is quite invisible in this entire episode. It is not Betuel who
greets the servant but Lavan, Rivka's brother. And when the servant
completes his story, we read that "Lavan and Betuel responded, 'From God
has this matter come!'" (24:50). Why is Lavan, the brother, mentioned
before Betuel, the father? In this society, the brother and mother head
the family, not the father. And thus, the servant gives gifts not to the
father, but to Rivka's "brother and mother" (24:53).
It thus comes as no
surprise that the father is nowhere to be found when the final decision is
made: "And her brother and her mother said, 'Let the lass stay with
us a year or ten months" (24:55). Rashi, assuming the norms of a
patriarchal society, asks, "And where was Betuel?" His answer:
"Betuel wanted to refuse to give Rivka and an angel came and smote him
dead." As we have seen, this question disappears once we realize that we
are dealing with a matriarchal society. This is also why Lavan and Rivka's
mother send Rivka away and bless her, referring to her as "sister"
and not daughter (24:59-60). With Lavan as the head of the family, Rivka is the
family's sister, not its daughter.
Returning now to the
beginning of the parasha, we can understand why Avraham's servant was concerned
that the woman would stay put and Yitzchak would be asked to relocate, and why
he was concerned about what the woman, and not her father, would say. For
in matriarchal societies, the husband would move into the woman's house and
women had a voice regarding their fate. And, lo and behold, we find that unlike
cases in which a father marries off his daughter unilaterally, here, when the
critical moment comes, the final decision is given to Rivka. "And
they said: Let us call the lass, and ask for her answer" (24:57). In fact,
this is a value that finds its way into halakha. It is from this that
the Sages learn that a father is forbidden to marry off his underage daughter,
that he must wait until she is an adult and can choose her own husband (Rashi
and Nachalat Yaakov, Breishit, 24:57 and Kiddushin 41a).
Perhaps this helps
explain why Avraham was so insistent on the servant going to Aram. Maybe
Avraham wanted to make sure that Yitzchak's wife would be a woman who had a
voice of her own. Avraham had learned this lesson well: "Everything
that Sarah tells you, listen to her voice" (21:12). Sarah, also from
Aram, did what was necessary to ensure the survival of her family. And for
this family, this new religion, to succeed, it would require not just strong
men, but strong women as well. It would require women like Sarah and
Rivka. For as we will read in next week's parasha, it was Rivka who, using
her strength and her voice and finding a way to operate in a patriarchal
society, followed in Sarah's ways and acted to ensure the continuity of the
Jewish family.
It is unhealthy to have
only men in positions of power. We need to learn to follow Avraham's example,
to seek out strong women, to seek out women's voices, to be led collaboratively
by men and women working to ensure our survival as a people who will sanctify
God's name in the world.
Shabbat
Shalom!
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