TOLEDOT
5765-2004
"Digging Wells"
Rabbi Ephraim Buchwald
In
this week's parasha, parashat Toledot, we read of a
famine that once again strikes the land of Canaan, this
time during the lifetime of Isaac. Isaac, like his father
Abraham before him, goes down to the land of Avimelech,
King of Gerar, to find relief.
After
a brief sojourn in Gerar, Avimelech realizes that Isaac
is living with Rebeccah, not as a sister, but as a wife,
and berates Isaac for deceiving him and his people,
and almost causing them to sin. Isaac, however, is not
asked to leave the land.
Isaac
settles in Gerar, plants corn, and due to G-d's blessing,
reaps one hundredfold. Because of Isaac's "Midas
touch," he becomes staggeringly wealthy. The citizens
of Gerar soon become jealous of him, and begin to harass
him. Scripture tells us that the Philistines stopped
up all the wells that Abraham's servants had dug, filling
them with earth.
Finally,
Avimelech demands that Isaac leave Gerar because he
has become too mighty and too great. Poor, homeless
Isaac begins to wander in the valley of Gerar and starts
digging wells, uncovering the same stopped up wells
that his father, Abraham, had dug. Isaac makes a point
of calling the wells by the same names that his father
had called them.
Isaac's
servants continue to dig wells in the valley and find
fresh water. The shepherds of Gerar quarrel with Isaac's
shepherds, claiming that the water belongs to them.
Isaac calls that well Esek, which means "quarrel."
Isaac and his workers dig a second well, that was also
the subject of dispute, and is called Sitnah, which
means "enmity." Isaac then moves from that
location and digs another well. The new well was not
quarreled over, and Isaac calls the name of the well
Rechovot, (spacious), because now G-d has granted him
ample space, and he can now be fruitful in the land.
We
see that, especially in comparison to Abraham and Jacob,
Isaac appears to be rather passive. After being expelled
from Gerar, Isaac simply takes up a new profession,
or perhaps a hobby--digging wells. Of course, from a
business point of view, finding new sources of water
could be very lucrative, especially if the wells are
developed commercially to provide water for the local
inhabitants. The Torah does not indicate that Isaac
did anything entrepreneurial. The only thing the Torah
notes about the wells is that they were quarreled over,
and that Isaac named them appropriate names. The other
information the Torah shares is that Isaac went to the
locations of his father's wells and reopened them. Digging
wells, seems like a strange preoccupation for a great
Patriarch like Isaac, but perhaps not so strange for
someone of enormous wealth.
We
know that digging wells was something of a tradition
in Isaac's family. After all, it was Abraham's custom
to go around digging wells and calling out the name
of G-d. Wells, in ancient times, were known as gathering
places where young men fraternized, shepherds met shepherdesses,
and much internal information was exchanged. Like his
father Abraham, Isaac digs wells that provide water,
a vital source of life. But clearly the wells were not
only for water. Isaac, like Abraham, often names the
wells by invoking the name of G-d, so that the wells
might serve as "outreach posts"--virtual advertisements
for the monotheistic religion that the children of Abraham
were trying to propagate. It may not be at all presumptuous
to imagine the ancient marketing campaign and the advertisements
that were publicized, "Come to our wells, make
a blessing over the water," "Slake your thirst,
and pronounce the name of G-d." The wells served
as a place where wayfarers could refresh and relax and
be invited, in a non-threatening manner, to invoke the
name of G-d.
But
there may very well have been another reason that Isaac
dug these wells. In perhaps the first overt act of historical
anti-Semitism, Isaac had just been expelled from Gerar.
Avimelech, King of Gerar, says to Isaac brazenly,(Genesis
26:15) "Laych may'eeh'mah'noo, kee ah'tzam'tah
mee'meh'noo m'od," Get out of here because
you have become much mightier than we! Furthermore,
it is quite likely that this expulsion order was accompanied
by covert, and probably overt, expressions of anti-Semitism
on the part of the people of Gerar. Conceivably, anti-Semitic
graffiti appeared on the walls, and Isaac, and members
of his family, were subjected to frequent taunts of
"Dirty Jew." By digging the wells and calling
out in the name of G-d, Isaac made a bold statement
declaring, in effect, "If I am going to suffer
as a Jew, I will suffer as a proud Jew!" Rather
than get defensive or embarrassed, Isaac stands up tall,
with his big kippah on his head and his strong
public Jewish persona, and announces, "You may
taunt me, but I am, and always will be, proud to be
a Jew.
It
is told of Sylva Zalmenson, the famous Russian refusnik,
that when she was incarcerated for defying the all powerful
Russian government, she said that although she was never
a religious Jew, no morsel of non-kosher food would
pass through her lips as long as she is imprisoned as
a Jew. "As long as I suffer as a Jew," she
said, "I will live as a Jew."
Throughout
Jewish history, there have been numerous cases of Jews
trying to escape their destiny by changing their names
and their clothing, by hiding their Jewishness--like
the Conversos of Spain, and by outright conversion out
of Judaism.
Heinrich
Heine, (1797-1856) one of the greatest German poets
of all times, was certain that his conversion from Judaism
to Christianity would be the means for him to achieve
liberation and freedom. In one of his letters he wrote,
that he was not baptized because he believed in Christianity---but
rather that "Baptism is the ticket to entry into
European culture." By the end of his life, Heinrich
Heine realized that he was wrong, and wrote: "I
regret that I was baptized. Now I am hated by the Christians
and the Jews. And I don't see that it's helped me very
much!"
When
Isaac's servants dug the wells, they encountered resistance
from the Philistines. However when Isaac digs the wells
himself, and asserts himself proudly and publicly as
a Jew (Genesis 26:22), there was no resistence.
There
is a bitter lesson to be learned from history: Jews
are most respected by non-Jews when they respect themselves,
and most detested when they detest themselves. There
is no escaping Jewish destiny. It is therefore imperative
to conduct one's life in an ethical and moral manner,
so that one can hold one's head up high and proudly
say, "I am a Jew. I am a Jew. I am a Jew."
May
you be blessed.