Vayeitzei
by Rabbi Chaim Dovid Green
A Torah scroll does not contain the familiar kind of punctuation which we
are used to seeing in a paragraph in English. Instead, the main form of
punctuation is done with spaces. There are two functions for these spaces
as follows. The appearance of the text in a Torah Scroll is that of a
vertical rectangle, or pillar. This is achieved by beginning and ending
most lines in alignment with eachother. The Torah Scroll is made up of many
such pillars. When a topic comes to an end, the words stop before the end
of a line, and the remainder of the line is left open. The new topic begins
on the next line in this case. When a new yet related topic begins, the
line is not open at the end, but a significant space is left between the
words.
This week's parsha is the only parsha that does not have these paragraph
breaks within it. The Sfas Emes takes note of this and offers the following
explanation. Yaakov, our forefather, left Be'er Sheva and his pious
parents, to go to Charan. He knew he would encounter his uncle, Lavan, who
did not by any means espouse the same values as his parents. Nevertheless,
Yaakov remained the same Yaakov that he was from the time he left Be'er
Sheva until he returned to his father 22 years later. Yaakov's goals and
his relationship with G-d remained the same through all those years. His
lifestyle throughout that time reflected his direction and goal orientation.
The aforementioned idea is alluded to by the lack of interruptions in this
week's portion. The entire time that Yaakov spent in Charan was one
consistent unit in his life as a servant of G-d. It was one continuous era
beginning with his life while drinking from the spiritual Be'er
(wellsprings) in Be'er Sheva, and ending with the very same. Yaakov teaches
us by example that in every new situation we find ourselves in we must
follow our values and be true to our morals, rather than allow our
surroundings to influence our behaviors and attitudes.
It was 1945. The German army was retreating. In their "employ" was a
battalion of Jews who whose job it was to help the Germans dismantle and
destroy anything of value that might contribute to the allied war effort
against them as they retreated. It was the eve of Yom Kippur. This group of
Jews had decided that come what may, they would not violate the prohibition
of eating on this holy day. When given their morning "coffee", they quietly
poured it out on the ground, and they saved their meager rations for after
the fast. It seemed to have turned out a success until after the day came
to a close. Their captors had discovered their secret. The German soldiers
offered them an alternative. Anyone who steps forward and shows regret
publicly for having fasted will not be punished. Not one person stepped
forward. As a punishment they were taken to a hill which at the time was
wet and muddy, and were forced to slide down the hill on their bare
stomachs. Again the offer was made to show regret, and again not one Jew
stepped forward. This repeated itself numerous times and not one Jew gave
in and showed regret for having fasted on Yom Kippur...
What is the basis of our attitudes and actions? Are we directed by internal
values, or do we allow the expectations of our peer groups to shape our own
expectations of ourselves? Do we really feel that we are doing enough to
live up to our own personal values, or do we satisfy ourselves as being
relatively good? Yaakov teaches us that our value system should be
independent of the prevailing attitudes and practices of the society we
find ourselves in.
Good Shabbos!
Text Copyright © 1998 Rabbi Dovid Green and
Project Genesis, Inc.