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We hear enough about Jacob's wives Leah and Rachel to get to know
them a little bit. Leah is silent at first but becomes eloquent as she names
her
children, lamenting that her husband does not love her. Rachel has
Jacob's
love but desperately desires children and becomes relentless in her
pursuit
of fertility, finally dying as she births her second son Benjamin. We
hear
a good deal less about Jacob's concubines Bilhah and Zilpah. And we
hear
nothing at all about the wives of Jacobıs rejected twin Esau. Who are
the
Canaanite women, named Bosmat and Yehudit, who displease Isaac and
Rebecca?
Who is the daughter of Ishmael, Machalat, whom Esau marries to appease
his
father? If we investigate further, we may learn that Machalat helps
Esau to
find a blessing.
In Parashat Toldot, Isaac seeks to give his elder son Esau, whom he
loves best, a firstborn's blessing. But Rebecca, Isaacıs wife, who
loves
the younger son Jacob and who has received an oracle that Jacob will
rule
his brother, convinces Jacob to wear goat skins, simulating Esau's hairy
skin, and trick the blind Isaac. Jacob brings Isaac freshly-killed
meat, as
Esau was supposed to do, and claims he is Esau. His blind father,
though
suspicious, blesses Jacob with wealth, prosperity, and dominion over his
brothers. When Esau discovers the ruse, he is heartbroken. He begs his
father for another blessing, and Isaac gives him one, but it is a lesser
blessing. Esau is so angry he wants to kill Jacob. To save her
favorite
son, Rebecca goes to Isaac and tells him to send Jacob far away, to her
family, to find a wife. Isaac sends Jacob off, reminding him not to
marry a
Canaanite woman. Esau, knowing that his father is angry about Esau's
foreign wives, marries his grandfatherıs son's daughter, Machalat.
Is this a good move? We could imagine that Isaac and Rebecca would
be
pleased that Esau has married a relative, just as Jacob will soon do.
Isaac, who saw his brother Ishmael exiled when both men were children,
may
be delighted to welcome a member of Ishmael's family into his household.
There are even midrashim, legends, that Isaac went to visit his brother
Ishmael and try to convince him to come home. So maybe this is a sign
of
repentance for Esau, and some ancient rabbis say that the name Machalat,
"forgiveness," means that Esau was forgiven when he married her (Genesis
Rabbah 67:13). Or, perhaps, Esau is making a foolish, or even a
spiteful,
move. Abraham and Sarah rejected Ishmael and his mother Hagar,
Abraham's
concubine. Esau now brings a daughter of the rejected Ishmael into the
house, on top of his already offensive Canaanite wives. Some ancient
rabbis
argue that if Esau really meant to make his parents happy, he should
have
divorced his first wives (Genesis Rabbah 67:13).
But while some people do get married to please or spite their
parents,
it is also possible to choose a life partner because that person gives
you
something unique. We donıt know what Machalat's personality is, but we
can
speculate. What might Machalat have given Esau that he needed?
One thing we know about Machalat is that she is Ishmael's daughter,
and
therefore she understands what it is to be rejected. Her father and
grandmother were forced into the desert, nearly dying of thirst, because
Sarah, Abraham's wife, did not want Ishmael to inherit Abraham's
blessing
and possessions Sarah wanted Isaac to inherit. So Machalat knows how
Esau
feels. She may be able to give him empathy and understanding that no
one
else can give him. Machalat's empathy may help to heal Esau of his deep
bitterness and we know that Esau is healed, because in Parashat
Vayishlach,
when Jacob and Esau meet again after many years, Esau is no longer
angry, he
embraces his brother and forgives him.
Machalat also is Hagar's granddaughter. Hagar is one of the only
women
in Genesis to talk to God, and she is the only person in Genesis to give
God
a name, she calls God El-Ro'i, God of seeing, when she has a vision near
a
well that she will give birth to a son. Machalat calls the son she has
with
Esau Reu'el, "See God!" The similarity between Hagar's name for God and
Machalat's name for her son shows that Machalat is spiritually connected
to
the God of her grandmother. She has successfully inherited a way of
speaking to God one might even say that she has inherited a blessing.
So
Machalat has spiritual wisdom to offer Esau, and she can also show him
how
to connect with his family. It must be hard for Esau to trust her after
he
has been rejected by his mother, father, and brother, but perhaps it is
her
wisdom and kindness that allow Esau to finally reach out to his brother
Jacob.
In later chapters of the Torah, it turns out that Machalat has two
names Machalat and Bosmat. Machalat can mean "illness." Bosmat can
mean
"herb." Shoshana Jedwab, who studied this text with me, pointed out to
me
that Machalat/Bosmat embodies Esau's illness (the pain of his rejection)
and
his medicinal cure (wisdom and compassion). Our families and loved ones
know us well enough to understand what causes us pain, and therefore we
turn
to them for comfort and closeness when we are hurting. The message of
Machalat bat Ishmael is that even when we are distrustful, angry and
suffering, we can still reach out to those who understand us. |