Lessons from Jacob on War and Peace
I feel guilty. When I finished writing last week’s article
and I heard about the tragic news from Chevron, I was overcome
with regrets over my own complacency. What are you doing waxing
philosophical about… sheep, when lives are being torn from
our midst, in a senseless madness that has consumed the Middle
East?
Insanity has become the norm, and we here in
America delude ourselves into thinking that this is not about
us, as we go about our ‘sane’ and organized lives, even as
innocent people – this time teenagers on a bus in Jerusalem
– are being blown up.
Where is this headed and are we doomed to a
desolate future of more and more killings?!
And what are we to do about it?
Honestly, though I receive many compliments
for my weekly e-mail articles, I cannot bring myself to write
about anything else when this obvious crisis slaps us in the
face just when we thought were safe behind our complacency.
I for one do not want to be remembered for silence
and inaction in face of what is happening to our brothers
and sisters in the Holy Land. We are repulsed enough by the
silence 60 years ago when our brethren were being exterminated
in Europe…
What will I – and you – tell my (our) children
when they ask us: What did you do?!…
So this week I asked our editor, Neria, to perhaps
find something from our archives to send out in our weekly
e-mail, so that I don’t have to sit down and write misplaced
ideas when an uncontrollable fire is burning down the house.
But then I realized my own cowardice. “No way,”
I said to myself, “you cannot be silent. You must write and
express precisely these feelings. If nothing else, you will
at least leave a document that you cared.”
More importantly, believing that the Torah is
our blueprint for life, doesn’t the Torah have something to
say about how to deal with, and what we can do about, the
current situation?
Challenges always bring out the best in us.
I immediately realized that this week’s Torah portion speaks
directly to our situation today.
Jacob is faced with a formidable confrontation.
He is about to meet his twin brother and mortal enemy, Esau,
from whom he had to escape 20 years ago in fear of his life
after stealing the blessings from Esau. Frightened and distressed,
Jacob prays to G-d to rescue him from Esau. Jacob also prepares
for war with Esau. Finally he prepares a bribe to appease
Esau his brother.
Why does Jacob need all three methods, especially
considering that he prayed for help, why then would he need
other approaches?
The answer: Faith and prayer are not just for
losers and weak people. Faith is not a mere crutch and escape.
True faith dictates that coupled and driven by your faith
you do everything in your power, in the natural realm, you
use every possible intervention to solve the problem.
Jacob therefore covers all the bases and scenarios.
He begins with prayer, but he also prepares for war, the worst
case scenario, one of last resort, yet still a distinct possibility
considering that Esau is marching toward him with an army!
And then he prepares a bribe, a gift that will appease Esau.
Thankfully, Jacob needs only the first and third interventions
(prayer and gifts) to cause Esau to reconcile with him.
Therein lies the lesson for us in facing adversaries
today, both personally and collectively.
The first thing we must do is pray. We must
establish our connection with G-d and recognize that the foundation
of any success lies in our absolute conviction that our cause
is right and Divine.
You can have all the tools and weapons in the
world, you can devise the best schemes, but if you don’t believe
in your cause, and you don’t believe that you can and will
prevail, you will not be able to achieve victory. Case in
point: America in Vietnam. Victory is for those that believe
in it the most. Persistence will always win over complacency.
A committed individual is more powerful than a hundred uncommitted.
Prayer is the foundation – to establish the
absoluteness of your cause, and turn to G-d with this firm
belief and ask G-d to ensure your success.
Faith then dictates and infuses you with the
fortitude to do whatever it takes, everything humanly possible
to ensure victory. Faith is not an escape into fantasy; as
you look up to heaven in prayer your feet remain grounded
on Earth. You aren’t naïve or in denial about the realities
around you, and you leave no stone unturned. You prepare for
war if necessary, in the worst case scenario. You also devise
schemes that may appease the enemy – without compromising
yourself – and solve the problem without having to actually
go to war.
But you must prepare and be ready to do whatever
it takes.
In Israel today the single most important foundation
(that sadly appears as if it may often be missing) is that
our cause is just. We are absolutely convinced that we belong
in the land and that the lands belongs to us. The only right
that the Jewish people have to Israel is the fact that it
was given to them by G-d (see the first Rashi in the Torah),
and they have historically lived there since the times of
Abraham. Take away this element and you have a very arbitrary
claim.
We must all first establish the absoluteness
of our mission and cause. It would do us all well to begin
with a prayer – to connect to G-d and ask for His assistance
in our time of need. We pray not only that G-d should protect
us - that is a necessary prayer and one which we offer with
our complete hearts - but even before you begin to pray, before
you have the right to pray, you must be able to say that you
believe in the cause, or else the prayer is just words. We
must feel that what we pray for is right and should be granted
to us. And if you don’t feel that, perhaps you should pray
that you acquire that confidence.
Then, we must be prudent and realistic. As Jacob,
we must send out messengers to assess the intentions of our
adversary. Sadly today, we don’t need messengers; the intentions
are quite clear. And resultantly, we must do whatever it takes
to defend ourselves. If it’s war so be it. Not because we
want it, but because it’s been thrust upon us. What is unhealthy
is to delude yourself into false hopes of appeasement, when
war has been declared and waged against you.
If war is avoidable and you can in some way
appease your adversary – not by giving away precious land
that is necessary for security and puts you further at risk
– but in other modes of mutual cooperation, then of course,
that takes precedent. But once you have been attacked, and
not once, but time and again, and it doesn’t end, you must
stop that threat. Once the other side is ready to stop the
war, you can find ways to appease them that don’t put you
at any risk.
Indeed, though prayer is the foundation, we
find that Jacob actually begins by preparing for war even
before his prayer. Because when life is at risk, protecting
life is the first priority. Then, when you have mobilized
your army and are ready for any possible attack, you can pray.
Jacob was not a victim and neither are we. We
free ourselves from oppressive circumstances by taking the
bull by the horns and initiating change. We MAKE a move.
And we make every move possible so that all
possibilities are covered. But it all begins with the absolute
conviction and commitment to your cause.
Let’s make our move.
|