Torah

Eretz Yisrael: Our land now and forevermore

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One of the major themes of our parasha is the death and burial of Sarah Emanu in Ma’arat HaMachpelah. Another, found in the subsequent chapter, focuses on Eliezer finding Yitzchak’s future wife, Rivka.

Following this extensive presentation, the Torah informs us: “And Avraham took another wife, and her name was Keturah.” With but few exceptions, Chazal identify Keturah with Hagar, Sarah’s former maidservant and the mother of Yishmael. If this is the case, why was the new name “Keturah?”

Rashi offers the following explanation based on Midrash Bereishit Rabbah 61:4: “Keturah: This is Hagar. She was called Keturah because her deeds were as beautiful as incense (ketoret).”

In his super commentary on Rashi’s Commentary on the Torah, the Maharal explains why Keturah’s deeds “were as beautiful as incense.”

According to Rashi and the Maharal, Keturah emerges as a spiritually appropriate wife for Avraham during the post-Sarah Emanu years of his life as she, too, eschewed idol worship and embraced monotheism.

They were zocheh (merited) to have six children and a number of grandchildren, all of whom the Torah describes as “b’nai Keturah.” Immediately thereafter, we find these two pasukim:

And Avraham gave all that he possessed to Yitzchak. And to the sons of Avraham’s concubines, Avraham gave gifts, and he sent them away from his son Yitzchak while he [Avraham] was still alive, eastward to the land of the East.

The verse, “and Avraham gave all that he possessed to Yitzchak,” teaches us that Yitzchak was the sole inheritor of Avraham Avinu’s property. We are left to ponder the exact content of this inheritance. Fortunately, there is a fascinating narrative in Talmud Bavli, Sanhedrin 91a that speaks directly to this issue:

The Gemara relates [that] the descendants of Yishmael and the descendants of Keturah came to judgment with the Jewish people before Alexander of Macedon. They said to the Jewish people before Alexander: The land of Canaan is both ours and yours, as it is written: “And these are the generations of Yishmael, son of Avraham, whom Hagar the Egyptian, Sarah’s maidservant, bore unto Avraham,” and it is written, “And these are the generations of Yitzchak, son of Avraham.”

Therefore, the land should be divided between Avraham’s heirs.

The essence of this passage is the fourth century BCE attempt by the descendants of Yishmael and Keturah to acquire a portion of Eretz Yisrael, as demonstrated by their purported inheritance claims. Geviha ben Pesisa, Chazal’s representative to Alexander of Macedon, cites pasukim that prove the inaccuracy of their specious assertions, and concludes with a logical argument congruent with Greek law which stipulates that it is the father’s legal right to divide his property using an agatin, and such choices remain inviolate. Alexander apparently accepted Geviha’s arguments since there is no further discussion of this case in the Gemara.

Unfortunately, the descendants of Yishmael and Keturah have unceasingly continued their quest to deny our G-d given right to Eretz Yisrael. One particularly powerful incident involving Rav Avraham Yitzchak Kook, the first Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi of British Mandatory Palestine, gives voice to their never-ending efforts:

In 1929, the Arabs, supported by the British authorities in the land of Israel, were attempting to deny Jews the right to pray before the Western Wall. When Rabbi Kook appeared before a commission set up to deal with the matter, he turned to the head of the commission and said in a trembling voice:

“What do you mean by saying that this commission will decide who has ownership over the Western Wall? Does this commission or the League of Nations control the Wall? From whom have you received permission to decide who owns it? The entire world is the possession of the Holy One, blessed be He, the Creator of the world. And the Holy One, blessed be He, gave the nation of Israel possession of the entire land of Israel, including the Western Wall. No power in the world, no League of Nations and not this commission can suspend this divine right.”

The commission head commented that almost two thousand years had passed since the Jews had possessed the land of Israel, including the Western Wall. To this, Rav Kook replied quietly and calmly:

“In Jewish law, there is a concept of an owner’s giving up his right to his property — including his land. But when a person’s land was stolen from him, and he protested and continues to protest, his rights never expire.”

May the time come soon, and in our days, when we will witness the complete fulfillment of the bracha we recite in the daily Shmoneh Esrei: “Behold our affliction, take up our grievance, and redeem us speedily for Your Name’s sake, for You are a powerful Redeemer. Blessed are You, Hashem, Redeemer of the Jewish people.” V’chane yihi ratzon.