Shabbat Shalom: Parshat Noah Genesis 6:9-11:32
By Shlomo Riskin
Efrat, Israel - Why was the first Jew Abraham and not Adam, Abraham and not
Noah? I've dealt with this question before, having suggested that the
uniqueness of Abraham resides in the fact that he created three generations
faithful to ethical monotheism, a feat accomplished neither by Adam nor by
Noah. In this commentary I would like to make another suggestion; I
would like to look at these three outstanding biblical personalities from the
perspective of their attitudes towards their wives.
Adam and Eve transgress G-ds command and eat of the forbidden fruit of
knowledge of good and evil. G-d first confronts Adam, the individual to
whom he initially gave the command forbidding the eating of the fruit: "Is
it then that from the tree which I commanded you not to eat of it, you ate?"
Apparently, what G-d expected to hear from Adam was a contrite confession,
following which everything would have been forgiven and all the human
descendants would still be happily residing in the Garden of Eden.
Instead, Adam is full of recriminations, against G-d but especially against
Eve, his wife "And the man said, 'The woman whom You gave to me, she gave
me from the tree and I ate"' (Genesis 3:11, 12). Not only is there
no confession from Adam or any attempt at protecting his wife; what this first
man does is escaping from responsibility by placing all the blame on his
wife’s shoulders. He sees his wife as being a mere means to his end.
Chapter 5 of the book of Genesis catalogs the ten generations between Adam and
Noah "And Shet lived 105 years and he begat (literally bore, gave birth
to) Enosh…and Enosh lived 90 years and he begat Canaan" (Genesis 5:6,
9). And so the verses continue, He lived and he begat, …but where are
the women in this whole process of Begatting? Did the men have children
by themselves?! And when the Bible does mention the two wives of Lemekh,
Adah and Zilah, the Midrash cited by Rashi explains their name derivative as
expressing their respective functions: Adah was the baby machine while Zilah
was the trophy wife. This hardly expresses a husband-wife partnership
and soul mate relationship.
And now we come to Noah. Our Torah portion opens with an introduction
"These are the generations of Noah; Noah was a righteous man,
wholehearted in his generation; Noah walked with G-d. And Noah begat three
sons: Shem, Ham and Yafet" (Genesis 6:8-10). However, here again
Noah alone does the Begatting, with no mention of a Mrs. Noah (It is the
Midrash who does identify his wife as having been Naamah, the sister of Tuval
Cain – Genesis 4:22). G-d apparently picks up on Noahs habitual
disregard of his wife "And G-d said to Noah: 'you and your house (a noun
used talmudically to refer to ones wife but generally referring to ones
household or family) shall come into the ark …from all the pure animals take
for yourself seven of a kind a man and a woman" (Genesis 7:1, 2).
Animals are generally referred to in the Bible as male and female not as a man
and his wife. God is apparently demonstrating to Noah that just as in
the animal world, the human world comes in pairs, husbands with their wives.
Noah doesn't get the point. "Noah and his sons and his wife and the
wives of his sons" come into the ark (Genesis 7:7). And once again
the Bible emphasizes "on that very day Noah and Shem, Ham and Yafet the
sons of Noah and Noah's wife and the three wives of his sons came with them
into the ark" (Genesis 7:13). G-d tries one final time: "and
G-d said to Noah, 'Go out of the ark you and your wife, your sons and sons'
wives' (Genesis 8:15). But even this time, Noah remains impervious to G-ds
Him "And Noah and his sons, his wife and his sons wives exited from the
ark" (Genesis 8:18)
It is only in the case of Abraham that the bible describes his wife as an
independent personage with a unique individual character "And Abram and
Nahor took for themselves wives; the name of the wife of Abraham was Sarai and
throughout the story of Abraham and Sarah we see two individuals working
together as a team. As the Midrash so aptly interprets the Biblical
reference to the "Soul they made in Haran"(Genesis 12:5),
"Abraham converted the males and Sarah converted the females" (Rashi
Ad Loc). G-d tells Abraham, "Everything that Sarah says to you, you
must listen to her voice" (Genesis 21:12), and for the 38 years that
Abraham lived after Sarah's death - a period when he remained strong and
virile, marries another woman (Keturah, Hadar) and has sons and daughters with
her - he is never visited by G-d and the act of consequence he accomplishes is
choosing Eliezer to seek a suitable wife for Isaac. Apparently it was Sarah
who was the greater prophet of the two, as our Sages suggest. Perhaps it
is because of the developed Husband-Wife relationship expressed by Abraham and
Sarah, that it is Abraham - and not Adam or Noah - who is considered the first
Jew.
Last year I was invited to Melbourne Australia to speak at the Yahrzeit of Rav
Hayim Gutnick, one of the most important scholars and spokesman for Australian
Jewry. One of the most moving experiences of my life was the viewing of a
video of the speech Rav Gutnick gave on the 30th day following his wife’s
demise. After extolling her virtues he said to the large crowd gathered
to honor her memory,
"I don’t know why but during the last period of my
wife's illness I never told her how much I loved her. I had many
opportunity's to do so, but the words "I love you" never escaped my
lips and this omission doesn't allow me to rest – because now it is too
late. If you who assembled here today truly wish to pay proper
tribute to the memory of your Rebbetzin then when you come home let each of
you say to his/her spouse I Love You before its too late".