Friday, December 4, 2015

Parshas Vayeishev - Caught in the Act: Don’t Fake it ‘til You Make it

~ Thoughts on the Parsha ~
Parshas Vayeishev


Caught in the Act: Don’t Fake it ‘til You Make it
By: Daniel Listhaus

וַיִּרְאוּ אֶחָיו כִּי אֹתוֹ אָהַב אֲבִיהֶם מִכָּל אֶחָיו וַיִּשְׂנְאוּ אֹתוֹ וְלֹא יָכְלוּ דַּבְּרוֹ לְשָׁלֹם
“His brothers saw that it was he whom their father loved most of all his brothers so they hated him; and they were not able to speak to him peacefully.”
-Vayeishev 37:4

After leaving Lavan’s house, encountering Eisav, and running into some issues with Shechem, Yaakov and his family were finally able to settle in Eretz Yisroel. The Torah[1] tells us that Yaakov made a special kesones passim (fine woolen tunic) for Yosef; clearly displaying favoritism towards Yosef which he did not extend equally to his other sons. The S’forno[2] teaches that this was a mistake that Yaakov avinu made. One should not outwardly show more love to one child more than another, even if it that is truly how one feels.[3]  The favoritism which Yaakov showed seems to be one of the main causes of the sequence of events which resulted in B’nei Yisroel living in Mitzrayim.

The passuk (verse)[4] tells us that the brothers hated Yosef and were unable to speak to him peacefully. The S’forno[5] points out that indeed the brothers still spoke to Yosef when they needed to communicate in order to accomplish their daily tasks and household chores; they were just unable to have the relationship of loving brothers. Rashi[6] adds that as bad as this was, there was one redeeming quality: at least the brothers were consistent. They hated Yosef and they did not try to pretend otherwise. Not the best situation possible, but at least the cards were on the table for peace to potentially be able to be worked out.

The Kli Yakar however has a slightly different approach. The Kli Yakar[7] writes that the hatred referred to in this passuk was not because of Yaakov’s favoritism toward Yosef, but rather over the fact that Yosef had given bad reports about his brothers to Yaakov. As Rashi[8] describes a few passukim earlier, Yosef tattled on his brothers and reported that they were doing improper things such as eating eiver min ha’chai (limb taken from a live animal), not treating the sons of Bilhah and Zilpah properly, and that they were suspect of arayos (immoral behavior). The brothers hated Yosef for reporting these things to Yaakov and painting them in a very negative light. So, to counter this they decided to ignore Yosef completely. They wanted to make it very clear to Yaakov that they hated Yosef so much that they could not bring themselves to speak to him at all. Their calculation was that they hoped that by faking their anger strong enough, Yaakov would realize how upset the brothers were with Yosef and figure that Yosef must equally dislike them in return. With this thought, the brothers assumed that Yaakov would be far less likely to take Yosef’s allegations as serious and instead attribute them as part of the mysterious family feud.

The most fascinating and intriguing part of this Kli Yakar we must focus on is that when he explains the passuk that the brothers were not able to speak to Yosef peacefully, he writes that really the brothers were fully capable of speaking to Yosef p0eacefully and working out the hatred that was between them. However, they were stuck. If they made peace with Yosef then Yaakov was much more likely to believe the bad reports that Yosef had told him. After all, if Yosef had no incentive to tattle-tale on his brothers, it must be true! So instead, the brothers decided to put on an exaggerated show of hatred so that Yaakov would attribute Yosef’s snitching to his severed relationship with his brothers.

The Kli Yakar continues to explain that there are two more times within the next few passukim that the Torah states that the brothers hated Yosef. The very next passuk[9] relates that Yosef told his brothers that he had dreamt a dream, and they increased even more hatred. At this point, Yosef had not yet told them what the details of his dream, he just told them that he had a dream. If so, why were the brothers upset that the Torah says that they increased even more hatred toward him? The reason, as the Kli Yakar explains, is that since they were trying to ignore Yosef completely, when he came over and started speaking with them, their plan became harder to keep; this made the brothers angrier with Yosef and increased their hatred toward him.

The problem with this explanation is that it does not seem to fit with the brothers’ real attitude and honest feelings. The Kli Yakar had said clearly based on the previous passuk that really as much as the brothers disliked Yosef for speaking negatively about them, they were capable of making peace. However, in order to ensure that Yaakov would not believe the evil reports they needed to put on a show in front of Yaakov and pretend that they sincerely hated Yosef by completely ignoring him. So when Yosef came over and merely mentioned to the brothers that he had a dream, there should have been no reason for them to increase their hatred. Yosef did not yet tell them the contents of his dream, so that could not have been what caused the added hatred. Also, to say that it was the mere fact that Yosef had approached them and spoke to them while they were trying to ignore him is also hard to understand since that they did not really hate Yosef so much and were really capable of making peace; they just had to put on a show in front of Yaakov, but at this point they were not in front of Yaakov.[10] Why couldn’t they speak peacefully? They were not in front of Yaakov at this point? They only went to Yaakov later when Yosef repeated the dream again. So why did they hate the fact that Yosef mentioned to them the mere fact that he had a dream?

The narrative continues with Yosef telling his dream to his brother without their consent. The dream obviously did not sit well with the brothers and they felt the need to respond to Yosef. This, as the passuk tells us, caused an additional level of hatred – al chalomosuv v’al d’varav (because of his dreams and because of his words). The Kli Yakar explains here as well that besides for being disturbed about the content of Yosef’s dream, they were furious that not only was Yosef continuing to speak with them, but that he had said such crazy things which demanded the brothers to respond, despite their decision to ignore him completely.

The difficulty again is that Yaakov was not yet in the scene, so if the brothers were really able to speak to Yosef peacefully and only needed to fake their anger in Yaakov’s presence, why did they hate Yosef more after hearing the dreams? If it was just from hearing the dream itself, the Torah should have described the brothers’ feelings as kinnah (jealousy), as it does when Yosef tells over his dreams to Yaakov at a time that the shevatim are not being spoken to nor speaking. Clearly the hatred was stemming from the fact that Yosef was speaking to them coupled with the fact that they felt compelled to respond, despite having resolved to ignore Yosef completely. However, what was the big deal? That was something only necessary to do in front of Yaakov, not between them and Yosef – for really, according to the Kli Yakar, they were able to speak peacefully?

A certain journalist on a quest to determine the validity of the mass diagnosing of mental illness in our times, was introduced to a man named Tony. Tony is a resident of Broadmoor Criminal Lunatic Asylum, better known as Broadmoor Hospital, which is a high-security psychiatric hospital in England. Tony’s story is an interesting one. As an aggressive 17 year old boy he supposedly killed a homeless alcoholic man during a street fight – a crime which would have had him locked away for about five years given the circumstances. However, while waiting for his trial, he was advised by a cell-mate to fake mental illness as a way to get some years of his sentence. Tony like the idea but ended up having to face a bigger issue: he faked it too well and as a result he was sent to Broadmoor. Upon arriving at Broadmoor, Tony took a look around at all the completely crazy people there. He asked to speak to the psychiatrist and told him that there must have been a mistake. He was not mad, he was completely normal. He merely feigned madness in order to lighten his sentence. The Psychiatrist heard his points and determined that Tony was in fact even worse than a madman, he was a psychopath. For example, Tony kept to his story but no matter what he did, it was translated as psychopathic behavior. While everyone in the asylum wore sweatpants and a t-shirt, Tony insisted on wearing a pinstripe suit – something he attributed to having self-worth and believing in his own sanity. However the Broadmoor staff understood it as displaying a gross amount of superiority above his peers. Also, Tony would choose to stay by himself in his room – something which he did out of fear of the real insane people on the premises, however the doctors said that it was further proof to his aloof and grandiose attitude. Tony decided he wanted to show that he was normal so he subscribed to a magazine which had an article one month about how the United States was training bumblebees to sniff out explosives. However, when he approached a nurse and mentioned the article he had read, trying to strike a normal conversation, she listened and nodded and jotted down in the medical record, “Believes that bees can sniff out explosives”. Even his original faking madness was taken as a sign of manipulative psychopathic behavior.

Whether Tony was always a psychopath, had become one, or was in fact completely telling the truth is something which we may never find out. However one point which Tony made is definitely objectively clear: It is much easier to convince someone that you are a psychopath than try to convince him that you are not. Once it is believed that a person has a disorder or shows certain attributes of a certain type of personality, it is extremely easy to give him a label and then point to anything and everything he or she does and put it in the “box” of what one defined his “issue” as being. It is so easy to get caught in the act of ourselves and others and set the proverbial ball rolling in motion in a certain direction without remembering why or how it started rolling in the first place.

Perhaps this was the underlying mistake of the brothers’ hatred according to the way the Kli Yakar learns. The original hatred, although legitimately formed, was one that had the potential to be corrected; however because of the curveball of the brothers wanting to save face in front of Yaakov, they had to display an exaggerated form of hatred – unanimously deciding to completely ignore Yosef’s existence. When Yosef approached them, though, not in front of Yaakov and informed them that he had a dream, the brothers got caught up in their “policy” of ignoring Yosef and became further upset with him for making it increasingly difficult. There was no reason for this hatred. It stemmed from a feeling of needing to fake hatred in front of Yaakov in order that he be less likely to believe Yosef’s evil reports. Yet, when Yosef approached them and started talking, the brothers’ hatred intensified. Then, when Yosef went ahead and told them the preposterous contents of the dream which demanded their immediate defensive response, the brothers were further infuriated not only because of Yosef’s wild imagination and disrespectful comments, but also that he had “forced” them into breaking their ignoring streak by causing the brothers to feel the need to respond. Again, this hatred did not belong. Yaakov was not around and there was no reason for them to allow their anger to increase every time Yosef came. They were not really that upset with him. However, they got caught up in their act. They faked their original anger too well to the point that anything Yosef did that opposed their efforts to ignore him was taken personally by the brothers as if Yosef was specifically trying to trick them out of their plan to save face.

This is a mistake that so many of us make and all of us are prone to making. We make assumptions or put on acts, and then become entrapped by them and subconsciously feel the need to continue playing the role, like a self fulfilling prophecy. May Hashem help us make the right decisions and, perhaps more importantly, to remember the role, purpose, and direction of our decisions so we can be smart about when our reasoning should be applied and when it should be aborted.



[1] Beraishis 37:3
[2] S’forno Beraishis 37:4
[3] See also Gemara Shabbos 10b
[4] Beraishis 37:4
[5] S’forno ibid.
[6] Rashi ibid.
[7] Kli Yakar ibid.
[8] Rashi Beraishis 37:3. Rashi continues to write that for sayinh these things, Yosef was punished middah-keneged-middah: For his report of them eating eiver min ha’chai, Yaakov was told that Yosef had been “slaughtered” by a wild beast. For his reports about the treatment of the sons of the maidservants, Yosef was solf as a slave. And for his relating that his brothers were suspect of arayos, Yosef was put in a very difficult situation in Mitzrayim with eishes Potiphar.
[9] Beraishis 37:5
[10] It is clear that they were not in front of Yaakov at the time Yosef related his dream to his brothers for the first time, since it is only in the next passuk when Yosef repeated his dreams to his father and brothers. 

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