I have never liked the Midrashim to Genesis which explain away Yaakov’s trickstery against his twin brother, or the ones that explain that Esau deserved to loose his birthright because of some behavioural fault. I equally dislike the ones that tell us that Esau really did mean to harm Yaakov during their brief reunion. I particularly can’t stand the ancient Midrash, which is repeated in Rashi’s commentary, according to which Esau sought to bite, not kiss Yaakov. According to Midrash Bereishit Rabbah and Midrash Tanhuma, Yaakov’s neck miraculously turned to marble, thus thwarting the fratricidal elder brother’s ploy and occasioning his tears (his teeth hurt). It is a very clever Midrash, which hinges on the similarity between the words kiss (neshikah) and bite (neshichah).
But the Midrash assumes and argues that Esau is somehow not Jewish. The Bible does tell us that Esau, having been robbed of his birthright, moved to the mountains of Se’ir and became the progenitor of the Edomites, in today’s
I think it is time to lay to rest this antagonistic thinking, and to stop blackening Esau in order to whitewash Yaakov. In rejecting the anti-Esau / Edom Midrashim, I am undoubtedly guided by a political agenda: I do not think that whitewashing your own ancestors and blacken those of your opponents is conducive to peace.
If the antagonism between the brothers prevailed, then how could they, near the end of the Parasha, come together and jointly bury their father Isaac? The Torah clearly states that they buried their father together. Why then could the embrace of the brothers not also be genuine?
