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    THE DUAL DANGERS OF ANTISEMITISM

    This week’s parsha
    relates the encounter of
    Yakov with his dangerous
    and murderous brother
    Eisav, and Yakov’s
    admitting that he was
    fearful of Eisav. These
    events connect directly to
    our contemporary multiplicity of antisemitic
    incidents and horrors all over the globe.
    Whether it is distribution of hundreds of
    leaflets which proclaim, “Jews: leave or
    be slaughtered,” in the peaceful Jewish
    London suburb of Hendon, the brazen arson
    of a popular and much used synagogue
    in Australia, the pogrom like behavior in
    Amsterdam, or the swastika graffiti that keeps
    on cropping up in America, the proliferation
    of antisemitism is chilling to all of us. This
    is especially true for children of Holocaust
    survivors who feel a frightening foreboding of
    nightmarish deja vu.
    At the recent national convention of the
    Agudas Israel of America, the Ner Yisroel

    Rosh Yeshiva, Rav Feldman, shlit”a, said that
    after the events of October 7, 2023, we would
    have expected a massive reaction of sympathy.
    How surprised we were to see the opposite:
    the absurd accusations of genocide and even
    the condemnation of the prime minister of
    Israel as a war criminal. While this leaves
    us scratching our heads, Rav Feldman said
    we should not be surprised because this is a
    rule of nature. “Halachah b’yaduah she’Eisav
    sonei es Yakov – It is a known fact that the
    descendants of Eisav hate the descendants of
    Yakov.” Note that regarding the revelation
    at Mt. Sinai, the word sinai is similar to the
    word sinah, hatred, because from thence there
    would be hatred toward us from the world.
    At the same convention, in a Question and
    Answer session with Rabbi Yisroel Reisman,
    shlit’a, he reminisced how years ago some
    goyim broke into the Yeshiva of Torah
    V’Daas in Brooklyn, took hold of a Sefer
    Torah and threw half of it out of the window.
    In the morning, the students woke up to
    the horrible sight of a Sefer Torah hanging

    exposed, halfway on the ground. The then
    Rosh Yeshiva, HaRav Pam, zt”l, zy”a, told
    them to take the Sefer Torah to be respectfully
    repaired but to have no other response, as
    not to retract any copycat behaviors. (Rabbi
    Reisman was quick to add that currently our
    institutions have to do whatever hishtadlus
    they see necessary.) On an individual level,
    we should understand that this is the way
    Hashem made the world, that Eisav harbors a
    hatred for Yakov. Rabbi Reisman further said
    that since the Torah says, “V’hayah k’asher
    tarid, uferachta ohl mei’al tzavorecha,” when
    Yakov deteriorates in spirituality, Eisav will
    kick free.” Our individual response must be
    to elevate our Yiddishkeit which will rein in
    any terror from Eisav.
    While we are frightened over the sinister rise
    of global antisemitism, Yakov warns us in this
    week’s parsha that we should be even more
    frightened about something else. Yakov says,
    “Hatzileini na mi’yad achi, mi’yad Eisav –
    Save me (Hashem) from my brother, from
    Eisav.” The obvious question is, we know that
    Eisav was Yakov’s brother, so what other
    Eisav was he talking about? The Rokei’ach
    says a remarkable pshat: Eisav had a son
    who he named Achi, my brother. He did
    this so he should never forget what Yakov
    did to him, and Eisav gave this son Achi the
    exclusive mission to kill his uncle. This was
    the danger that Yakov meant when he added
    the words, “Hatzileini na mi’yad Achi,”
    save me from my murderous nephew, Achi.
    The Beis Halevy however gives a famous
    answer to explain the superfluous word
    achi. He says that Yakov was pleading with
    Hashem to be spared from two dangers that
    his toxic brother Eisav posed. Of course,
    save me from the murderous side of Eisav.
    But even when he acts like achi, like my
    brother, also protect me from learning and
    imitating his sinful ways. From the fact that
    Yakov prefaced achi to Eisav, it is clear that
    Yakov felt that the danger of assimilating
    his brother’s heinous ways was the more
    dangerous of the two possibilities.
    This is oh! so true in our contemporary
    times especially since the portals of the
    internet and all kinds of social media bring
    the ‘values’ of western civilization into our
    homes. We have to realize that they are much
    more dangerous than painted swastikas
    and racial slurs. They bring promiscuity
    and the vulgarity of pop music, the sense
    that the younger generation has more
    sophisticated knowledge through podcasts

    and environmental norms as to what ‘true’
    happiness really consists of, the breakdown of
    respect and a feeling of responsibility to one’s
    elders, the deterioration of a sense of shame
    and human dignity. These are but a few of
    the toxic poisons that are coming from our
    exposure to our brother Eisav.
    When we say in Havdalah that there is a
    difference between night and day, and between
    Yisroel and the nations, we need to educate
    our children that our way of adherence to the
    wisdom of the Torah and its moral compass is
    as different from today’s ways of looking at
    things as the difference between night and day.
    Just as we know that antisemitic incidents
    have put us on high alert, the need is also to be
    on high alert to protect our families from the
    styles and values of an increasingly decadent
    and amoral society.
    In the merit of our spiritual cautions, may
    Hashem bless us with long life, good health,
    safety, and true Yiddishe nachas.