Difference between revisions of "Sin and Slaughter of Shekhem/2"
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<approaches> | <approaches> | ||
<category name="">Fundamentally Justified | <category name="">Fundamentally Justified | ||
+ | <p>Shekehm and his city were deserving of death for their actions in either the original taking of Dinah, or for their refusal to abide by the deal that was made with the brothers.</p> | ||
<opinion name="">Complicit in the Original Sin | <opinion name="">Complicit in the Original Sin | ||
<p>Since the entire city had participated, to varying degrees, in the taking of Dinah, all deserved a capital punishment.</p> | <p>Since the entire city had participated, to varying degrees, in the taking of Dinah, all deserved a capital punishment.</p> | ||
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<point><b>Sin of the general populace</b> – These commentators differ in their assessment of the specific wrongdoing of the people of the city:<br/> | <point><b>Sin of the general populace</b> – These commentators differ in their assessment of the specific wrongdoing of the people of the city:<br/> | ||
<ul> | <ul> | ||
− | <li><b>Condoning the Act</b> – Ibn Kaspi and Abarbanel assert that the people of  Shekhem did not protest the taking of Dinah, and as such were guilty of complicity.<fn>Ibn Kaspi points to Hashem's warning to Yechezkel that if he does not chastise wrongdoers, he himself will be held accountable: "בְּאָמְרִי לָרָשָׁע מוֹת תָּמוּת וְלֹא הִזְהַרְתּוֹ... הוּא רָשָׁע בַּעֲוֹנוֹ יָמוּת וְדָמוֹ מִיָּדְךָ אֲבַקֵּשׁ".</fn> Rambam adds that in not prosecuting Shekhem, they violated the Noachide law to institute legal procedures, which is itself punishable by death.<fn>Ramban questions Rambam, asserting that if this were true, then Yaakov should not have rebuked his children, but rather been the first to join them.  He | + | <li><b>Condoning the Act</b> – Ibn Kaspi and Abarbanel assert that the people of  Shekhem did not protest the taking of Dinah, and as such were guilty of complicity.<fn>Ibn Kaspi points to Hashem's warning to Yechezkel that if he does not chastise wrongdoers, he himself will be held accountable: "בְּאָמְרִי לָרָשָׁע מוֹת תָּמוּת וְלֹא הִזְהַרְתּוֹ... הוּא רָשָׁע בַּעֲוֹנוֹ יָמוּת וְדָמוֹ מִיָּדְךָ אֲבַקֵּשׁ".<br/>See also, E. Samet, "שמעון ולוי אחי דינה",  who suggests that the area in which the story takes place, Shalem, is actually just a satellite village of the city Shekhem.  It was home only to the immediate clan of Shekehm, rather than thousands of outsiders.  Thus, it would be understandable that all might be aware of Shekehm's actions and complicit in them.  The attack should be viewed as a blood vendetta between two clans,not a on innocent bystanders.  See, though, Z. Whitman, "האם ניתן ללמוד זכות על מעשה שמעון ולוי?"', who argues against this read, suggesting that the verses do not support the idea that this was just a small village and questioning why the prince would not be living in the main city.</fn> Rambam adds that in not prosecuting Shekhem, they violated the Noachide law to institute legal procedures, which is itself punishable by death.<fn>Ramban questions Rambam, asserting that if this were true, then Yaakov should not have rebuked his children, but rather been the first to join them.  He suggests that the Noachide law does not refer to the establishment of courts but rather to the making of laws.  Though the latter includes setting up a court system, negligence in that area does not incur death.  See also the Or HaChayyim who similarly questions Rambam's understanding.</fn></li> |
− | <li><b>Actively took Dinah</b> – Or HaChayyim asserts that the people of the city participated in the taking of Dinah, thereby transgressing the Noachide law regarding theft.<fn>See above that this is a capital crime under the Noachide laws while rape is not.  He | + | <li><b>Actively took Dinah</b> – Or HaChayyim asserts that the people of the city actively participated in the taking of Dinah, thereby transgressing the Noachide law regarding theft.<fn>See above that this is a capital crime under the Noachide laws while rape is not.  He questions why the verse would then highlights that "they defiled her" rather than saying "and they took her", answering that the point is to show that the "stolen item" was no longer returnable.  Had it been, they would have retrieved Dinah without killing the whole city.</fn></li> |
<li><b>Joined in the sexual assault</b> – The Tosafist commentary goes even a step further to suggest that Dinah was raped by the other men of Shekhem as well.<fn>He apparently maintains that killing one who rapes is justified.</fn></li> | <li><b>Joined in the sexual assault</b> – The Tosafist commentary goes even a step further to suggest that Dinah was raped by the other men of Shekhem as well.<fn>He apparently maintains that killing one who rapes is justified.</fn></li> | ||
</ul></point> | </ul></point> | ||
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</ul></point> | </ul></point> | ||
<point><b>Yaakov's reaction: "עֲכַרְתֶּם אֹתִי"</b> – This approach might claim that Yaakov did not question the morality of his children's actions but only chastised them due to his fear that the deed was to endanger the family when surrounding peoples retaliated.</point> | <point><b>Yaakov's reaction: "עֲכַרְתֶּם אֹתִי"</b> – This approach might claim that Yaakov did not question the morality of his children's actions but only chastised them due to his fear that the deed was to endanger the family when surrounding peoples retaliated.</point> | ||
− | <point><b>Yaakov's rebuke in Bereshit 49</b> – Or HaChayyim suggests that Yaakov's words do not relate to the episode in Shekhem at all, but rather the sale of Yosef.  Thus here, too, there is no condemnation of the brothers' deeds.<fn>Abarbanel disagrees and suggests that Yaakov was unaware of the brothers' plan to kill the enitre city and did not condone it. Had they only killed Shekehm, that might have been justified, but the rest of the city was undeserving of death, especially after agreeing to enter into a covenant with Hashem.  As such, it was clear that the brothers were not motivated by righteous anger, but acted violently just to gain booty. <br/> | + | <point><b>Yaakov's rebuke in Bereshit 49</b> – Or HaChayyim suggests that Yaakov's words do not relate to the episode in Shekhem at all, but rather the sale of Yosef.  Thus here, too, there is no condemnation of the brothers' deeds.<fn>Abarbanel disagrees and suggests that Yaakov was unaware of the brothers' plan to kill the enitre city and did not condone it. Had they only killed Shekehm, that might have been justified, but the rest of the city was undeserving of death, especially after agreeing to enter into a covenant with Hashem.  As such, it was clear that the brothers were not motivated by righteous anger, but acted violently just to gain booty. <br/>According to Abarbanel, though,the brothers' actions were justified because the inhabitants of the city legally deserved death for complicity, making it unclear why Yaakov should condemn them.</fn></point> |
<point><b>Hashem's evaluation</b><ul> | <point><b>Hashem's evaluation</b><ul> | ||
<li><b>Hashem assented</b> – Abarbanel suggests that Hashem agreed with the brothers' acts, as evidenced by the fact that He put fear into the surrounding cities and protected Yaakov's family. </li> | <li><b>Hashem assented</b> – Abarbanel suggests that Hashem agreed with the brothers' acts, as evidenced by the fact that He put fear into the surrounding cities and protected Yaakov's family. </li> | ||
− | <li><b>Hashem rewarded</b> – Many of the classical sources suggest that the act was sanctioned explicitly by Hashem, who might have even have put the thought into their heads.<fn>See Theodotus and the Testament of Levi. The Book of Judith similarly suggests that Hashem put a sword into Shimon's hands.</fn> Jubilees further asserts that the brothers were "written for a blessing" for their act.  Soon after, Levi <fn>Jubilees might suggest that  only Levi (rather than Shimon) was rewarded with priesthood because he married within the family of Terach while Shimon married a Cananite. For Jubilees, it was not the rape itself which was so problematic, but the potential marriage to a non-Jew.  Thus, in Shimon's intermarriage, he undid any merit he might have gained by trying to prevent Dinah's marriage to Shekhem.</fn> was rewarded with the priesthood.<fn>Even those who assert that Levi only attained special status after the tribe's role in killing the worshipers of the Golden Calf might | + | <li><b>Hashem rewarded</b> – Many of the classical sources suggest that the act was sanctioned explicitly by Hashem, who might have even have put the thought into their heads.<fn>See Theodotus and the Testament of Levi. The Book of Judith similarly suggests that Hashem put a sword into Shimon's hands.</fn> Jubilees further asserts that the brothers were "written for a blessing" for their act.  Soon after, Levi <fn>Jubilees might suggest that  only Levi (rather than Shimon) was rewarded with priesthood because he married within the family of Terach while Shimon married a Cananite. For Jubilees, it was not the rape itself which was so problematic, but the potential marriage to a non-Jew.  Thus, in Shimon's intermarriage, he undid any merit he might have gained by trying to prevent Dinah's marriage to Shekhem.</fn> was rewarded with the priesthood.<fn>Even those who assert that Levi only attained special status after the tribe's role in killing the worshipers of the Golden Calf might agree that in both cases it was the same attribute of zeal, and the willingness to act against offenders, that made Levi meritorious.</fn></li> |
</ul></point> | </ul></point> | ||
<point><b>Taking of the spoils</b> – Or HaChayyim justifies the looting as payment for embarrassing Dinah and the family ("דמי בושת").</point> | <point><b>Taking of the spoils</b> – Or HaChayyim justifies the looting as payment for embarrassing Dinah and the family ("דמי בושת").</point> | ||
<point><b>Shimon and Levi versus the other brothers</b><ul> | <point><b>Shimon and Levi versus the other brothers</b><ul> | ||
<li><b>Act together</b> – Abarbanel and Or HaChayyim do not differentiate between the brothers and present them as all acting together in both the negotiations and in the killing/looting of the people of the city.</li> | <li><b>Act together</b> – Abarbanel and Or HaChayyim do not differentiate between the brothers and present them as all acting together in both the negotiations and in the killing/looting of the people of the city.</li> | ||
− | <li><b>Shimon and Levi more zealous</b> – Theodotus and the Testament of Levi, though, do not present Shimon and Levi as part of the negotiations, and in fact suggest that in their zealousness they were against them totally.  According to | + | <li><b>Shimon and Levi more zealous</b> – Theodotus and the Testament of Levi, though, do not present Shimon and Levi as part of the negotiations, and in fact suggest that in their zealousness they were against them totally.  According to these sources, it is possible that Yaakov was sincere in his offering of Dinah.  Shimon and Levi, though, thought that circumcision alone should not permit intermarriage, and it is to prevent this (rather than avenge the rape) that they massacred the city.<fn>See J. Kugel, "The Story of Dinah in the Testament of Levi", The Harvard Theological Review85 (1992):1-34, who discusses the issue at length.  He points out that there is a crucial variant reading in the extant manuscripts of the text of the Testament of Levi with regards to this topic.  Some present Levi as advising his father to ask Chamor to circumcise and some have him counseling against it.  Kugel comes out in favor of the latter reading.</fn></li> |
</ul></point> | </ul></point> | ||
<point><b>Why wait for the third day?</b> According to Abarbanel the brothers killed the men on the third day after taking Dinah captive, which was immediately (not 3 days) after the circumcision.  At this moment they were both weak and in great pain and, thus, easily overcome.</point> | <point><b>Why wait for the third day?</b> According to Abarbanel the brothers killed the men on the third day after taking Dinah captive, which was immediately (not 3 days) after the circumcision.  At this moment they were both weak and in great pain and, thus, easily overcome.</point> | ||
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</opinion> | </opinion> | ||
<opinion name="">Reneged on the Deal | <opinion name="">Reneged on the Deal | ||
− | <p>The Shekhemites did not uphold their part of the bargain with the brothers, but rather changed the terms, and in so doing invited and justified | + | <p>The Shekhemites did not uphold their part of the bargain with the brothers, but rather changed the terms, and in so doing invited and justified the brothers' vengeance.</p> |
<mekorot><multilink><a href="SeferHaYashar34-4-23" data-aht="source">Sefer HaYashar</a><a href="SeferHaYashar34-4-23" data-aht="source">34:4-23</a><a href="Sefer HaYashar" data-aht="parshan">About Sefer HaYashar</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="SeferYosefHaMekannei18" data-aht="source">Sefer Yosef HaMekannei</a><a href="SeferYosefHaMekannei18" data-aht="source">18</a><a href="Sefer Yosef HaMekannei" data-aht="parshan">About Sefer Yosef HaMekannei</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="PeirushHaRoshBereshit34-25" data-aht="source">Peirush HaRosh</a><a href="PeirushHaRoshBereshit34-25" data-aht="source">Bereshit 34:25</a><a href="Peirush HaRosh" data-aht="parshan">About Peirush HaRosh</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="HadarZekeinimBereshit34-25" data-aht="source">Hadar Zekeinim</a><a href="HadarZekeinimBereshit34-25" data-aht="source">Bereshit 34:25</a><a href="Hadar Zekeinim" data-aht="parshan">About Hadar Zekeinim</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="MaaseiHashemMaaseiAvot34" data-aht="source">Ma'asei Hashem</a><a href="MaaseiHashemMaaseiAvot34" data-aht="source">Ma'asei Avot 34</a><a href="R. Eliezer Ashkenazi (Maasei Hashem)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Eliezer Ashkenazi</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="HaKetavVeHaKabbalahBereshit34-15" data-aht="source">HaKetav VeHaKabbalah</a><a href="HaKetavVeHaKabbalahBereshit34-15" data-aht="source">Bereshit 34:15</a><a href="HaKetavVeHaKabbalahBereshit34-25" data-aht="source">Bereshit 34:25</a><a href="R. Yaakov Mecklenburg (HaKetav VeHaKabbalah)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Yaakov Mecklenburg</a></multilink></mekorot> | <mekorot><multilink><a href="SeferHaYashar34-4-23" data-aht="source">Sefer HaYashar</a><a href="SeferHaYashar34-4-23" data-aht="source">34:4-23</a><a href="Sefer HaYashar" data-aht="parshan">About Sefer HaYashar</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="SeferYosefHaMekannei18" data-aht="source">Sefer Yosef HaMekannei</a><a href="SeferYosefHaMekannei18" data-aht="source">18</a><a href="Sefer Yosef HaMekannei" data-aht="parshan">About Sefer Yosef HaMekannei</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="PeirushHaRoshBereshit34-25" data-aht="source">Peirush HaRosh</a><a href="PeirushHaRoshBereshit34-25" data-aht="source">Bereshit 34:25</a><a href="Peirush HaRosh" data-aht="parshan">About Peirush HaRosh</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="HadarZekeinimBereshit34-25" data-aht="source">Hadar Zekeinim</a><a href="HadarZekeinimBereshit34-25" data-aht="source">Bereshit 34:25</a><a href="Hadar Zekeinim" data-aht="parshan">About Hadar Zekeinim</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="MaaseiHashemMaaseiAvot34" data-aht="source">Ma'asei Hashem</a><a href="MaaseiHashemMaaseiAvot34" data-aht="source">Ma'asei Avot 34</a><a href="R. Eliezer Ashkenazi (Maasei Hashem)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Eliezer Ashkenazi</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="HaKetavVeHaKabbalahBereshit34-15" data-aht="source">HaKetav VeHaKabbalah</a><a href="HaKetavVeHaKabbalahBereshit34-15" data-aht="source">Bereshit 34:15</a><a href="HaKetavVeHaKabbalahBereshit34-25" data-aht="source">Bereshit 34:25</a><a href="R. Yaakov Mecklenburg (HaKetav VeHaKabbalah)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Yaakov Mecklenburg</a></multilink></mekorot> | ||
<point><b>Did Shekhem deserve death?</b><ul> | <point><b>Did Shekhem deserve death?</b><ul> | ||
− | <li><b>No</b> –This position might assert that Shekhem did not deserve death for ravishing Dinah, since rape is not a capital crime according to the Torah.  Rather, the rapist must compensate the father of the victim and then marry the woman.<fn>See the next point that it is possible that Yaakov and some of the brothers were thus sincere when they set terms for the marriage, agreeing to it as long as Shekhem accepted upon himself circumcision. It would be difficult, though, to assert that everyone spoke in earnest since the verse explicitly states that there was an element of "trickery" in the request.</fn>  Thus | + | <li><b>No</b> –This position might assert that Shekhem did not deserve death for ravishing Dinah, since rape is not a capital crime according to the Torah.  Rather, the rapist must compensate the father of the victim and then marry the woman.<fn>See the next point that it is possible that Yaakov and some of the brothers were thus sincere when they set terms for the marriage, agreeing to it as long as Shekhem accepted upon himself circumcision. It would be difficult, though, to assert that everyone spoke in earnest since the verse explicitly states that there was an element of "trickery" in the request.</fn>  Thus, it is not for the rape itself that Shekhem and the city were killed but rather for their later actions.</li> |
<li><b>Yes</b> – According to Maasei Hashem and HaKetav VeHaKabbalah, though, both Yaakov and sons thought it just to kill Shekhem for the "lawless atrocity" which had been committed.</li> | <li><b>Yes</b> – According to Maasei Hashem and HaKetav VeHaKabbalah, though, both Yaakov and sons thought it just to kill Shekhem for the "lawless atrocity" which had been committed.</li> | ||
</ul></point> | </ul></point> | ||
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<ul> | <ul> | ||
<li><b>Regretted leaving idolatry </b>– According to Sefer HaYashar, the Rosh, and Hadar Zekenim, the condition regarding circumcision included a rejection of idolatry.  After circumcising, though, the people regretted changing their faith,<fn>These commentators suggest that the word "כֹּאֲבִים" be understood metaphorically to refer not to physical discomfort but to emotional pain over their decision to circumcise.</fn> and according to Sefer HaYashar even planned to kill Yaakov and sons in a show of loyalty to their original beliefs.</li> | <li><b>Regretted leaving idolatry </b>– According to Sefer HaYashar, the Rosh, and Hadar Zekenim, the condition regarding circumcision included a rejection of idolatry.  After circumcising, though, the people regretted changing their faith,<fn>These commentators suggest that the word "כֹּאֲבִים" be understood metaphorically to refer not to physical discomfort but to emotional pain over their decision to circumcise.</fn> and according to Sefer HaYashar even planned to kill Yaakov and sons in a show of loyalty to their original beliefs.</li> | ||
− | <li><b>Planned to enslave and rob</b> – Yosef HaMekannei, Maasei Hashem, and HaKetav VeHaKabbalah<fn>See, also, more recently N. Leibowitz' discussion in Iyyunim BeSefer Bereshit (Jerusalem, 1992): 265-267.</fn> point to several changes that Shekhem made when relaying the deal to his subjects.<fn>Maasei | + | <li><b>Planned to enslave and rob</b> – Yosef HaMekannei, Maasei Hashem, and HaKetav VeHaKabbalah<fn>See, also, more recently N. Leibowitz' discussion in Iyyunim BeSefer Bereshit (Jerusalem, 1992): 265-267.</fn> point to several changes that Shekhem made when relaying the deal to his subjects.<fn>Maasei Hashem, in fact, asserts that the only reason that this part of the story is included in Tanakh is because it shows why the brothers were justified in killing the entire city.  Otherwise it would be of no relevance and not written at all.</fn>  His words "מִקְנֵהֶם וְקִנְיָנָם וְכָל בְּהֶמְתָּם הֲלוֹא לָנוּ הֵם"  proved that their intentions were to rob,<fn>Maasei Hashem and HaKetav VeHaKabbalah emphasize this and point out that it further proves that the conversion was insincere, as it was motivated only by a desire for money.</fn> while the new emphasis on their actively taking (rather than being given) the Israelite women suggested that they planned to subjugate Yaakov's clan.<fn>Yosef HaMekannei points this out.  He contrasts the brother's original words, "וְנָתַנּוּ אֶת בְּנֹתֵינוּ לָכֶם וְאֶת בְּנֹתֵיכֶם נִקַּח לָנוּ " with Shechem's reversal thereof, "נֹתָם נִקַּח לָנוּ לְנָשִׁים וְאֶת בְּנֹתֵינוּ נִתֵּן לָהֶם".</fn> Maasei Hashem asserts that as this was their motivation, the brothers had no choice but to attack, since "הבא להרגך השכם להרגו".</li> |
</ul></point> | </ul></point> | ||
<point><b>"וַיַּעֲנוּ בְנֵי יַעֲקֹב... בְּמִרְמָה"</b><ul> | <point><b>"וַיַּעֲנוּ בְנֵי יַעֲקֹב... בְּמִרְמָה"</b><ul> | ||
− | <li><b>Only Shimon and Levi deceitful – </b>This position might say that only Shimon and Levi spoke insincerely, and that the other brothers did not object to | + | <li><b>Only Shimon and Levi deceitful – </b>This position might say that only Shimon and Levi spoke insincerely, and that the other brothers did not object to giving Dinah in marriage. Their participation in the later killing was only in response to Shekhem's veering from his part of the bargain.</li> |
− | <li><b>A means to kill Shechem</b> – According to Maasei Hashem and HaKetav VeHaKabbalah the brothers spoke without their father's knowledge and the deceit was aimed at Shekhem alone.<fn>They explain that the usage of the plural by the brothers was not meant to include the rest of the city but was simply the way one speaks to a prince (similar to the usage of the "royal we").</fn> They intended that he circumcise himself so that they could then attack him easily, but they had not initially meant for the rest of the city to also be circumcised or killed.<fn>According to these exegetes, Shekhem and Chamor thought it beneath their dignity to be the only ones circumcised and so they convinced the rest of the city to do likewise.</fn></li> | + | <li><b>A means to kill Shechem</b> – According to Maasei Hashem and HaKetav VeHaKabbalah the brothers spoke without their father's knowledge and the deceit was aimed at Shekhem alone.<fn><p>They explain that the usage of the plural ("בְּזֹאת נֵאוֹת <b>לָכֶם</b>") by the brothers was not meant to include the rest of the city but was simply the way one speaks to a prince (similar to the usage of the "royal we").</p></fn> They intended that he circumcise himself so that they could then attack him easily, but they had not initially meant for the rest of the city to also be circumcised or killed.<fn>According to these exegetes, Shekhem and Chamor thought it beneath their dignity to be the only ones circumcised and so they convinced the rest of the city to do likewise.</fn></li> |
</ul></point> | </ul></point> | ||
<point><b>"אֲשֶׁר טִמְּאוּ"</b> – This position does not read any significance into the plural form of the verb.</point> | <point><b>"אֲשֶׁר טִמְּאוּ"</b> – This position does not read any significance into the plural form of the verb.</point> | ||
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<point><b>Hashem's evaluation</b> – This position might suggest, like Abarbanel above, that Hashem's granting of  protection proved that He condoned the killings.</point> | <point><b>Hashem's evaluation</b> – This position might suggest, like Abarbanel above, that Hashem's granting of  protection proved that He condoned the killings.</point> | ||
<point><b>Taking of the spoils</b> – Since the Shekehmites' actions justified an attack, taking the spoils of war afterwards was legitimate, especially given that the Shekhem had planned to rob them to begin with.</point> | <point><b>Taking of the spoils</b> – Since the Shekehmites' actions justified an attack, taking the spoils of war afterwards was legitimate, especially given that the Shekhem had planned to rob them to begin with.</point> | ||
− | <point><b>Why wait for the third day?</b> This position might assert that it took several days until the men of Shekhem regretted their actions. | + | <point><b>Why wait for the third day?</b> This position might assert that it took several days until the men of Shekhem regretted their actions.<fn>Hadar Zekenim instead posits that three days passed before all the men were circumcised.</fn> </point> |
<point><b>Shimon and Levi versus the other brothers</b> – According to one variation of this approach, it is possible that only Shimon and Levi negotiated deceptively with Shekhem, while the other brothers might have been sincere.</point> | <point><b>Shimon and Levi versus the other brothers</b> – According to one variation of this approach, it is possible that only Shimon and Levi negotiated deceptively with Shekhem, while the other brothers might have been sincere.</point> | ||
<point><b>Polemical motivations</b></point> | <point><b>Polemical motivations</b></point> | ||
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</category> | </category> | ||
<category name="">Practically Necessary | <category name="">Practically Necessary | ||
+ | <p>Though the people of Shekhem might themselves have been innocent, it was necessary to kill them either to retrieve Dinah and achieve vengeance for her rape, or to ensure that such an atrocity was never repeated.</p> | ||
<opinion name="">To Retrieve Dinah | <opinion name="">To Retrieve Dinah | ||
<p>The only way to retrieve Dinah from her captors and avenge the rape was to kill those who were protecting Shekhem.</p> | <p>The only way to retrieve Dinah from her captors and avenge the rape was to kill those who were protecting Shekhem.</p> | ||
<mekorot><multilink><a href="RalbagBeiurDivreiHaParashahBereshit34-30-31" data-aht="source">Ralbag</a><a href="RalbagBeiurDivreiHaParashahBereshit34-30-31" data-aht="source">Beiur Divrei HaParashah Bereshit 34:30-31</a><a href="R. Levi b. Gershon (Ralbag)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Levi b. Gershon</a></multilink>,<fn>Ralbag combines this approach with the one above which asserts that the men of the city were also culpable for not protesting the original deed.</fn> <multilink><a href="OrHaChayyimBereshit34-25" data-aht="source">Or HaChayyim #1</a><a href="OrHaChayyimBereshit34-25" data-aht="source">Bereshit 34:25</a><a href="R. Chayyim b. Atar (Or HaChayyim)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Chayyim b. Atar</a></multilink></mekorot> | <mekorot><multilink><a href="RalbagBeiurDivreiHaParashahBereshit34-30-31" data-aht="source">Ralbag</a><a href="RalbagBeiurDivreiHaParashahBereshit34-30-31" data-aht="source">Beiur Divrei HaParashah Bereshit 34:30-31</a><a href="R. Levi b. Gershon (Ralbag)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Levi b. Gershon</a></multilink>,<fn>Ralbag combines this approach with the one above which asserts that the men of the city were also culpable for not protesting the original deed.</fn> <multilink><a href="OrHaChayyimBereshit34-25" data-aht="source">Or HaChayyim #1</a><a href="OrHaChayyimBereshit34-25" data-aht="source">Bereshit 34:25</a><a href="R. Chayyim b. Atar (Or HaChayyim)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Chayyim b. Atar</a></multilink></mekorot> | ||
− | <point><b>Did Shekhem deserve death?</b> According to Or HaChayyim, Shekhem deserved death for | + | <point><b>Did Shekhem deserve death?</b> According to Or HaChayyim, Shekhem deserved death for abducting Dinah, but not for raping her, since only the former is a capital crime.<fn>See discussion above.</fn>  Ralbag agrees that legally the rape was not punishable by death since Dinah was not married, but asserts that the brothers felt that leaving the act unavenged made it appear as if Dinah was simply a harlot,<fn>Since taking a prostitute was not punishable according to the Noachide laws, if Dinah's rape was to go unpunished, it would appear to all that she must have been a harlot.</fn> and that for her honor and theirs, Shekhem needed to be killed.<fn>Ralbag brings this explanation in the name of his father to explain the brother's final words, "הַכְזוֹנָה יַעֲשֶׂה אֶת אֲחוֹתֵנוּ".</fn></point> |
<point><b>Did the general populace sin?</b> According to this approach the inhabitants of the city were not culpable for condoning or participating in the original act. The brothers, thus, would not have killed them except that they stood to defend their king making it impossible to avenge Dinah without killing them too.<fn>Rav Zeev Weitman</fn></point> | <point><b>Did the general populace sin?</b> According to this approach the inhabitants of the city were not culpable for condoning or participating in the original act. The brothers, thus, would not have killed them except that they stood to defend their king making it impossible to avenge Dinah without killing them too.<fn>Rav Zeev Weitman</fn></point> | ||
<point><b>"וַיָּבֹאוּ עַל הָעִיר בֶּטַח וַיַּהַרְגוּ כָּל זָכָר"</b> – One might question the assumption that the city's inhabitants were defending their king from this verse which suggests that the brothers proactively killed the men, who were sitting secure, unprepared for the massacre.<fn>See R. Zeev Whitman who questions this approach, not from this specific verse, but from the tone of the passage as a whole.  It is perhaps this issue that prompts Ralbag to propose that the brothers pre-empted an inevitable revenge attack by the city, rather than say that they defended themselves against those who were protecting Shekhem.</fn></point> | <point><b>"וַיָּבֹאוּ עַל הָעִיר בֶּטַח וַיַּהַרְגוּ כָּל זָכָר"</b> – One might question the assumption that the city's inhabitants were defending their king from this verse which suggests that the brothers proactively killed the men, who were sitting secure, unprepared for the massacre.<fn>See R. Zeev Whitman who questions this approach, not from this specific verse, but from the tone of the passage as a whole.  It is perhaps this issue that prompts Ralbag to propose that the brothers pre-empted an inevitable revenge attack by the city, rather than say that they defended themselves against those who were protecting Shekhem.</fn></point> |
Version as of 22:40, 4 December 2014
Sin and Slaughter of Shekhem
Exegetical Approaches
Fundamentally Justified
Shekehm and his city were deserving of death for their actions in either the original taking of Dinah, or for their refusal to abide by the deal that was made with the brothers.
Complicit in the Original Sin
Since the entire city had participated, to varying degrees, in the taking of Dinah, all deserved a capital punishment.
- "Abducting" Dinah is a capital crime – Rambam, Abarbanel and Or HaChayyim maintain that the act of taking Dinah against her will falls under the category of "theft" which is a capital crime under the Noachide laws.2
- Rape is punishable by death – The Tosafist commentary, on the other hand, apparently assumes that it is justified to punish rape with death, even though neither Noachide nor Torah law does so.3
- Intermarriage – According to many of the classical commentaries, in contrast, it seems that Shimon and Levi are less bothered by the actual act of rape and more by the potential for intermarriage.
- Condoning the Act – Ibn Kaspi and Abarbanel assert that the people of Shekhem did not protest the taking of Dinah, and as such were guilty of complicity.4 Rambam adds that in not prosecuting Shekhem, they violated the Noachide law to institute legal procedures, which is itself punishable by death.5
- Actively took Dinah – Or HaChayyim asserts that the people of the city actively participated in the taking of Dinah, thereby transgressing the Noachide law regarding theft.6
- Joined in the sexual assault – The Tosafist commentary goes even a step further to suggest that Dinah was raped by the other men of Shekhem as well.7
- The brothers never meant the Shekhemites to circumcise themselves. Their speech was rather intended to shame and rile Shekehm and Chamor into fighting against them, enabling them to take revenge.
- Alternatively, the brothers hoped to convince Shekhem and his city to circumcise themselves so that they could kill them while they were weak.8 He suggests, though, that the real trickery lay in the intentional ambiguity of their words. Though they implied otherwise, they never actually agreed to let Shekhem marry Dinah.9 Thus, in the end, they did not go back on their word.
- Hashem assented – Abarbanel suggests that Hashem agreed with the brothers' acts, as evidenced by the fact that He put fear into the surrounding cities and protected Yaakov's family.
- Hashem rewarded – Many of the classical sources suggest that the act was sanctioned explicitly by Hashem, who might have even have put the thought into their heads.11 Jubilees further asserts that the brothers were "written for a blessing" for their act. Soon after, Levi 12 was rewarded with the priesthood.13
- Act together – Abarbanel and Or HaChayyim do not differentiate between the brothers and present them as all acting together in both the negotiations and in the killing/looting of the people of the city.
- Shimon and Levi more zealous – Theodotus and the Testament of Levi, though, do not present Shimon and Levi as part of the negotiations, and in fact suggest that in their zealousness they were against them totally. According to these sources, it is possible that Yaakov was sincere in his offering of Dinah. Shimon and Levi, though, thought that circumcision alone should not permit intermarriage, and it is to prevent this (rather than avenge the rape) that they massacred the city.14
Reneged on the Deal
The Shekhemites did not uphold their part of the bargain with the brothers, but rather changed the terms, and in so doing invited and justified the brothers' vengeance.
- No –This position might assert that Shekhem did not deserve death for ravishing Dinah, since rape is not a capital crime according to the Torah. Rather, the rapist must compensate the father of the victim and then marry the woman.15 Thus, it is not for the rape itself that Shekhem and the city were killed but rather for their later actions.
- Yes – According to Maasei Hashem and HaKetav VeHaKabbalah, though, both Yaakov and sons thought it just to kill Shekhem for the "lawless atrocity" which had been committed.
- Regretted leaving idolatry – According to Sefer HaYashar, the Rosh, and Hadar Zekenim, the condition regarding circumcision included a rejection of idolatry. After circumcising, though, the people regretted changing their faith,16 and according to Sefer HaYashar even planned to kill Yaakov and sons in a show of loyalty to their original beliefs.
- Planned to enslave and rob – Yosef HaMekannei, Maasei Hashem, and HaKetav VeHaKabbalah17 point to several changes that Shekhem made when relaying the deal to his subjects.18 His words "מִקְנֵהֶם וְקִנְיָנָם וְכָל בְּהֶמְתָּם הֲלוֹא לָנוּ הֵם" proved that their intentions were to rob,19 while the new emphasis on their actively taking (rather than being given) the Israelite women suggested that they planned to subjugate Yaakov's clan.20 Maasei Hashem asserts that as this was their motivation, the brothers had no choice but to attack, since "הבא להרגך השכם להרגו".
- Only Shimon and Levi deceitful – This position might say that only Shimon and Levi spoke insincerely, and that the other brothers did not object to giving Dinah in marriage. Their participation in the later killing was only in response to Shekhem's veering from his part of the bargain.
- A means to kill Shechem – According to Maasei Hashem and HaKetav VeHaKabbalah the brothers spoke without their father's knowledge and the deceit was aimed at Shekhem alone.21 They intended that he circumcise himself so that they could then attack him easily, but they had not initially meant for the rest of the city to also be circumcised or killed.22
Practically Necessary
Though the people of Shekhem might themselves have been innocent, it was necessary to kill them either to retrieve Dinah and achieve vengeance for her rape, or to ensure that such an atrocity was never repeated.
To Retrieve Dinah
The only way to retrieve Dinah from her captors and avenge the rape was to kill those who were protecting Shekhem.
Deterrence for the Future
The brothers were purposefully extreme in their actions so as to instill fear into their enemies and deter them from any future attempts to harm the family.