EXCAVATING MATRIARCHAL LEGACIES – VAYIGASH

We gathered in a bittersweet and joyful closing homecoming session to hold and honor Bilhah and Zilpah. Over our month together, we shared the story of Bilhah and Zilpah; a narrative of being born into a system of enslavement, navigating life’s realities, finding identity in a sea of change, and creating better opportunities for our children.

In our first session, we read the lines of Vayeitzei that introduce Zilpah and Bilhah, foreshadow their marriage to Yaakov as they’re given to Leah and Rachel, and reveal how they are used to create children intended to be claimed by other women. We journaled about how/why Bilhah and Zilpah are meaningful in our lives and considered the meaning and actions of homecoming. We closed with a collectively created welcome home prayer:

Welcome home Zilpah & Bilhah! May we learn to listen for and hear your wisdom and wrap it around us in comfort that teaches us to value and nurture our daughters from birth to death. שְׁמַ֣ע בְּ֭נִי מוּסַ֣ר אָבִ֑יךָ וְאַל־תִּ֝טֹּ֗שׁ תּוֹרַ֥ת אִמֶּֽךָ׃ Listen, my son, to your father’s instruction and do not forsake your mother’s teaching. You have arrived! Welcome Zilpah! Welcome Bilhah! All of you is welcome here. This is a space of collaboration.

Our second session looked at the other women of Bilhah’s and Zilpah’s story in parashat Vayishlakh and considered their relationships. The possibility for understanding and care born from kindred experiences. We noted Dinah’s experience with rape and her marriage being determined by her brothers and her rapist. We noted the women of Shekhem’s experience of witnessing their men be executed followed by their enslavement along with their children. We noted the mention of another woman (Devora) who had given her life to serve the family featured in the narrative. We started to excavate ritual imagery.

During our third session we continued looking for women in the story. Parashat Vayeshev, when we did not meet, mentions Tamar’s experiences surviving a husband’s death and control over her ability to procreate by her father-in-law, Yaakov’s unnamed daughters, and Timna as the mother of someone named an enemy. Parashat Miketz added only one woman, Asenat who was given to marry Yosef. We considered archetypes as a framework to understand the messages embedded within the story and connected the experiences, wisdom, and legacies of modern matriarchs to biblical matriarchs.

Today’s gathering opened with Esther Rabbah 1:12, a source that acknowledges six matriarchs instead of four. We are dropped into a discussion about a royal throne which turns to a query of how many steps led up to it. Like all rabbinic debates there was contestation and clarification. Are there seven instead of six? This is a classic case of tread versus riser. An additional riser goes up to a floor level, which is not a step, culminating in one additional riser than tread, the standing surface of a step, in any stair. The bulk of the source lands on six stairs (treads) and then likens it to a list of groupings of six: lands, orders of Mishnah, days of creation, matriarchs, and mitzvot.

Then, we invoked the Amidah line of the matriarchs, itself an augmentation to the prayer service in the history of prayer evolution. We played on the personal meditation invitation of the Amidah to reflect on the Esther Rabbah source and how it felt to step into prayer development space. We reflected on how ritual relates to legacy.

Throughout the readings, Bilhah and Zilpah remain in the story, always attributed as the birth parents of their children. That continues in parahsat Vayigash which holds the first accounting of the descendants of Zilpah and Bilhah. As we have welcomed Bilhah and Zilpah into the space, we have brought along ancestors and personal and biblical figures who have been meaningful in our life. Attendees shared recent yartzeits, honoring the memory of a loved one who had died, recently observed or coming up. Father’s, mother’s, a brother, a grandfather, a sister-in-law, an aunt, and a grandma named Hannah, who died during Chanuka, whose yartzeit starts this evening soon filled the room with us. Some had experienced a lot of loss this year. Everyone named someone. This set the stage for reading Zilpah’s and Bilhah’s lineages, first in Vayigash, culminating in Numbers.

We lit a yizkor candle and read the accounting of the families growth as they traveled to Canaan and later to Egypt. We focused on Zilpah and Bilhah, and then Gad, Dan, Asher, and Naphtali. We looked at options that can be found in traditional yizkor memorializations as we considered borrowing from this ritual as a way to honor Bilhah and Zilpah. As Chag haBanot and Rosh Chodesh approach, celebrating Serakh, Zilpah’s granddaughter and an immortal Talmudic elder, emerged as a calendar time to anchor possible communal commemoration. We returned to previous ritual elements explored in session two as ways to anchor memory to source material. Yartzeit and yizkor both are times when donations are often made in the name of a person being remembered. This idea wove into supporting organizations who support women who have been silenced after sexualized violence, bridging biblical matriarchs into the continuing realities of our world today.

We closed with storytime of Serakh midrashic tales of singing secrets, clarifying the texture of the Sea of Reeds, revealing where Yosef was buried, and vouching for Moshe from her first-hand knowledge, as the elder of elders who left Egypt and returned. This rolled into a midrash of ברזל barzel (iron) being an acronym for Bilhah-Rachel-Zilpah-Leah, Yaakov’s four wives representing the sefira malchut. We parted to a recording of Lucille Clifton reciting “won’t you celebrate with me”.

This is the final weekly email that runs during the annual Bilhah Zilpah Homecoming. Stay connected with the Bilhah Zilpah Project throughout the rest of the year with monthly emails sharing insights from weekly study. You can sign up for email through the homecoming registration form or reply to this email.

Joyful wishes for a continuing Chanukah and Kwanzaa and a meaningful Chag haBanot and Rosh Chodesh Tevet. May our actions bring us closer to the world to come.

WITNESSING MODERN MATRIARCHS – MIKETZ

We gathered for our penultimate session of the Bilhah and Zilpah homecoming. Today we grounded our welcome by naming historical or biblical figures who have been meaningful in our lives, sharing a bit on the lessons we have learned from them. Audre Lorde (1934-1992), Shifra & Puah (Exodus 1:17-19), Judith (Judith 13:10-12), Colin Ward (1924-2010), and Eartha White (1876-1974) were named. We also continued our tradition of inviting in the memories of ancestors fueling our learning: the persistence and resilience of a maternal grandfather to overcome fear; and Mi’kMaq great and great grandmothers, who were very fierce tenacious women, connected with during an ancestorial homeland visit to Newfoundland (Ktaqmkuk), Canada were brought in to support and enhance our learning…

Our recap of the first three parshiot of Bilhah’s and Zilpah’s homecoming, Vayeitzei, Vayishlakh, and Vayeshev, was offered before bringing in the stories of the upcoming parasha Miketz. On the surface, these portions tell the story of Yaakov leaving home, to save his life from the wrath of his brother Esav and seek a wife, ultimately acquiring four wives which is how we meet Zilpah and Bilhah. It is the tale of sending gifts to appease a brother heading his way accompanied by four-hundred men that sweetly resolves in a joyful reunion and an invitation for Yaakov to join Esav in Seir that is refused in lieu of Shekhem and the rape of Dinah. It is a story of settling down in a father’s homeland, raising a family, and mourning the ‘death’ of a favorite son; with a full chapter interlude of the righteous insistence of Tamar to have children, before returning back to Egypt where a very much alive Yosef has been sent to the dungeon for refusing the sexual advances of a wife with a powerful husband. The narrative will continue this coming Shabbat with Yosef freed by his ability to interpret dreams for a confounded Pharoah and the suggestions made that protect (and enrich) Egypt from the same famine that ultimately reunites Yosef with his family.

All that might be added to expound the single run-on sentence parshiot summaries would be details nuancing the broad brush strokes painted above. The call to center Bilhah and Zilpah invited closer consideration of ways to bring them in, especially in a portion which does not invoke either character. This offered opportunity to build on previous study and interpretations for reading solidarity between Bilhah and Zilpah with Leah and Dinah. This insight with Leah comes during Lavan’s search for his idols in the mountains of Gilad (Breishit 31:33) with it’s odd ordering of entering Leah’s tent, entering the shared tent of the two enslaved, and then exiting Leah’s tent before entering Rachel’s tent. Could Leah’s sense of herself as a second-class first-wife induce empathy with the second-wife realities of Zilpah and Bilhah? The invitation to envision solidarity with Dinah lies in Bilhah and Zilpah, as women who navigated orchestrated sexual control by others, witnessing the consequences endured by Dinah after her rape by Shekhem followed by her brothers deciding the fate of so many.

Beyond these primary female characters of Leah and Dinah, we looked at other women, some named and others merely noted, who existed within Vayeitzei, Vayishlakh, and Vayeshev. Miketz offered another chance to explore other women within the text, there was only one, Asnat who was given as a wife to Yosef. So, Bilhah and Zilphah entreated looking at the transitions between the narratives of women across the parshiot where they dwell, whispering to go back and include Toldot as a foundation. It is easy to miss this sequencing of matriarchal stories operating the background because of the focus on completing the full set of twelve sons that become the Israelites and in setting up the Jewish foundational narrative of being betrayed and enslaved by Pharoah. We had quite the spirited conversation of the archetypal messages subconsciously conveyed about women’s purpose and place, and the conditions under which autonomy of action by women is interpreted as righteous or wrong.

Our conversation introduced Modern Matriarchs which considers the stories of historical women alongside Bilhah and Zilpah. Modern Matriarchs grew out of understanding Bilhah and Zilpah as surviving lack of bodily autonomy amid their voices being silenced, a reality of many women today, if not all women to varying degrees. Bilhah and Zilpah have a lot to teach about navigating oppressive conditions. Connecting biblical wisdom with the secular insight of other women who survived kindred realities emerged as a powerful framework. The list started with Lucy, Anarcha, and Betsey (the women who made modern gynecology possible between 1845-1849); Nancy, Mary, and Lizzie (two enslaved sisters and a third enslaved woman married to the same man in 1855); Emma, Carrie, and Vivian Buck (three generations of women sacrificed to legislate control over women’s womb’s which came to a head in 1927); and Henrietta Lacks (whose cells made modern drug testing and development possible in the 1950s); women largely controlled in medical settings.

We met modern matriarch Recy Taylor (1919-2017) whose yartzeit is December 28. Recy was a twenty-four year old mother of one when she was abducted at gunpoint by seven men & raped by six in 1944, while walking home from church with another woman and the woman’s son. A car had passed several times that evening as the trio navigated along peanut plantations lining the highway in Abbeville, Alabama. Recy was forced inside the car by men armed with knives and guns, claiming they had been deputized to bring in an assailant who cut a white boy. Recy knew the men who raped her, and was warned to be silent, but she told what happened to her. There was no redemption for her from those men despite going through two trials and enduring intimidation. Recy’s voice might set her apart from Bilhah & Zilpah but little reveals whether or not Bilhah and Zilpah used their voice to affect their reality, beyond potential creative solidarity reads presented above. Recy’s story endures in part because of her brave resolve which ignited national organizing around the conditions of sexualized violence black women faced daily, that in turn provided the foundation for a civil rights movement to fight for the right to sit on a bus which was ultimately easier to win than protection of female bodies. This is part of Recy’s legacy, born from the brutality she endured that left her unable to have more children. The only formal redemption received was an apology by the Mayor of Abbeville in 2011 after the release of At the Dark End of the Street: Black Women, Rape, and Resistance­–A New History of the Civil Rights Movement From Rosa Parks to the Rise of Black Power by Danielle McGuire. This highlights how voices can be erased even when raised. That history already shared through the words and actions of black activists appears unheard until written as a book by an author whose About page never names herself as white (or anything else) for a book that notes ‘Black’ twice in its title.

We brought Bilhah and Zilpah back into the conversation through the following journal prompts:

• How do Bilhah’s and Zilpah’s biblical realities relate to historic ones around the globe and ours today?

• How might Bilhah and Zilpah have channeled what they endured into actions that paved the way to better realities for their daughters?

• How do we interact with figures like Recy Taylor and understand them beyond one moment that came to define them? How do we do the same for Bilhah and Zilpah?

We returned to ritual explorations begun at our last session, now considering existing ritual moments connecting to characters discussed or the time of year:

  • Yartzeit (annual commemoration of a death)
  • Yizkor (communal ancestral remembrance four times each year on Yom Kippur, last day of Sukkot, last day of Pesakh, Shavuot)
  • Ushpizin (inviting seven guests, traditionally male shepherds of Judaism)
  • Omer (counting the 49 days between Pesakh and Shavuot)
  • Amidah (prayer recited while standing during all daily services)

אֱלֹהֵי אַבְרָהָם אֱלֹהֵי יִצְחָק וֵאלֹהֵי יַעֲקב

God of Abraham, God of Isaac and God of Jacob

וֵאלֹהֵי שָׂרָה אֱלֹהֵי רִבְקָה אֱלֹהֵי רָחֵל וֵאלֹהֵי לֵאָה

God of Sarah, God of Rebecca, God of Rachel, and God of Leah

  • Chag haBanot or Rosh Chodesh l’Banot or Eid-al-Banat, a North African Chanukah festival of daughters celebrated by some Jewish communities in the Middle East on Rosh Chodesh Tevet during the Jewish holiday of Chanukah. The holiday was most preserved by Tunisian Jews and also celebrated by Jewish communities in Libya, Algeria, Kushta, Morocco and Thessaloniki.
  • Rosh Chodesh

Chevruta pairings yielded rich conversations that referenced Kindred by Octavia Butler, compared midrash as Jewish fan fiction, asked what it means to build a shared tent (during Sukkot and beyond), considered saving a bus seat for Elijah as an empetus for action during Pesakh, envisioned ways of weaving Bilhah and Zilpah into the Kabbalistic approach to counting the Omer using sefirot (attributes of God), considered the ethical issues of modern gestational characters where birth mothers are often excised from children’s lives distinct from biblical characters where mothers often remain in the picture, and pondered erecting altars to flawed individuals rather than requiring an image of perfection that requires erasure to warrant admiration.

After more group discussion, we brought in the ritual elements identified at the previous session, and split into small groups to look for objects, actions, prayers, and lines of Torah that might inspire ritual or be borrowed into it. We considered bat mitzvah, commonplace today yet didn’t exist until 1970, which may feel far away but is far from ancient. Bat Mitzvah has become so commonplace within the past fifty-five years that we are currently witnessing the continuing morphing of this ritual as it transforms from bar and bat into ‘b’ which stands for both and welcomes people for whom those categories are nuanced. The example demonstrates how Judaism needs us to create the rituals we need for our lives, which in turn keeps Judaism alive.

We considered:

  • What ritual opportunities are inspired by the lines that invoke Bilhah and Zilpah?
  • What modern historical characters have kindred experiences with Bilhah and Zilpah?
  • How might you imagine celebrating daughters through Bilhah and Zilpah?
  • How might honoring Bilhah and Zilpah open opportunities to acknowledge other biblical women?

Our engaged study took us right to the end of our time together. We were slow to part but looking forward to our last Bilhah and Zilpah Homecoming session on December 29 when we will explore Weaving Matriarchal Legacies, looking to the generations and story threads that tie us together. Register to join us. We would love to study with you! Until then, listen for Bilhah and Zilpah whispering to us.