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 Orchard of Delights    #                                                     Vayeishev

 #
 stems from the same root as the Hebrew word describing the ladder   Shabbat, replete with all its trials and tribulations, nonetheless for
 being “set” firmly in the earth. Jacob poured oil on the “head” of   millennia the Jewish people have managed to transform the seventh
 the pillar, and the “head” of the ladder reached the heavens. Thus,   day into an island of true peace and tranquility. Every Shabbat we
 in anointing the pillar, Jacob rapidly transforms the dream symbols   express our longing for an era that will be eternally Shabbat, when
 into reality.  heaven and earth will no longer represent antithetical realities and
            states of mind.
 Finally, following  the  dream and Jacob’s initial reaction, the
 Torah states, “And Jacob lifted up his feet and went towards the   In the Zohar a tzaddik is referred to as “Shabbat.” This does not
 land of the children of the east” (Genesis 29:1). Here we see Jacob   mean that the tzaddik has an unrealistic, naïve, or escapist view of
 enthusiastically internalizing the dream, by symbolically “lifting up   reality; rather, this appellation connotes a certain inner peace the
 his feet.” The dream has permeated Jacob’s entire being, from his   tzaddik maintains when dealing with the never-ending barrage of
 head, to his heart, and even to his feet.  tests  and  turbulent  fluctuations  of  life.  Perhaps  this  was  Jacob’s
            and our greatest test – to embrace the challenges of this world while
 Jacob’s ability to not only interpret dreams but to translate and
 integrate their messages into his life is also proven by his ability to   maintaining an inner sense of peace and joy.
 “transform” the majority of Laban’s flocks. As was discussed above
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 in the portion of Vayeitzei (“Transformations”), by internalizing the
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 message of the ladder connecting earth and heaven, Jacob was able
 to not only unite the physical and the spiritual, but to even transform   £The Dreams of Jacob – The Dreams of Jacob –
                              ££The Dreams of Jacob –
 the physical by applying the spiritual to it.
                               the Dreams of Joseph
                               the Dreams of Joseph
 Jacob’s dream and his ability to not only interpret it but to turn it   the Dreams of Joseph
 into a driving force in his life were inherited by Joseph. Perhaps that
 is why Joseph so imprudently shared his dreams with his brothers
 and his father. His enthusiasm overcame his sense of caution as he   This portion begins with Joseph dreaming two dreams and ends with
 knew that his dreams were vessels containing both prophecy and   him correctly interpreting two more dreams, the butler’s and the
 blessing. Jacob “guarded the matter” for he knew intuitively that   baker’s. In the next portion, Joseph rises to power by interpreting
 his son’s dreams would be realized as his own had been.  Pharaoh’s two dreams correctly. Where did Joseph receive  the
            wisdom and sensitivity to interpret dreams from?
               In the portion’s second verse, Jacob’s special relationship with
            Joseph is emphasized: “And these are the generations of Jacob, Joseph
            was seventeen years old” (Genesis 37:2). Although Jacob had twelve
            sons, the Torah only mentions Joseph by name to teach that Jacob
            singled out Joseph for special treatment. The next verse explicitly
            states the reason for his favoritism: “Now Israel loved Joseph more
            than all his children because he was the son of his old age” (Genesis
            37:3). No doubt this special treatment was also a reflection of Jacob’s
            deep love for Rachel, his first love, whose oldest son was Joseph.
            A mystical reading of  the second verse  proposes that this special


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