Rachel is first mentioned in the
Hebrew Bible in
Genesis 29 when Jacob happens upon her as she is about to water her father's flock. She was the second daughter of
Laban, Rebekah's brother, making Jacob her first cousin.[2] Jacob had traveled a great distance to find Laban. Rebekah had sent him there to be safe from his angry twin brother,
Esau.
During Jacob's stay, he fell in love with Rachel and agreed to work seven years for Laban in return for her hand in marriage. On the night of the wedding, the bride was veiled and Jacob did not notice that
Leah, Rachel's older sister, had been substituted for Rachel. Whereas "Rachel was lovely in form and beautiful", "Leah had tender eyes".[a] Later Jacob confronted Laban, who excused his own deception by insisting that the older sister should marry first. He assured Jacob that after his wedding week was finished, he could take Rachel as a wife as well, and work another seven years as payment for her. When God "saw that Leah was unloved, he opened her womb" (Genesis 29:31),[4] and she gave birth to four sons.
Rachel, like
Sarah and Rebekah, remained unable to conceive. According to biblical scholar
Tikva Frymer-Kensky, "The infertility of the matriarchs has two effects: it heightens the drama of the birth of the eventual son, marking
Isaac,
Jacob, and
Joseph as special; and it emphasizes that pregnancy is an act of God."[5]
Rachel became jealous of
Leah and gave Jacob her maidservant,
Bilhah, to be a surrogate mother for her. Bilhah gave birth to two sons that Rachel named and raised (
Dan and
Naphtali). Leah responded by offering her handmaid
Zilpah to Jacob, and named and raised the two sons (
Gad and
Asher) that Zilpah bore. According to some commentaries, Bilhah and Zilpah were half-sisters of Leah and Rachel.[6] After Leah conceived again, Rachel finally had a son,
Joseph,[2] who would become Jacob's favorite child.
Children
Rachel's son
Joseph was destined to be the leader of Israel's tribes between exile and nationhood. This role is exemplified in the Biblical story of Joseph, who prepared the way in Egypt for his family's exile there.[7]
After Joseph's birth, Jacob decided to return to the land of
Canaan with his family.[2] Fearing that Laban would deter him, he fled with his two wives, Leah and Rachel, and twelve children without informing his father-in-law. Laban pursued him and accused him of stealing his
teraphim. Indeed, Rachel had taken her father's teraphim, hidden them inside her camel's seat cushion, and sat upon them. Laban had neglected to give his daughters their inheritance (
Genesis 31:14–16).[5]
Not knowing that the teraphim were in his wife's possession, Jacob pronounced a curse on whoever had them: "With whoever you will find your gods, he will not live" (
Genesis 31:32). Laban proceeded to search the tents of Jacob and his wives, but when he came to Rachel's tent, she told her father, "Let not my lord be angered that I cannot rise up before you, for the way of women is upon me" (
Genesis 31:35). Laban left her alone, and the teraphim were not discovered.
Death
Near
Ephrath, Rachel went into a difficult
labor with her second son,
Benjamin. The midwife told her in the middle of the birth that her child was a boy.[8] Before she died, Rachel named her son
Ben Oni ("son of my mourning"), but Jacob called him Ben Yamin (Benjamin).
Rashi explains that Ben Yamin either means "son of the right" (i.e., "south"), since Benjamin was the only one of Jacob's sons born in Canaan, which is to the south of
Paddan Aram; or it could mean "son of my days", as Benjamin was born in Jacob's old age.
Biblical scholarship distinguishes between two narratives for the site of Rachel's burial, a northern one suggesting a site north of Jerusalem near
Ramah (modern
Al-Ram), and a southern one placing it close to Bethlehem.
Rachel was buried on the road to
Ephrath, just outside
Bethlehem,[9] and not in the ancestral tomb at
Machpelah (where her husband Jacob and her sister Leah were buried).
Rachel's Tomb, located between
Bethlehem and the
Israeli settlement of
Gilo, is visited by tens of thousands of visitors each year.[10]
Mordecai, the hero of the
Book of Esther, and Queen
Esther herself, were descendants of Rachel through her son Benjamin. The Book of Esther details Mordecai's lineage as "Mordecai the son of
Yair, the son of
Shimi, the son of
Kish, a man of the right (ish yemini)" (Esther 2:5). The designation of ish yemini refers to his membership in the
Tribe of Benjamin (ben yamin, son of the right). The rabbis comment that Esther's ability to remain silent in the palace of
Ahasuerus, resisting the king's pressure to reveal her ancestry, was inherited from her ancestor Rachel, who remained silent even when Laban brought out Leah to marry Jacob.
After the tribes of
Ephraim and Benjamin were exiled by the
Assyrians, Rachel was remembered as the classic mother who mourns and intercedes for her children.[5]Jeremiah 31:15, speaks of 'Rachel weeping for her children' (
KJV). This is interpreted in
Judaism as Rachel crying for an end to her descendants' sufferings and exiles following the destruction by the Babylonians of the
First Temple in ancient
Jerusalem. According to the
Midrash, Rachel spoke before God: "If I, a mere mortal, was prepared not to humiliate my sister and was willing to take a rival into my home, how could You, the eternal, compassionate God, be jealous of
idols, which have no true existence, that were brought into Your home (the
Temple in Jerusalem)? Will You cause my children to be exiled on this account?" God accepted her plea and promised that, eventually, the exile would end and the Jews would return to their land.[11]
In the second chapter of the
Gospel of Matthew (part of the
New Testament), this reference from Jeremiah is interpreted as a prediction of the
Massacre of the Innocents by
Herod the Great in his attempt to kill the young
Jesus. The Jeremaic prophecy is the inspiration behind the medieval dramatic cycle Ordo Rachelis, concerned with the infancy of Jesus.
In Jewish tradition
A major theme in Jewish tradition is that of Rachel weeping for her children in
Exile. This is based in part on a biblical passage (Jer. 31:14–16) "A cry is heard in Ramah—wailing, bitter weeping—Rachel weeping for her children, she refuses to be comforted for her children, who are gone." According to the rabbis, Jacob buried Rachel on the side of the road for the purpose of her future position to plead on behalf of the Jewish people.[12]
In Islam
Despite not being named in the
Qur'an, Rachel (
Arabic: رَحِـيْـل, Rāḥīl) is honored in
Islam as the wife of Jacob and mother of Joseph,[13] who are frequently mentioned by name in the
Qur'an as Yaʿqūb (
Arabic: يَـعْـقُـوْب) and Yūsuf (
Arabic: يُـوْسُـف), respectively.[14][15]
Notes
^"Leah had tender eyes" (
Biblical Hebrew: ועיני לאה רכות) (Genesis 29:17).[3] It is debated as to whether the adjective "tender" (רכות) should be taken to mean "delicate and soft" or "weary". Some translations say that it may have meant blue or light colored eyes. Some say that Leah spent most of her time weeping and praying to God to change her destined mate. Thus the Torah describes her eyes as "soft" from weeping.