Zohar 2:29b
This verse, however, refers to what has been said. Mystery of Rachel and Leah: they are two Worlds, One a concealed world, one a revealed world. So this one is buried and covered withing, in the cave, and concealed ; while that one stands at the crossroads, revealed
All corresponding to the supernal pattern. Therefore, Jacob Did not bring her into the cave or into anywhere else, for look at what is written: "with still a stretch of land to reach Ephrath He did not bring her into the city because he knew that her place was in the open.
D. Matt commentary Zohar volume IV 117
Rachel symbolized Shekhinah, who is relatively revealed whereas Leah symbolized Binah who is concealed. Appropriately, Rachel was buried by the road and Leah within the cave of Machpelah.
Zohar 2:29b
This verse, however, refers to what has been said. Mystery of Rachel and Leah: they are two Worlds, One a concealed world, one a revealed world. So this one is buried and covered withing, in the cave, and concealed ; while that one stands at the crossroads, revealed
All corresponding to the supernal pattern. Therefore, Jacob Did not bring her into the cave or into anywhere else, for look at what is written: "with still a stretch of land to reach Ephrath He did not bring her into the city because he knew that her place was in the open.
D. Matt commentary Zohar volume IV 117
Rachel symbolized Shekhinah, who is relatively revealed whereas Leah symbolized Binah who is concealed. Appropriately, Rachel was buried by the road and Leah within the cave of Machpelah.
Jacob is Tiferet: energized by Binah, and the voice that energized Shechinah. When Shechinah is in exile, the voice of Tiferet is cut off.
Zohar 2:29b
A voice is heard on the height wailing bitter weeping, Rachel weeping for her children. Moses and Abraham could not convince Hashem to change his mind, why Rachel? Because she took pity on her sister Leah and gave her the signals to fool Jacob and even hid under the marriage bed so her voice would be heard. And so Rachel says to HaShem, If I could give up my husband to have pity on my sister, surely you can have pity on our children.
Matt Zohar volume iv
Assembly of Israel is called Rachel: Shekhinah, who shares in Israel's exile. The word "rachel" also means "sheep, and as sheep are silent before her shearers, so Shekhinah is silent when other nations rule her people, because She is cut off from Her partner: Tiferet, symbolized by "voice". This voice has now withdrawn fro Her and is heard only on a height, the realm of Binah; who is known as Jerusalem above.
Adin Steinsaltz:
There is a special bond betweena man and the first woman he knows. This bond existed not between Jacob and Rachel, but between Leah and Jacob. Rachel remained dreaming a dream that was unfulfilled while Leah gave birth to son after son. When her second son was born, instead of joy and happiness, it was death that came to her. Rachel became the personification of the tragic aspect of the people Israel. She became the personification of the Shechinah in exile.
Rachel had weaknesses as well as charm. She personified another aspect of the Jewish Nation: its feeling of being chosen, its overconfidence in the love of Gi-d which often led to disaster.
Some weakness in her character was present in hertemporary exchange of Jacob for the mandrakes, and in stealing of the household gods.Rachel did not recognize limitations, she lived in a sphere where love justified everything. Even a great love requires limitations.
Avivah Gottlieb Zornberg:
Quoting the Maharal, in his supercommentary to Rashi. What is the power of intercession? Why does G-d instruct Jacob to bury her so that her tears that will restore her children from exile? From Eikha Rabbah
Rachel says to G-d, "What have my children done, that You have brought such punishment upon them? If it is because of their idolatry (called tzara, a rival wife} I loved my husband, Jacob, and he worked for me for seven years, and in the end my father gave my sister to him in marriage. And I constrained my love for my husband and handed over the identifying signs....I am flesh and blood, while you are the compassionate King - how much more merciful should You be to them. And G-d answers " T here is a reward for your labor".
In Maharal's reading, the heroic complexity, a kind of tragic potimism radiates from the figure of Rachel, buried "by the way. It is the painful raidance that overwhelms Jacob's memory, just at the moment when he is about to synthesize the exiled fragments of his world The thought of Rachel becomes a mirror, reflecting, sam and yet inverted, some of his own deepest dilemmas. For if she could tolerate Rachel can holdthat position, at the mmargin between reality and appearances, on the border between meaning and meaninglessness.For Jacob, the tension underlying such a position is sometimes unbearable. At the very moment of reintegration, it precipitates him into a blank.