Background to share with participants:
- Genesis 16 - Birth of Ishmael and relationship of Sarah and Hagar
- Genesis 17 - God makes a covenant with Abram: changes name to Abraham, promises a son to be named Yitzhak meaning laughter, changes Sarai's name to Sarah, covenant will be with descendants of Isaac, blesses Ishmael.
Ask participants what they know about
- Abraham
- Sarah
- Isaac
- Ishmael
- Hagar
Let participants know that we will exploring Chapter 21 of B'reishit, the first book of the Torah, the portion we read on the first day of Rosh Hashanah. We will be using a particular technique called Bibliodrama and it requires your participation. There are two techniques used: Asking general questions of everyone, and opportunities to play the different Biblical figures. When you play a Biblical figure, you will wear a name tag with that person's name so we (and you) can keep track! Bibliodrama is not a play or a skit. I will be telling the story and then you will be imagining how that person would respond to what is happening to them in that part of the story.
Any questions before we start?
(1) יהוה took note of Sarah as promised, and יהוה did for Sarah what had been announced. (2) Sarah conceived and bore a son to Abraham in his old age, at the set time of which God had spoken. (3) Abraham gave his newborn son, whom Sarah had borne him, the name of Isaac. (4) And when his son Isaac was eight days old, Abraham circumcised him, as God had commanded him. (5) Now Abraham was a hundred years old when his son Isaac was born to him. (6) Sarah said, “God has brought me laughter; everyone who hears will laugh with me.”
Questions/Context
- God took note of Sarah. Why? [God's covenant is with Abraham and Sarah.]
- Sarah says "Everyone will laugh with me. Why with me and not at me? [Hope for childless couples, hope for anyone who really wants something and has to wait a long time to get it.]
“Who would have said to Abraham
That Sarah would suckle children!
Yet I have borne a son in his old age.”
Optional to include for 6th & 7th or older to discuss what they think Sarah's comment means.
Bibliodrama: Part 1
Volunteers: Sarah, Ishmael, Isaac
Background: Isaac is 3 or 4; Ishmael is 17 or 18
Rounds:
1. Ishmael does something mean to Isaac and Sarah sees Ishmael do it - what does Sarah see/think?
2. Isaac does something mean to Ishmael and Isaac does something back. Sarah does not see how Isaac instigates, but does see what Ishmael does to Isaac - what does Sarah see/think?
3. Isaac and Ishmael are playing and it is innocent but doesn't look like it - what does Sarah see/think?
Bibliodrama: Part 2
Volunteer: Sarah
- What are you worried about?
- What are the consequences of your actions?
Volunteer: Abraham
- What are you thinking about this idea of Sarah's?
- Do you think it's a request? Demand?
Bibliodrama: Part 3
Volunteers: Abraham
- What do you think of what you just heard God tell you?
- How do you feel about it?
Questions:
- Why do you think God says listen to Sarah and do as she says?
- How do you feel when people tell you to listen to someone else? How do you handle that?
If time is running short, end here.
Bibliodrama: Reflection
Volunteers: Abraham, Sarah, Hagar, Isaac, Ishmael
Reflect on what just happened to you.
Question:
- What are you thinking now?
- What are you feeling now
- What did your character learn from this story
Questions for all participants
- What do we learn from this story
- Why do you think we read this text on Rosh Hashanah?
Context from Etz Chaim Chumash: Paraphrased: ...Why were these chapters chosen for Rosh Hashanah? Perhaps because the real story of humanity is that of families, parents and children, husbands and wives, passed down from one generation to the next...
Bibliodrama: Part 4
Volunteer: Hagar
Hagar: Why are you crying? What are you thinking? Feeling?
Question: Hagar refers to Ishmael as a child and leaves him under a bush to die. Thinking of Ishmael as age 17 or 18, does the reference to "child" or this language work? Why? Why not? They are walking in the desert and have no water. Does this change your thinking?
Bibliodrama: Part 5
Volunteers: Hagar, Ishmael
Hagar: What are you thinking? What are you feeling?
Ishmael: What are you thinking? What are you feeling?
Questions:
- What do you think is meant that God was with Ishmael?
Bibliodrama: Reflection
Volunteers: Abraham, Sarah, Hagar, Isaac, Ishmael
Reflect on what just happened to you.
Question:
- What are you thinking now?
- What are you feeling now
- What did your character learn from this story
Reflection: Ask participants
- What do we learn from this story
- Why do you think we read this text on Rosh Hashanah?
Context from Etz Chaim Chumash: Paraphrased: ...Why were these chapters chosen for Rosh Hashanah? Perhaps because the real story of humanity is that of families, parents and children, husbands and wives, passed down from one generation to the next...
