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  1. Joseph Jacobs (29 August 1854 – 30 January 1916) was a New South Welsh-born British-Jewish folklorist, translator, literary critic, social scientist, historian and writer of English literature who became a notable collector and publisher of English folklore.

  2. To choose a Jewish of Jacobs's career in English letters. Up to this subject was at least a gesture of sympathy, date his career had been brilliant, and even regardless of its artistic success: remarkable when one considers his religion and race.

  3. Even as his specialized interest in folklore made him a researcher into Jewish ethnology, his interest in statistics led him to another branch of anthropology, namely the study of the "racial" characteristics of Jews.

    • His Story Is Told in the Book of Genesis. After recounting the lives of Abraham and Isaac, the Book of Genesis turns to Jacob, whose story spans chapters 25 and 27-35.
    • He Was the Third Patriarch. The story of the Jewish people begins with the three Patriarchs and four Matriarchs, the patriarchs being Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.
    • He Was a Twin. After 20 years of childless marriage, Isaac and Rebecca’s prayers were answered and Rebecca conceived. Finding the pregnancy unusually difficult, Rebecca consulted with Shem, the righteous son of Noah.1 Shem relayed G‑d’s message that she was carrying two children in her womb, progenitors of two great nations.
    • He Was Born Grasping His Twin’s Heel. The first to be born was the Esau, followed moments later by Jacob. Jacob exited his mother’s womb grasping his brother’s heel, symbolizing from the start the ongoing tension between them and between the nations they would father.
  4. Jacob (Ya’akov in Hebrew) is one of Judaisms three patriarchs, and appears throughout many chapters of the . He is the son of Isaac and Rebecca, the grandson of Abraham and Sarah, and the father of 12 sons, the progenitors of the 12 tribes of Israel.

  5. Joseph, at the age of 30, is appointed second-in-command to Pharaoh. The famine that Joseph predicted ultimately brings the sons of Jacob to Egypt. With no other options, and hearing of excess grain in the neighboring country, Jacob’s sons make a series of trips down to Egypt.

  6. Nov 25, 2022 · Why did the tzaddik, Isaac, favor the wicked Esau? Why did the righteous Rebecca devise a plan to deceive her beloved husband? What is the battle between Jacob and Esau that continues to be...