Childbirth, perhaps more than any other life event, is an experience that demands a strong dose of faith and surrender. No matter how well-planned or organized we may be, the inevitable moment will arise when the birthing woman must face the fact that there is a force at play that is larger than herself. As her baby moves down the narrow passage towards birthâand contractions rush through her body with the force of a tidal wave surging towards landâthe birthing woman is presented with a sublime choice: to faithfully submit to its power, or to fight it tooth and nail. There is a precious body of women who for centuries have been intimately connected with this simple truth and have continuously chosen faith. They are called midwives.
A midwifeâs role, among other things, is to encourage a birthing mother to âlet goâ and allow herself to become a conduit for this great force to flow through. Trusting in the natural process of laborâand in a womanâs body to birth normally and safelyâis the hallmark of midwifery care. Every culture and religion has its own words and metaphors to describe their reverence and awe of this process. But for Jewish midwives, this reverence stems from an understanding that birth is Gâdly in nature. Their faith in birth is inexorably bound with their faith in Gâd.
We have a historical precedent for the midwifeâs inherent faith in Gâd in the Torah portion, Shemot, where we are introduced to two of the most powerful Jewish leaders in our history, both extremely faithful and righteous women. They are our first recorded midwives, Shifra and Puah.
They practiced their trade during a time when the very existence of the Jewish people was hanging by a delicate thread. Pharaohâs astrologers had predicted that a Jewish male would rise amongst the Hebrews and overtake his throne. In a paranoid attempt to curtail the Jewish birth rate, he ordered all Jewish men into backbreaking slave labor (Ibn Ezra). But when the Jews continued to multiply, Pharaoh, driven by evil and desperation, commanded Shifra and Puah to kill all newborn Jewish boys.
âThe midwives, however, feared Gâd; so they did not do as the king of Egypt had spoken to them, but they enabled the boys to live.â (Exodus 1:17)
Pharaoh didnât count on the midwivesâ defiance or their faith in Gâd. Despite the danger of defying Pharaohâs command, Shifra and Puah decided to continue their holy calling. With whole-hearted faith in the Creator, they swam against a very strong and dangerous political tide, fully knowing that disobedience of Pharaohâs decree meant death for them. But their fear of Gâd far surpassed their fear of a human king.
From then on, not only did Shifra and Puah help birth the Jewish women, but they helped to nurture and sustain all the newborn babies. Before each birth, they prayed to Gâd to assist the Jewish women to birth quickly and safely, and they prayed for the health and well-being of all the babies under their care. The Midrash states that Shifra and Puah actually became Gâdâs partners in creation, granting life to the Jewish children (Shemot Rabba 1:19).
âGâd bestowed goodness upon the midwives, and the people multiplied and became very strong. It was because the midwives feared God that He made houses for them.â (Exodus 1:20-21)
The âhousesâ Gâd made for Shifra and Puah were, in fact, dynasties born through them. Our sages explain that Shifra was a pseudonym for Jochebed, and Puah was another name for Miriam. The name âShifraâ comes from the Hebrew word meshaperet, which means âto beautifyâ and/or âto swaddle and cleanâ (i.e., a baby). Miriam was called Puah, from the Hebrew verb âPoâah,â which means âcry, coo or groanâ because of the way she soothed and cooed the crying newborn infants.
Jochebed was blessed to give birth not only to her daughter, Miriam, but also to Moses and Aaron. Through Jochebed (Shifra), a nation of priests was born. And Miriam (Puah) was blessed to mother the Royal dynasty, the âHouse of David.â
There is something about being present at a birth . . . about standing at the threshold between born and unborn that transforms a person. Perhaps it is because of their trade that Shifra and Puah developed such faith in their conviction. Perhaps it was because they witnessed the miracle of life unfold before their eyes that they found the strength to face the challenge to kill or be killedâand overcome it with power and grace.
Shifra and Puah never entertained the idea of fighting Gâdâs will. Instead, they fought for Gâdâs will. And they won. This strength has been handed down all the way from our ancestral midwives to the modern midwives of today. May Gâd bless them to continue in the paths of Shifra and Puahâfearing Gâd, not manâand through their faith in the Gâdliness of birth bless them to be His partners in creation.

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