Dinah just wanted to meet her neighbours. It led to one of the most disturbing stories in the Bible.
“Now Dinah, the daughter Leah had borne to Jacob, went out to visit the women of the land.” (Genesis 34 v 1)
Jacob had other daughters, but Dinah is the only one mentioned in the Bible.
This chapter is certificate 18 for sure. But before we get into it, there are questions from the first verse.
Did Dinah simply want to meet other local women from the community?
Or was she stepping outside of her cultural boundaries, and so we are introduced to the tension between Israel’s family and the culture they were living in?
Did Dinah want more connection than what she was getting within her own family? There was nothing wrong with that.
Without attaching any blame to her for what was to happen, we start with Dinah’s curiosity at least and a desire for cultural engagement. She wants to meet people who live nearby, even though they are very different to her.
Don’t we all want that?
In our current world state of increasing misogyny, the description which will be known for years of the Epstein files to label serious wicked behaviour by the rich and powerful, this story could be written for our modern world.
Sometimes the most ordinary moments in life become the starting point of the most profound lessons.
The first verse reminds us that curiosity, connection, and reaching beyond familiar boundaries are natural and valuable impulses. Even in a world marked by injustice and wrongdoing, ordinary moments like Dinah’s desire to engage with her neighbours show that this need has been universal since time began.

