Implementing this strategy will bring about true and lasting peace." (Farbrengen - Parshat Chukas-Balak in 1982) The Rebbe's words remain as relevant today as they were first spoken. We've no ...
The Neshamot of the Shevatim accompanied and shielded their descendants during the teeth of the Egyptian exile.
We know that the צפרדע were very noisy and scary, and one of the methods in which armies attack is by making a lot of noise through psychological warfare, e.g. in Sefer Devarim, Parshas ...
As we can see, this phrase has many parushim inside the Rishonim. We can connect all this with the beginning of the Parsha, where To Yaakov worried that if Binyamin travelled tragedy may ensue ...
And in our parsha, they unite to ensure that everyone has a portion of the Korban Pesach to partake in as they prepare together to leave Egypt. When there is genuine concern for the individual ...
Parashat Shemot, which opens the second book of the Torah, recounts the suffering of the Israelites in Egypt. After years of comfort in Egypt, the Jews were subjected to harsh enslavement. Pharaoh ...
Hashem buried this light and is keeping it hidden for the end of days, as mentioned in the commentaries on Parshat Bereishit. This light is meant to be uncovered from its burial plot. It is not ...
Moses raised his staff toward heaven. God gave forth thunder and hail, and fire came down to the ground inside the hail, and God rained down hail over Egypt. ~ Exodus 9:23 one of our paradises ...
This connection to the people’s suffering is central to Moses’ leadership. Five times in this parsha, Hashem makes it clear that He is not merely aware of the Israelites’ pain; He feels it.
The blessing that led Pharaoh to the sin of arrogance is the very thing that will turn into a curse. In a recent article, Dr. Zahi Hawass, the Egyptian former Minister of Antiquities, addressed ...