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TOLEDOT 5786- YITZJAK REAFIRMA LA BERAJA DE YAAKOv by Rab Shlomo Benhamu
Parshat Toledot - A fórmula de integrar o conhecimento com as emoções
Parsing "you where?", and more fun with frames. Follow along with Follow along in Bereshit 27:37, 26:33-34, 27:30. Provide your feedback or join the WhatsApp group by sending an email to torahreadingpodcast@gmail.com.
Toledot: A Gratitude-Mindset by Rabbi Avi Harari
El Tikun en la Casa de Itzjak (Toledot)
Sabedoria Judaica em 5 minutos - Divrei Torah Podcast Jewish Torah Wisdom in 5 Minutes
Qual foi seu maior desafio nos últimos tempos? Já esteve alguma vez a ponto de explodir e seguiu com esta ação ou conseguiu se segurar? Sabe o acordo que um professor fez consigo mesmo ? Ouça
Esav and Yaakob are twins who, with all of their differences have striking similarities. The differences between them can be subtle. But they are significant because they define us as a nation. In this episode we discuss the relationship Yaakob and Esav have with time. And how that has direct implications on how we as Jews, see the world and live every day. Link to Podcast mentioned in this episode: https://open.spotify.com/episode/6eVvopDpwg42TxiUMXKPVi?si=rM6ZcVZyQcC260Awdmwsrw
Shalom aleichem and welcome to Torah in Real Time, the podcast where ancient words meet today's headlines, and where the struggles of our ancestors illuminate the challenges of our lives. I'm Rabbi Shlomo Gemara, and I'm so glad you're here with me. This week, the Torah pulls us into Parashat Toledot, a portion whose very name means “generations.” Yet instead of a tidy family portrait, we're handed a story crackling with tension, rivalry, longing, and love that sometimes hurts more than it heals. We meet Isaac and Rebecca: the only monogamous couple in the entire Torah, desperately praying for children after twenty years of barrenness. When the twins finally arrive, they come out fighting. One is red and restless, a hunter born with the dust of the wild on him; the other clings to his brother's heel, quiet, calculating, already reaching for something bigger. From the womb they wrestle, and the struggle never really ends. In Toledot, a family gropes toward its future. Isaac digs wells and searches for blessing. Rebecca carries the burden of prophecy and will do anything to see it fulfilled. Esau roars in from the field, starving, and trades eternity for a bowl of lentil stew. Jacob puts on skins and a borrowed voice to claim what he believes is his destiny. Nothing is simple. Everything is unforgettable. And somehow, three thousand years later, it still feels like the evening news. Because this portion refuses to let us look away from the messy, sacred work of transmission: How do we pass on faith when siblings see the world so differently? How do parents love children who are nothing alike? What happens when prophecy and politics collide in the same household? And how do we shape the next generation when the ground beneath us keeps shifting? This week on Torah in Real Time, we'll dive deep into Toledot and ask what it has to say about the headlines screaming at us right now: the raising of the Palestinian flag in public squares across Toronto and Canada, the imminent sale of F-35 fighter jets to Saudi Arabia, the fault lines running through families, communities, and nations when identity, loyalty, and survival are all on the table. Because if Jacob and Esau teach us anything, it's that the future is never guaranteed. It's wrestled for, one difficult blessing at a time. So settle in, open your Chumash (or just open your heart), and let's learn Toledot together, in real time, in this time. Welcome to the conversation. ——
Shalom aleichem and welcome to Torah in Real Time, the podcast where ancient words meet today's headlines, and where the struggles of our ancestors illuminate the challenges of our lives. I'm Rabbi Shlomo Gemara, and I'm so glad you're here with me. This week, the Torah pulls us into Parashat Toledot, a portion whose very name means “generations.” Yet instead of a tidy family portrait, we're handed a story crackling with tension, rivalry, longing, and love that sometimes hurts more than it heals. We meet Isaac and Rebecca: the only monogamous couple in the entire Torah, desperately praying for children after twenty years of barrenness. When the twins finally arrive, they come out fighting. One is red and restless, a hunter born with the dust of the wild on him; the other clings to his brother's heel, quiet, calculating, already reaching for something bigger. From the womb they wrestle, and the struggle never really ends. In Toledot, a family gropes toward its future. Isaac digs wells and searches for blessing. Rebecca carries the burden of prophecy and will do anything to see it fulfilled. Esau roars in from the field, starving, and trades eternity for a bowl of lentil stew. Jacob puts on skins and a borrowed voice to claim what he believes is his destiny. Nothing is simple. Everything is unforgettable. And somehow, three thousand years later, it still feels like the evening news. Because this portion refuses to let us look away from the messy, sacred work of transmission: How do we pass on faith when siblings see the world so differently? How do parents love children who are nothing alike? What happens when prophecy and politics collide in the same household? And how do we shape the next generation when the ground beneath us keeps shifting? This week on Torah in Real Time, we'll dive deep into Toledot and ask what it has to say about the headlines screaming at us right now: the raising of the Palestinian flag in public squares across Toronto and Canada, the imminent sale of F-35 fighter jets to Saudi Arabia, the fault lines running through families, communities, and nations when identity, loyalty, and survival are all on the table. Because if Jacob and Esau teach us anything, it's that the future is never guaranteed. It's wrestled for, one difficult blessing at a time. So settle in, open your Chumash (or just open your heart), and let's learn Toledot together, in real time, in this time. Welcome to the conversation. ——
Qui sont les "petits prophètes" ? Pourquoi sont-ils appelés ainsi ? Qui est Malakhi ? Quand a-t-il vécu ? De quoi parle la Haftara de Toledot ? En quoi est-elle liée à la Paracha de Toledot ?
Pour la Refoua chelema de: Dina bat Simha ABITBOL Sharon Déborah Salomé bat DALIA Déborah bat Ninette Moché Ben MyriamSarah Bat Léa
Source Sheet: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1F57HaUCV_j5aEPEVV43Iyjeff7etxlfD/edit?usp=sharing&ouid=104720012433624398617&rtpof=true&sd=true
Como lidar com a REBELDIA das crianças?Parashá TOLDOTA educação judaica de Esaú — o filho rebelde — e o legado de Avraham Avinu.Por que um neto do maior tzadik da história cresceu tão desviado?O que deu errado — e o que podemos aprender para educar nossos filhos hoje?Descubra, pela ótica da Chassidut e da Cabalá, como transformar rebeldia em potencial, como direcionar forças negativas para o bem, e quais erros evitar na formação espiritual dos nossos filhos.
Rabbi Alex Matthews discusses Rivkah's moment of existential and physical crisis. Rabbi Alex Matthews has been part of the Congregation Ahavas Achim in Newburyport since 2015 and has been serving as its congregational leader since 2019. Rabbi Matthews was ordained at Hebrew College in June 2023. He serves part-time as a staff chaplain at Beverly Hospital. Rabbi Matthews completed the 18 Doors Rukin Rabbinic Fellowship focused on interfaith engagement, as well as the Pardes Institute for Jewish Studies Machloket Matters fellowship, focused on working toward and through constructive disagreement.
TOLEDOT 5786- POR QUE YAAKOV TUVO QUE ENGAÑAR? by Rab Shlomo Benhamu
TOLEDOT 5786- POR QUE ESAV PREGUNTO DEL MAASER? by Rab Shlomo Benhamu
Parashat Toledot - Doing Your Part by Rabbi Avi Harari
The JTS Commentary for Toledot by Rabbi Daniel Nevins, Former Pearl Resnick Dean of the Rabbinical School and Division of Religious Leadership, JTSThis commentary was originally broadcast in 2012.Music provided by JJReinhold / Pond
Por trás do episódio das “bênçãos roubadas” existe um plano Divino muito mais profundo do que parece.Yaacov não engana — ele cumpre uma missão espiritual que muda o rumo da história.Entenda como a Providência conduz cada detalhe, por que Rivká age com tanta precisão, e como a verdadeira justiça às vezes se apresenta sob o véu do disfarce.#chassidut #mistica #judaismo #kabala #tora #torah #toledot #yaacov #esav #berachotPIX: rabinoelipix@gmail.com
TOLEDOT 5786- COMO FUE LA PREGUNTA DE RIBKA DE SU EMBARAZO? by Rab Shlomo Benhamu
À travers des propos du Sifté Cohen et du Kli Yakar, ce cours montre l'importance de la prière, de la joie et de l'étude de la Torah. Il explique notamment qu'une personne peut énormément s'améliorer en priant.
Toledot: Decisions by Rabbi Avi Harari
Have you heard of the mystery of the waw (or vav)? What could the disappearance of a single letter in a word have to do with prophecy? What is so significant about the letter Waw?
Congregation of the Living Word, a Messianic Jewish Congregation
Parshat Toledot: Who Is Chosen And Why? - English and Spanish. Some people lead a life of confusion, others live an illuminated life. Sadly, both often experience pain and suffering. Recorded November 30, 2024. Recorded November 30, 2024. Parshat Toledot: ¿Quién es elegido y por qué? - Inglés y español. Algunas personas llevan una vida de confusión, otras viven una vida iluminada. Lamentablemente, ambas suelen experimentar dolor y sufrimiento. Grabado el 30 de noviembre de 2024. Grabado el 30 de noviembre de 2024.
In this week's parasha, Toledot , we are introduced to the wicked ways of Esav harasha . Yet although he was so wicked, he merited to rule over our people throughout history until that great day of ועלו מושיעים בהר ציון לשפוט את הר עשיו. What did he do to merit all of his blessings? The mitzvah of kibbud av v'em . And although he did excel in many aspects of this mitzvah, he was far from perfect in it, as can be seen explicitly in the pesukim . Furthermore, he was only careful with kibbud av and not kibbud em, as the Rambam explains. Yet, with all of his rishut and all of his deficiencies, he was still rewarded for generations in the merit of this one mitzvah. How much more so will the reward be for even the simplest Jew trying his best to serve Hashem, doing dozens and even hundreds of mitzvot every single day. Of course, we know the real reward for mitzvot is paid in the Next World, while here we only receive their dividends. Every single effort we make is appreciated by Hashem. A rabbi told me he wanted to do the mitzvah of kibbud av v'em and visit his parents who moved to Israel. This rabbi learns half a day and teaches half a day. And so buying plane tickets for him and his wife was a major expense. The travel agent told him the best he could get for two tickets at this time of year was $3800. He then offered him $500 less if he would take a stop-over. The rabbi accepted and booked the tickets. A few hours later, he realized that with the stop-over he was going to miss praying Shacharit with a minyan , as well as his entire morning seder of learning. Then he thought to himself, is it worth $500 to miss minyan and Torah? Of course not. He called the travel agent back and switched to the direct flight. In the end, his flight back had to land in another country because of a technical problem and, due to the delay, he ended up getting back after his morning seder . The airline gave him a $2400 credit for the inconvenience that they caused. He said to me, it was clear that for whatever reason he was meant to arrive in the afternoon that day, but baruch Hashem, he chose Torah and tefila over the money. And as a bonus, Hashem gave him an extra $2000. Our mitzvot are so precious. Even the objects that we use in their performance become holy and thereby bring about yeshuot . I read a story about a young rabbinical scholar who lives in Israel who accepted upon himself to go every Friday to the Shaarei Tzedek Hospital with his accordion and play Shabbat songs to the patients and bring them joy. One day his car broke down and the cost to fix it was more than the worth of the entire car, so he left it. He couldn't afford a new one, but he was worried. How would he continue his mitzvah of bringing joy to the sick on Fridays without a car? He decided he was going to go above and beyond and lug his big accordion on two separate buses to get to that hospital. He continued this week after week and month after month. A couple of years ago, he came into the room of an elderly patient in a coma who the doctors had already given up hope on. When he played his accordion and started singing Shabbat songs, the patient made a very slight smirk and the family began to celebrate. They called the nurses in to see. The following week when he came back and played again, again the smirk came back. On the third week, a miracle took place. While he was playing the song, her eyes opened. He kept playing and, finally, she said a couple of words. The children were so thankful to this young rabbi and asked him more about himself. He told them about his weekly chesed and how he has been doing it with extra effort since he lost his car. They were so moved, they chipped in and bought this rabbi a new car. A week later, their mother was out of the hospital. Our mitzvot are wondrous. The rewards for them are unimaginable and the kedusha that we bring about through their performance is great. Shabbat Shalom.
Eating up more mistakes. Follow along in Bereshit 24:54, 30:25, 27:19, 27:25, 27:4. Provide your feedback or join the WhatsApp group by sending an email to torahreadingpodcast@gmail.com.
When Esav heard the words of his father, he cried a cry that was great and very bitter. And he said “bless me as well, father!.”Esav knows that Yaakov has received the blessing that was intended for him. Hurt and saddened, he begs his father to bless him. Yet, he has no idea what blessing his father gave to Yaakov.Why is he so desperate for some unknown words?
Podcast Jajam Shlomo (Sally) Zaed Toledot/ No cargues dáselo a Hashem Conferencia
In this week's Torah Portion, Toledot (Generations), Rebekah commits "relationship arson" when she tells her son Jacob to steal the first born blessing from his twin brother Esau. Jacob lies to his father Isaac by pretending to be Esau. He ends up being one of our great forefathers while we know little of Esau. What does all this mean? Was Rebekah acting on divine prophecy from God, or did she meddle and play favorites? It's Thanksgiving in the USA, but Briyah is in Auckland, New Zealand, and Michael is eating fish in some country called Malta. Maybe next year we will be reunited as a family, but if the Torah has taught us anything, well, only God knows. We also talk about the brilliant new documentary, Sabbath Queen, which Briyah was fortunate to see. If it's playing near you, don't miss it. Enjoy your leftover turkey with a side of Toledot!
RAB SALLY ZAED- TOLEDOT- NOLO CARGUES Y DASELO A HASHEM by TALMUD TORA MONTE SINAI
Esav and Yaakob are twins. Yet, Esav the elder famously sells his birthright to Yaakob. In this episode we explore why Esav may have done that, and why Yaakob was better equipped to hold it.
RAB YOSEF BIRCH- PERASHA TOLEDOT 5785 by TALMUD TORA MONTE SINAI
RAB MORDEJAY MALEJ- PERASHA CON ZOHAR- TOLEDOT 5785 by TALMUD TORA MONTE SINAI
Cours vidéo de 31 minutes donné par Rav Ariel FHIMA.
Plusieurs interprétations dont celle de Rachi ont été données au sujet de la volonté d'Its'hak de donner sa bénédiction à son fils aîné 'Essav bien qu'il savait pertinemment que le fils spirituel, celui dont la voix résonnait dans la maison d'étude, était Ya'akov. Comment comprendre ce choix d'Its'hak ? Son père savait-il qu'Essav avait vendu son droit d'aînesse à son frère jumeau ? Quel enseignement en tirer sur le potentiel qui peut se révéler dans la descendance d'un enfant "problématique" ? Réponse avec une Guémara dans le traité Baba Batra.
Cours vidéo de 28 minutes donné par Rav Eliahou UZAN.
Source Sheet: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1aJkJCnWkp9eTG6izQBhbwO4cH1XEPQv_/edit?usp=sharing&ouid=104720012433624398617&rtpof=true&sd=true
Pourquoi Its'hak aimait-il tellement 'Essav ? Était-il conscient de sa méchanceté ? Pourquoi Rivka a-t-elle tenu à ce que ce soit précisément Ya'acov qui reçoive la bénédiction de Its'hak ? Pourquoi Ya'acov avait-il peur que Its'hak le maudisse ? Ya'acov a-t-il vraiment menti à Its'hak ? Comment Its'hak a-t-il pu croire que 'Essav se tenait devant lui, alors qu'il reconnaissait clairement la voix de Ya'acov ?
Les enfants préparent le Chabbat avec Benny en 18 minutes.
The JTS Commentary for Toledot by Rabbi Annie Lewis, Director of Recruitment and Admissions for Religious and Educational Leadership and Assistant Dean of First Year Rabbinical Students, JTSMusic provided by JJReinhold / Pond5.
Toledot: Doing the Right Thing Even When it Isn't Easy by Rabbi Avi Harari
There may be times when a person feels that Hashem is ignoring him. He cries out in tefila multiple times a day but doesn't see any answers. Is Hashem listening? he thinks to himself. Does He see how badly I want this? We must always remember that our main purpose in this world is to accomplish spiritually. One of the greatest merits a person can get is when he helps the masses. This is called זיכוי הרבים . But not everyone is in a position where he is able to do great things on behalf of Klal Yisrael . But that does not mean that Hashem will not help him do it anyway. In the beginning of this week's parasha, Toledot , we read about Yitzchak and Rivka praying very hard to have children. The Zohar HaKadosh writes, one of the reasons Hashem wanted them to pray for so long is because their tefilot were helping so many others who needed tefilot . Yitzchak and Rivka were bringing blessing to the entire world with their tefilot and were being credited with an unbelievable זיכוי הרבים for it. They didn't see anything from their tefilot , but every one of them was accomplishing a different yeshua . Rashi writes on the words ויעתר יצחק that Yitzchak was pressing very hard with his tefilot . Although it took so many years for him to see the answer he was looking for, he kept getting stronger and stronger with his tefilot until Hashem finally blessed them with children. When a person asks his friend repeatedly for something, it becomes a burden because obviously the friend doesn't want to give it. However, when it comes to Hashem, He loves when a person keeps asking and He loves it even more when the person asks with emotion and tears. That's because Hashem wants to give. He is only holding back because He knows the prayers are accomplishing much more to the person than the object in which he is trying to get from them. There is a concept that when a person does pray with complete emunah and recognition of Hashem's capabilities, the zechut of such a tefila is so great it can bring about an immediate answer. A childless couple related that about ten years ago they were ready to despair of ever having children. They cried, they prayed, they received berachot from Gedolim , but nothing ever changed. They had been childless for close to nine years and the doctors were not optimistic at all. They had already failed nine treatments, each one of them was long and difficult, not to mention the enormous expenses that came along with them. They were literally at a point of breaking when they read an article in a bulletin regarding the capabilities of Hashem and the attitude a Jew is supposed to have when statistics are stacked against them. This article gave them a tremendous amount of chizuk and it taught them that the nine failed treatments said nothing about another possible treatment. Every day is a new day and Hashem can change things in an instant. They got this chizuk right before Chanukah and that Chanukah they prayed by the candles with a newfound emunah and bitachon . Within two weeks of Chanukah, they discovered the woman was expecting and it happened with no treatments whatsoever. Baruch Hashem, they had a healthy baby and, since then, added an additional four children to their family, all born without any treatments. Tefila is wondrous and is always beneficial. And tefila with real hope and bitachon shakes the Heavens. Shabbat Shalom
Toledot: Our "Inner Voice" by Rabbi Avi Harari