But he insists on something far more radical: that Jewish history is governed by a promise which no exile can annul. “Though ...
Parsha Bo is often remembered for its drama including the final plagues, the rising tension, the night that reshaped Jewish history. Yet beneath the spectacle, the Torah is asking a quieter, deeply ...
For God is walking before you. The God of Israel is your rear guard.” We are meant to understand: You will NOT depart in ...
Parashat Bo warns: true faith demands responsibility, that honoring life means accountability and protecting the vulnerable.
Parsha Bo reminds us that the greatest danger is not ignorance, but paralysis—the refusal to see suffering clearly and to act ...
For the JOC in San Diego, this is the most painful part. They are the bridge. They are the “Mixed Multitude” personified.
In the closing section of his speech, Milei referenced Moses’s confrontation with Pharaoh and the final three plagues described in Parshat Bo: locusts, darkness, and the death of the firstborn.
Tzvi LeTzaddik explains that in reality, every Jew during the time of exile suffered doubly-once for their own personal pain ...
This is why Parshat Bo speaks directly to our generation. October 7 was not only a military failure. It was a failure of ...