New Book Release – Torah Travels

A unique commentary probing the psychological, philosophical, ethical and spiritual themes found in each weekly portion. The commentaries touch our souls, and reveal the depths of traditional, contemporary, and Chassidic/Kabbalistic sources. A rare, compelling, and uplifting work.

Rabbi Jonathan Sacks, z’l: Ki Teitse Two Types of Hate

Rabbi Sacks addresses the conundrum of Moses’ commands regarding the Egyptians vs the Amalekites: The Egyptians enslaved the Israelites and attempted to drown every male child. Yet one instruction is to “…not despise an Egyptian because you were strangers in his land.” The Amalekites attacked once and were successfully repelled, yet the second command is to “blot out the name.” Rabbi Sacks applies the concept of conditional love to hate. Conditional love only lasts as long as the particular condition. Likewise, when hate has a rational basis it can end, whereas unconditional hatred cannot be reasoned with.

Rabbi Adam Ruditsky: Re’eh What Do You See?

Rabbi Ruditsky introduces the parashah with the statement: “we need to look much more than just see.” We need to “see” as Adam and Eve did when they ate the fruit and “their eyes were opened”. Moses key point is to encourage Israel to perceive the role of Torah on a much deeper level than just words on a page.