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21 December 2025

Reb Ginsbourg: Circumcision in Egypt


We already know that everything that was created with man, was worthy of existing - except for the foreskin, as the Torah commanded us to remove it.

Our Sages derive from our Parasha, a wondrous occurrence: the circumcision of the Egyptians.

We read in our Parasha (41:53-57)’The seven years of abundance that came to pass in the land of Egypt ended. And the seven years of famine began approaching, just as Yosef had said.

‘There was famine in all the lands, but in the land of Egypt there was bread.

‘When all the land of Egypt hungered, the people cried out to Pharoah for bread. So Pharoah said to all of Egypt:’Go to Yosef. Whatever he tells you, you should do.’

Rashi brings the Midrash, to expand on these psukim:’When the entire land of Egypt hungered’: For their grain, which they had stored, had rotted, except for that of Yosef.

‘What he tells you, you should do’:’Since Yosef had ordered them to circumcise themselves, and when they came to Pharoah and said:’This is what he said to us’, he - Pharoah - said to them:’Why didn’t you gather grain? Didn’t he announce to you that years of famine were coming?

‘They replied: We gathered much, but it rotted’.

‘Pharoah replied:’If so, do whatever he tells you. He issued a decree upon the grain, and it rotted. What if he issues a decree upon us and we die?

Rav Mordechai Kohen - the ‘Sifsei Kohen’ - notes that ‘the people cried out from bread’ - not for grain, which was what Yosef had gathered, and stored.

He asks: We read, in the preceding passuk, that ‘in all the land of Egypt there was bread’ - why, then, did the people cry ‘to Pharoah for bread’?

Answer:’True they had grain - from which to bake bread - but the grain all rotted, and therefore the bread they baked from it, was inedible - and they ‘cried out for bread’.’

Here we are compelled to ask - is there a mention - or even an allusion - in our psukim, to circumcision?

The Sifsei Chachamim offer one allusion:’if it is not referring to circumcision, what does ‘אשר יאמר לכם: ‘whatever he TELLS you’ - why does the Torah choose the language of אמירה: Saying, and not simply אשר יצוה: ‘whatever he commands’?

‘Because, אמירה : saying, is assuredly alluding to circumcision - as we find in the words of David Hamelech, in Psalms (119:162): שש אני על אמרתך'’ :I rejoice in Your word’.

Rashi: ‘Our Sages (Menachot 43:) comment: this refers to circumcision - David, when in the bath-house - contemplating that he was without tzitzit there and without tefillin or Torah - saw himself as being bereft of any mitzvah; but he then saw his brit milah, and - as he left the bath-house - comforted himself with the words of the Psalm.’

Eliezer Mizrachi - on our Rashi - adds:’As it say - Rabbi Shmuel ben Nachman expounded: the Egyptians said : החייתנו: you have given us life - in this world, and in the world-to-come, and circumcision is called ‘life’, in the Mechilta - as we read in the Haggadah:בדמיך חיי: ‘and in your bloods, you shall live’ - and this refers to the blood of the brit milah.’

The Be’er Mayim Chayim elucidates:’To understand how our Sages learned from our psukim that it was specifically circumcision, that Yosef commanded the Egyptians - and not another mitzvah, or matter that was required for his rule - it would appear that they learned it by the midah of גזירה שוה - the same word being found in another place - from the word לכם: to you - which is said here ‘unnecessarily’, as it would have been to say:’Which he commands you, do’.

‘It is, therefore, written here, so that we can learn from it, that it refers to circumcision, as this word is found regarding circumcision, in the command to Avraham: (Lech Lecha 17:10)’circumcise לכם: for you, every male) - just as there it says לכם regarding circumcision, so too, here.’

Adds the Rav: As to the intention of Yosef, in compelling the Egyptians to circumcise themselves, it would appear to be derived from what our Sages say - concerning Noach in the era of the flood- that a special covenant was required, so that the fruits did not rot, which Hashem granted him because of his righteousness - so the fruits did not rot.

Here, too - by compelling the Egyptians to circumcise themselves, so that by this covenant: הברית מילה: their produce and fruit, would p, likewise, receive Hashem’s blessing , to enable them not to rot, in the years of famine.

The Kli Yakar, as is his want, brings a new way of expounding: why Yosef commanded the Egyptians, when their produce rotted, to circumcise themselves.

He comments: The reason why - as Rashi brings - that, when they went to Yosef, he told them to circumcise themselves, os because the foreskin is called ‘חרפה’: ‘shame’, as we read in Parashat Vayishlach ( 34:14), when Bnei Israel told Shechem:’It is a חרפה to us, to give..our sister, to a man with a foreskin.

Famine is also called חרפה: ‘a shame’, as the Torah states: (Yechezkel 36:30) ’You shall no longer suffer חרפת רעב בגוים: ‘the shame of famine among the nations’.

Yosef therefore concluded that removing the shame of the foreskin would ‘remove’ the shame of the famine - as the removal of the foreskin is the removal of the excess of the blood accumulating in the person, so too, the rotting of the grain is from the presence of the פסולת: the waste.

We find that this was the case with Noach, as we have brought.

This is measure-for-measure: if the person casts off from himself the excess of his waste, Hashem in His goodness, will also cast off the waste which is within the grain.

Further, our Sages say: (Mishlei 6:26) ’Because a man is brought for a loaf of bread to a harlot’ - but the circumcision rectifies the organ, that it does not over indulge in sexual activity - the Egyptians, because of their licentiousness, needed this rectification in the years of famine.

Yosef, who conquered his inclination, therefore merited that his crop did not rot, as he did not seek harlots.

The Maharal, in his commentary on Rashi, Gur Aryeh, comments:It is a query to me, that Yosef told them to circumcise themselves - are we not told that we do not compel non-Jews to convert?

There is a wondrous matter to this - because Yosef saw that their crops rotted, and his did not, he knew that this was because they were uncircumcised, as the milah is the covenant - the Aramaic translation of covenant is בר קיימא: capable of existence for a period of time.

Whoever does not have this brit of existence, his crops rotted.

We already know that everything that was created with man, was worthy of existing - except for the foreskin, as the Torah commanded us to remove it.

Therefore, one who has a foreskin, is adhering to something that has no existence - and therefore, his crops rotted.

It is therefore, no question that Yosef ordered them to circumcise themselves, as it was the Will of the Creator that they they should be circumcised - he did well in his command, in this regard.

Know further, that the Egyptians did not merit that they should be sustained by the righteous Yosef - who kept the covenant, and restrained himself from the Egyptian lady - only when they, too, were circumcised.

‘This is well known to those in the know.’

The commentaries we have brought, all expounded how the circumcision of the Egyptians, benefited them, by preventing their grain from rotting - as it had previously done - though, of course, the fact that the crops did not rot, also benefited Yaakov and his family, when they descended to Egypt.

Rav David Hofstedter brings a new approach to our subject, directly linking Yosef’s action to be for the benefit of Bnei Israel, commenting: Clearly the circumcision that Yosef required the Egyptians to undergo before he gave them bread, was not for the purpose of conversion - as he did not require them to observe any additional mitzvot; further, we do not compel conversion on the unwilling.

‘What, then, was the objective of this circumcision?

To clarify this, let us understand that all of Yosef’s actions were, to prepare Israel fo their exile in Egypt - an exile which was liable to contaminate them with impurity - to the brink of they being completely lost.

This appears to be the reason that Yosef demanded that the Egyptians circumcise themselves, to thereby weaken their impurity, enabling Israel to ascend above this danger.

The events with Shechem, also throw some light on this - when the sons of Yaakov required that Shechem and his nation, circumcise themselves before they would all ow them to marry their sister.

Why, then, were Yaakov’s sons not concerned that - once Shechem realized that it was all a ploy to weaken them - they would seek to harm them, for this?

The answer would seem to be, that the very act of circumcision changed the nature of Shechem and his men, to make them more submissive - as Rav Shimshon Hirsch writes.

When Shechem and his nation realized that their nature had been weakened - to be more submissive - by the circumcision they underwent, even when they discovered that it was a ruse, they felt themselves unable to harm Bnei Israel.

From this, we can learn what Yosef’s intention was in commanding the Egyptians to circumcise themselves, even though they only did so, to be given bread, nevertheless - since they had undergone circumcision - the same fear would enter their hearts as had entered the hearts of Shechem - as they would see that it was in the power of Yosef to change their nature.

This fear caused the Egyptians - even when they feared that Bnei Israel would go to battle against them, and chase them out of the Land, they only sought to enslave and afflict them, but not to annihilate them.’

The Pardes Yosef, citing the Yaarot Dvash, expounds more simply: Yosef was concerned lest his brothers learn from the Egyptians and not circumcise themselves’ - presumably to find favor in their eyes.

He therefore made the Egyptians circumcise themselves, to remove shame from his brothers.

This Pardes Yosef serves as an introduction to the exposition - on Parashat Shemot - of the Beit Halevi.

Expounds the sage: The righteous Bnei Israel did not at any time, cease to circumcise their male infants.

This can be learned from the Midrash Yalkut, which relates:’When they were circumcising their new born, the Egyptians said to them:’Why are you circumcising them? let them be like us, and your burden will be lightened.’

They rejected this, saying:’Did our holy forefathers forget their heavenly Father, that we, their sons, should forego it?!

We see - from this - that even then, they were circumcising their newly- born males - but this is what happened: they had the tradition that they would be enslaved in Egypt for four hundred years.

After Yosef died, they all understood that the days of enslavement were nearing - and the galut begins; they began to fear for their future, as who knew if they - or their descendants - would survive the servitude.

They therefore sought counsel how to draw nearer to the Egyptians - by not being too different from them, as aliens - hoping the increased resemblance would also lead to lessened animosity towards them.

The circumcision - they noted - was the main difference between them and the Egyptians.

They therefore had the wise idea, that, immediately after circumcision, they would pull down the foreskin, covering the place of the brit milah, until it appeared not to have been performed.

They thereby achieved two ends: First, they performed the mitzvah, but, second: it was not seen.

They did not transgress any Torah mitzvah, though it was a transgression of a Rabbinical ordinance, because they thereby appeared as if they were uncircumcised.

However, as they were - over a period of time - liable thereby to draw nearer to the Egyptians, and to descend into their immoral ways - this being the very opposite of the underlying purpose of the mitzvah - Hashem renewed the difference between them, by turning the favoring feelings towards them, to hatred of them - as an act of chessed, so that Bnei Israel remained separate, and special to Hashem.

This is why this - the change from favor, to hatred - is one of the things for which the Psalmist (105:1) gives thanks to Hashem.’

לרפואת נועם עליזה בת זהבה רבקה ונחום אלימלך רפאל בן זהבה רבקה, בתוך שאר חולי עמנו.

https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/419618

חתונה של בן הגה''צ ר' מיילך בידרמן, יום שני פר' כי תצא תשפ"ג





Mishpacha Magazine Moment about Rav Wasserman:

 Magazine date and pg # at bottom of this page:


דברים קצרים, חנוכה - מקץ. תשפ"ו | הגה"צ רבי אלימלך בידרמן שליט"א - English Subtitles

 

Some Extremely Golden Chanukah Thoughts From Then about NOW.....

"CHANUKAH


"We light the menorah outside our houses in order to negate the philosophy which advocates being a Jew in our home but merely a mentsh (decent human being) outside, and in order to emphasize that we are not embarrassed of our Torah and yiddishkeit. As we saw, Rav Schneider would convey to his students that bnei Torah have to be aware of their elevated status. He said that for his generation it was imperative for yeshivah bachurim to appreciate the great privilege and responsibility associated with being bnei Torah. This applies no less today.

"The other central message of Chanuka is the fundamental item of faith that there is no such thing as nature, since the whole of creation is constantly being re-created and dependent on Hashem’s Will; nor is there such a thing as a “law of nature”. As the Ramban notes, anyone who does not believe this is an epikores [heretic]. "


AND


 ...."One of the four exiles is that of golus yovon. Why is the subjugation of the Greeks considered to have been an exile, seeing that the Jews were neither exiled from Eretz Yisroel by the Greeks, nor did they destroy the Beis Hamikdosh? The Chasam Sofer explains that nevertheless, since they persecuted us and attempted to abolish Torah and mitzvos, the period of their subjugation is considered to have been an exile.

"Over the past few decades, we have witnessed, on the one hand, a proliferation of Torah learning, but, on the other hand, governments which are heretical, and whose entire purpose is to uproot Torah from the nation and to be a nation like any other. Our settlement in Eretz Yisroel in recent times has no connection to the beginning of the redemption; on the contrary, it is a further entrenchment of exile, since exile and redemption do not depend on settlement in the Holy Land. Redemption relates to a situation in which we are privileged to serve Hashem in Eretz Yisroel under the rule of the kingdom of Beis Dovid, and exile is a situation that distances us from that. When heretics rule the country and enact legislation against Hashem and His Torah, when clerks are forced to register same-gender “marriages”, for example, we are deeply immersed in exile, even whilst dwelling in our holy country."

Based on droshos by Maran HaGaon Rav Moshe Sternbuch shlita, Gaavad of Yerushalayim. To receive these weekly divrei Torah email ravsternbuchtorah@gmail.com 


* * * * *

Question & Answer with *HaRav Avigdor Miller zt'l



* * * * *

FEELINGS OF SUPERIORITY Parashas Miketz:


"Feelings of Ssuperiority

And Paroh said to Yoseph, "I am Paroh, and besides you, no one may lift his hand or his foot in the entire land of Egypt” (41:44).

"Rav Yecheskel Levenstein wonders how Yosef had agreed to accept the position of managing the mighty Egyptian kingdom without any previous experience. He had been a Yeshiva bochur until the age of 17, and had subsequently been a slave of Potiphar, and sat in prison for 12 years. How did he now have the courage to accept such a responsible position?

"He answered that Yosef lived with a clear awareness of his own spiritual greatness and the moral inferiority of his Egyptian subjects. Although he was careful not to cause them any sorrow, this awareness did give him the courage to rule over Egypt.

"Similarly, Rav Sternbuch recalls how Rav Moshe Schneider would endeavor to convey to his students that bnei Torah had to be aware of their superior status, that the existence of the celestial spheres, as well as of this world, is dependent on them. He said that for his generation it was imperative for Yeshiva bochurim to appreciate the great privilege and responsibility associated with being bnei Torah. 

"Mashgichim and Ramim have to instill a sense of responsibility into the hearts of every Yeshiva bachur and tell them about the magnitude of their task to protect every Jewish home at this time through the merit of their Torah. By virtue of Torah study, they are ensuring that the entire Jewish population - a sheep among seventy wolves - can remain alive. Someone who leaves Hashem’s army for the army of the state is a deserter, even if there would not be rampant immorality and heresy there."


Based on droshos by Maran HaGaon Rav Moshe Sternbuch shlita, Gaavad of Yerushalayim. To receive these weekly divrei Torah email ravsternbuchtorah@gmail.com 


_____________________


*Relating to that of HaRav Avigdor Miller zt"l IT IS HIGHLY RECOMMENDED TO READ THE RAV's FULL EXPLANATION OF WHAT REALLY HAPPENED BACK THEN. PLEASE GO TO 

HYRCANUS' DOWNFALL: What really happened Chanuka. Part I - The Rise of the Hellenists

[this entire download contains invaluable information of what caused the need for this War and how it relates to what we are faced with in Eretz Yisrael these days. If you have trouble and want to know the real history and not the zionists fabrication, indicate so in the comment section to this blog post.

https://torasavigdor.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/Chanukah.pdf   Scroll down to "THE IDENTITY OF THE ENEMY"




Shalom Pollack: SORRY!

 

"I can forgive the Arabs for killing our children,  but not for forcing us to kill theirs".
This famous quote is from PM  Golda Meir in 1969,  shortly after the miraculous victory over our enemies in the Six-Day War.

This diametric inversion of Torah and, therefore, Jewish morality,  was meant to win friends in the "enlightened" world.

Golda understood Jewish/Gentile history and its subconscious currents. She understood that the world has only a limited tolerance for strong Jews and  must be placated when Jews disturb the disappointing  outcome of well-planned massacres

The "enlightened" world (LBJ,  de Gaulle), not wanting to upset world order,  insisted that Israel not preempt the announced  Arab onslaught.
While  Arab armies tightened  the noose around our necks in the weeks before  the great victory, Israel was warned by our best "friends"  not to make trouble."

Had events followed professional evaluations, the enlightened world would have read their prepared eulogies about yet another unfortunate Jewish tragedy. They would have built a museum dedicated to yet another unfortunate Holocaust, and moved on.

Today, we know that humiliating massive pogroms wins us sympathy or friends. The Surge of Jew hatred on October 8, 2025, is a witness.

Golda was not a pacifist, and she was not a "progressive" useful idiot.
Surely she did not really forgive our enemies for killing our children. Surely she did not feel the pain of the enemy's children more than the pain of our own

She must have pronounced the anti-Jewish, immoral, absurd statement to win points in a world that had difficulty with  Jewish power; she felt she had to use the language of the hypocritical Jew haters.

We know that  it doesn't work

We know better today.

I was reminded of the famous Gola statement when listening to a lecture by a  well-known Liberal Rabbi.
He ended his talk with the quote from Gola and explained that Judaism is all about being a light unto the nations, and we absolutely do mourn the need to kill our enemies more than our own.
This is Torah and true Judaism.
He hoped that we would return to this true Jewish morality.

The same rabbi told me that Jewish soldiers should be sacrificed rather than kill "innocent" enemy civilians.

A group of similar rabbis signed a petition that called upon Israel to "stop starving Gaza babies". and rush more aid to the Gaza enemy.

On Hanukkah, we celebrate the victory of some very tough Jews who did some very rough things to our merciless, implacable enemies,  both  Gentiles and their  Jewish allies.

What did a "light unto the nations" mean then?
Probably not sacrificing our own children to save the enemy's
The Maccabees read the Torah from right to left and not upside down.
Unhappy enemies were a reason for celebration not contrition.

May we learn from the Maccabees and not be misled by would-be moralists.

Happy Chanukah

You are invited to an amazing tour on December 29



The Stunning Remez To The Beis Yosef's Question In Parshas Mikeitz ….Plus

 

 

 3 Sharp Divrei Torah on Parshas Mikeitz {From Sefer Pninei Kedem}  

 The Imponderable of Rav Yehoshuel'e M'Kutna For Shabbos Chanukah

Remains of a synagogue from 1,500 years ago in Horbat Kanaf (Ivrit)

Our Land Is Full of Batei Kenessiot, the Presence of Yehudim and Their Connection to Hashem

  

 The site of Horbat Kanaf was discovered about four kilometers east of the northeastern shores of the Sea of ​​Galilee in 1885 by Lawrence Oliphant. The ancient synagogue was located in the prominent stone structure at the top of the hill. This structure is new, it was built in the nineteenth century on the ruins of the ancient synagogue.

The northern entrance of the building corresponds to the original entrance of the synagogue from which the threshold stone and the three lower courses have been preserved. The most impressive find from the synagogue was discovered in the nineteenth century by Lawrence Oliphant. He discovered a stone lintel 3.5 meters long, on which is an Aramaic inscription that in Hebrew reads: 

"This lintel, remember well Yossa ben Halafu ben Haniyu who made it." The inscription expresses the volunteerism of the community for the purposes of building the synagogue. 
In 551, a strong earthquake struck the north of the country, and the synagogue of Kanaf was probably damaged by the same earthquake. The building was restored and continued to serve as a synagogue, but the renovated building was smaller and simpler than the original. 

However, the synagogue was divided by two rows of four columns each. The excavation found many capitals in a simple Doric style, some large and some small, from which it was concluded that there were two floors of columns, with the upper floor containing the smaller columns and capitals being a gallery.


Deir Aziz - A 1,500-year-old synagogue 

 

Until the Six-Day War, the village, which was built on the ruins of a Jewish settlement from the Mishnah and Talmudic period and included: a synagogue, a wine press, a cemetery and probably also a place to manufacture pottery, was under Syrian control. The findings of the excavations at Deir Aziz indicate that the Jewish settlement there existed until the earthquake of January 18, 749, which was one of the strongest earthquakes to hit the Land of Israel.
The uniqueness of the synagogue at Deir Aziz lies in the evidence we find in it for two traditions: originally, the building was built on an east-west axis with the direction of prayer facing west, but later the direction of prayer was changed to the south. Why and how was the change made? The answers are in the film.
Where did the name come from - near the western entrance, three fragments of a decorated lintel were discovered, on which were inscribed in Greek and which mention, among other things, the name 'Azizus'. Apparently, the name "Aziz" is related to the original name of this Talmudic settlement. Further excavations uncovered additional fragments of a Greek inscription that are related to the first inscription and can be seen as a single inscription that wished blessings to the donors. 
Most of the inscriptions in the synagogues deal with donations and the commemoration of the donors, thus emphasizing the synagogue's place as a central institution in the life of the Jewish community in the city and the village. Naturally, in the mountainous Galilee and the Golan, in buildings paved with stone tiles, the inscriptions are found engraved on stone items, while in buildings paved with mosaics, both in the Galilee and in the valleys, most of the inscriptions are in mosaic. Regarding the language of the inscriptions, in rural areas most of the inscriptions are in Hebrew and Aramaic. 
The site was discovered by Lawrence Oliphant in 1885. Oliphant described a large building built of ashlars and another building that was a synagogue. At the time, the lintel of the eastern doorway was still in place. For more information in Hebrew: https://historicalsitesinisrael.com/%... For more information in English: https://historicalsitesinisrael.com/e... Yehuda Holtzman

Reb Ginsbourg: Circumcision in Egypt

We already know that everything that was created with man, was worthy of existing - except for the foreskin, as the Torah commanded us to re...