HOME ABOUT US ASK THE RABBI CONTACT US
Chabad of Malibu

Parshah Ki Teitzei - Deuteronomy 21:10-25:19


Parshah Texts Parshah Texts
Text of Parshah  Deuteronomy 21:10-25:19
Text of Parshah with Rashi's Commentary
Text of Haftorah
Summaries and Overviews Summaries and Overviews
Parshah in a Nutshell
Aliyot Summary
In-Depth Parshah Overview with Selected Commentaries
Haftorah in a Nutshell
From the Chassidic Masters From the Chassidic Masters
Boundaries
Eating on the Job
Amalek
Parsha Columnists Parsha Columnists
Weekly Sermonette
By Yossy Goldman
Parshah Moment
By Shimon Posner
Life's Passages
By Chana Weisberg
For Friday Night
By Tali Loewenthal
Inner Stream
By Lazer Gurkow
More...
Rashi Studies Rashi Studies
When You Go Out to War
A Very Easy Mitzvah
Forbidden Mixtures
More...
Parsha Audio Classes Parsha Audio Classes
Parshah Thought - Ki Teitzei
Torah Gems - Parshah Ki Teitzei
The Philosophy of The Bible - Ki Teitzei
More...
Family Parshah Family Parshah
Kt Teitzei RoundupParshah Song
Ki Teitzei Q & AThe Sign
Living with the ParshahMore...


From our Sages on the Parshah
For a hanged person is a curse to G-d (Deut. 21:23)

It is a degradation of the Divine King in whose image man is created... This is analogous to a case of two identical twin brothers. One became king, while the other was arrested for robbery and hanged. Whoever saw him, would say, "The king is hanging!"

(Talmud, Sanhedrin 46b)

When you reap your harvest... and forget a sheaf in the field, do not go back to fetch it; it shall be for the stranger, for the fatherless and for the widow ( 24:19)

Certain opportunities and potentials are so lofty, that they cannot be accessed by the conscious self; they can only come about "by mistake." An example of this is the mitzvah of shikchah, which can only be fulfilled by forgetting.

(The Chassidic Masters)


Other Parshas


Chabad of Malibu 22943 Pacific Coast Highway Malibu, CA 90265 310-456-6588

Powered by Chabad.org © 2001-2008 Chabad-Lubavitch Media Center. All rights reserved.
In everlasting memory of Rabbi Yosef Y. Kazen, pioneer of Torah, Judaism and Jewish information on the web