Why Did Rashi Say That? podcast artwork

PODCAST · religion

Why Did Rashi Say That?

Why does Rashi explain the "obvious"?There's always something deeper.Every episode, Rabbi Ari Klapper takes one Rashi from the parsha and asks: Why did he need to say that? What gap was he filling? How does this commentary crack open our lives today?Not a parsha summary. A surgical strike on one idea—the Torah's hidden blueprint for relationships, character, and building you up. Just Rashi, depth, and tools to live differently.Rabbi Ari Klapper | Eli Podcast Productions | RealJudaism.org

  1. 27

    Parshas Behar-Bechukosai- The Chain of Life

    How does a person go from simply easing up on learning to not believing in Hashem at all? Why does Rashi trace spiritual collapse not to dramatic rebellion but to something as quiet as relaxing your effort? And what does it mean that the unraveling can span generations — by the time anyone notices, it's already someone else's crisis?Rashi reveals that the opening words of Bechukosai — im bechukosai telechu — don't mean following the rules. They mean toiling in Torah, actively wrestling with it. And from there Rashi maps a chain almost unbearable to trace: not being amel leads to not fulfilling mitzvos, which leads to hating them, which leads to causing others to abandon them, which ends — mamish — at a kofer b'ikur, someone who stops believing entirely. Rabbi Klapper draws out the devastating logic: this isn't someone who gets angry and walks away. It's someone on a downward escalator who never notices which way it's moving. The Haskalah is the proof — people who thought they were modernizing Judaism watched their grandchildren marry out, because once you loosen your grip on Torah itself, the ground keeps moving beneath you.Discover that Rashi's chain runs in both directions — the logic of collapse is equally the logic of growth. Learn that the standard isn't scholarship; it's honest effort, because genuine effort is what keeps you moving against the current. Uncover what's actually at stake in your Torah today — you're not just living your own life, you're building the foundation the people after you will stand on.Hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper and produced by Eli Podcast Productions, this episode is part of the Why Did Rashi Say That series, available on RealJudaism.org. Don't forget to subscribe and share to stay connected with our weekly Torah insights!

  2. 26

    Parshas Emor- Its in Your Hands

    What do you do with a man who never had a chance? Why does Rashi point the finger directly at someone whose father was murdered before he was born, whose tribe threw him out, and who had no corner of the world to call his own? And what does a blasphemer's worst moment have to do with the choices sitting right in front of you today?Rashi reveals that the megadef wasn't simply a criminal — he was a man built out of compounding wreckage. His father, an Egyptian, was killed by Moshe Rabbeinu sixty years earlier — meaning this man grew up without a father his entire life. His mother was a Jewish woman from Shevet Don who had been taken advantage of. When he finally tries to plant himself somewhere, to belong, he walks into Shevet Don because his mother came from there — and Moshe himself rules him out. Lineage follows the father. He has no father. Rejected, stateless, untethered — and then he curses Hashem. Rabbi Klapper traces how Rashi's comment on pasuk yud dalet, on the words es yadeihem, — the witnesses laying hands on his head and saying your blood is on your hands — isn't cruelty. It's the most radical statement of human dignity in the parsha: you were never merely the sum of what was done to you.Discover that the Torah's refusal to excuse him is actually the deepest form of respect — it insists he was capable of more. Learn that free choice doesn't disappear when circumstances get brutal; it's the one thing that cannot be stripped away. Uncover the uncomfortable truth that seeking help, turning around, choosing differently — that decision is always, only, yours.Hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper and produced by Eli Podcast Productions, this episode is part of the Why Did Rashi Say That series, available on RealJudaism.org. Don't forget to subscribe and share to stay connected with our weekly Torah insights!

  3. 25

    Parshas Acharei-Kedosim- How Do I Love My Friend Like Myself(1)

    Is V'ahavta L'reiacha Kamocha really telling you to feel genuine love for every single person you've ever met? Is it normal — or even possible — to love a stranger the same way you love your children? And if most people can't actually do that, are they violating one of the most fundamental mitzvos in the entire Torah every single day?Rabbi Klapper unpacks the layers hiding inside this famous pasuk. The most basic level — the floor, not the ceiling — is simply: don't hurt someone else the way you wouldn't want to be hurt. That's Hillel's one-foot Torah. But the Maharal reveals something deeper: the word Ahava itself means l'chaber — to connect. Which means the feeling of love doesn't have to come first. Do something for someone, and the love follows. Send the Mishloach Manos even when you don't feel close. Give the gift. Make the gesture. The connection builds from the action, not the other way around. And then the Rambam drops something unexpected: the language he uses to describe a husband's obligation to his wife is almost identical to the language of V'ahavta L'reiacha Kamocha — because your spouse is where this mitzvah finds its fullest expression.Discover why the mitzvah of loving your fellow Jew has levels — and which one you're actually responsible for right now. Learn why doing good for someone creates love rather than the reverse. Uncover why HaKadosh Baruch Hu put the deepest version of this mitzvah inside your own home.Hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper and produced by Eli Podcast Productions, this episode is part of the Why Did Rashi Say That series, available on RealJudaism.org. Don't forget to subscribe and share to stay connected with our weekly Torah insights!

  4. 24

    Parshas Tazria- Your True Life Source

    Why does a white hair only create Tumah if the follicle dried up — and what does that have to do with how you make a living? Why did a Kohen, one of the greatest experts in Hilchos Negaim of his generation, need his wife to teach him something he already knew? And if HaKadosh Baruch Hu gives every single individual hair on your body its own personal life source — why are you convinced He can't do the same for you?Rabbi Klapper uncovers a Midrash buried inside the intricate halachos of Tzaras that stops you cold. A Kohen preparing to leave his community for Parnassah teaches his wife the laws of Negaim — including how to identify when a hair's follicle has dried up and lost its life source. His wife turns the halacha right back at him: if the Ribono Shel Olam gives every hair its own source of life, why do you think you need to go searching for yours? The Chovos HaLevavos tells the exact same story with a twist — a goy makes the same point to a wandering Jew debating theology on the road.Discover why doing your hishtadlus doesn't mean doing more — it means doing what's normal and trusting who's actually in charge. Learn how a halacha about leprosy becomes one of the most practical lessons in bitachon you'll ever hear. Uncover why the life source you're looking for has been with you the whole time.Hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper and produced by Eli Podcast Productions, this episode is part of the Why Did Rashi Say That series, available on RealJudaism.org. Don't forget to subscribe and share to stay connected with our weekly Torah insights!

  5. 23

    Parshas Tzav- Shabbos HaGadol, Establishing Emunah

    Why is the great miracle of Yud Nisan commemorated on Shabbos — even when Yud Nisan falls on a Tuesday? If the Torah never mentions Shabbos in connection with taking the sheep, why do we call it Shabbos HaGadol and not Yud Nisan HaGadol? And what does any of this have to do with us, four days before our own Leil Seder?Rabbi Klapper uncovers a stunning layer in the Drisha: it wasn't coincidence that the sheep was taken on Shabbos — it was the entire point. The week is the only unit of time that has no astronomical explanation. No moon cycle, no constellation, no planetary movement creates a seven-day week. The week comes from one place: HaKadosh Baruch Hu created the world in six days and rested on the seventh. Shabbos is therefore the purest expression of Emunah that exists. And on the very day that declares Hashem runs this world, Klal Yisrael took the god of Egypt, tied it to their beds, and told the Egyptians exactly what they were going to do with it. That's not just a miracle. That's a declaration.Discover why Pesach can only begin with Shabbos — and why throwing away your Avodah Zarah on the day of Emunah is the first step toward any Geulah. Learn what the Egyptians' silence really meant, and why the Drisha says the date was almost irrelevant. Uncover what your own personal sheep might be — and what Shabbos is asking you to do with it.Hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper and produced by Eli Podcast Productions, this episode is part of the Why Did Rashi Say That series, available on RealJudaism.org. Don't forget to subscribe and share to stay connected with our weekly Torah insights!

  6. 22

    Parshas Vayikra- The Secret to Finding Happiness; Salt, Water, and Succos

    Why does the Torah require salt on every single Korban — every one, no exceptions? Why did the second day of creation not receive the word tov? And what does the Mishnah mean when it says that anyone who didn't witness Simchas Beis HaSho'eva has never seen true simcha in their life?Rashi reveals an astonishing promise buried in the laws of Korbanos: when HaKadosh Baruch Hu split the upper and lower waters on the second day of creation, the lower waters lodged a complaint — you separated me, you broke my achdus — and Hashem made a covenant with them. Rabbi Klapper uncovers that the salt on every Korban and the water libation on Sukkos are the fulfillment of that promise. The Mizbeach doesn't just receive offerings — it reconnects what was torn apart. Two halves of the same whole, finally becoming one again. That reunion, that moment of completion, is what the Mishnah calls simcha you have never seen before in your life.Discover why true simcha has nothing to do with vacations, achievements, or excitement — and everything to do with reconnection. Learn why the same secret that explains the waters explains your marriage. Uncover why the deepest happiness a person can feel is the moment two separated halves stop being apart.Hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper and produced by Eli Podcast Productions, this episode is part of the Why Did Rashi Say That series, available on RealJudaism.org. Don't forget to subscribe and share to stay connected with our weekly Torah insights!

  7. 21

    How Can I Feel Shabbos? Parshas Vayakhel

    Appreciate and Enjoy Shabbos: ⁠https://open.spotify.com/show/2GLIzh7FPz3opaDuHqT8bzWhy does the Torah introduce the Mishkan — the holiest structure ever built — with a warning not to light fire on Shabbos? Why did Moshe Rabbeinu, the greatest prophet who ever lived, lose his Torah the moment he got angry — even though he was right to be angry? And why do so many people who learn all week, daven every day, feel less on Shabbos than on a Tuesday?Rashi reveals that the prohibition of fire on Shabbos isn't only about melachah. The Shlah, the Zohar, and Sefer Tomer Devorah point to something deeper: the fire of machlokes, the heat of ka'as, is what the pasuk is really warning against. Rabbi Klapper draws on Sefer Shabbos Malkesa to uncover why Shabbos kedusha works differently than every other Yom Tov — it doesn't come from mitzvos you do, it comes directly from the Shechinah. And if you disconnect even for a moment through anger, you're unplugged completely. Not less connected. Gone. The neshama yeseira doesn't linger in a house with ka'as — it just leaves.Discover why the satan specifically targets erev Shabbos, and what Reb Meir did about it. Learn the one eitzah that Sefer Shabbos Malkesa gives — and why it's harder and simpler than you'd expect. This episode is a window into Rabbi Klapper's full series Appreciate and Enjoy Shabbos, going through Sefer Shabbos Malkesa — available now on Spotify and wherever you listen to podcasts.Hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper and produced by Eli Podcast Productions. Find the full Appreciate and Enjoy Shabbos podcast at: https://open.spotify.com/show/2GLIzh7FPz3opaDuHqT8bz — and stay connected with more weekly Torah content at RealJudaism.org.

  8. 20

    Parshas Ki Sisa- Hashem's Infinite Mercy

    Why did Moshe Rabbeinu's most powerful argument — the Zchus of Avraham, Yitzchak, and Yaakov — fall short when he davened after the Egel HaZahav? What does HaKadosh Baruch Hu actually want to hear when we ask Him for something? And if the first Bracha of Shemoneh Esrei isn't really about Z'chus Avos — what have we been saying all these years?Rashi reveals that the Egel Hazahav wasn't just a catastrophe — it was the moment HaKadosh Baruch Hu sat Moshe Rabbeinu down and taught him how to truly daven. Rabbi Klapper uncovers the stunning distinction: Z'chus Avos is real, but it's finite. Avraham had ten tests — and ten tests cover ten transgressions. But what happens in generation after generation of accumulated failure? Hashem's answer was the Yud Gimel Midos HaRachamim. Not our merit. His mercy. And His mercy has no ceiling, no expiration, no bottom. The door is never actually closed — because it's not our door to close.Discover why the first Bracha of Shemoneh Esrei is really a declaration of Kesher, not a resumé of ancestors. Learn how every Tefillah is less about asking and more about showing up — telling Hashem we still want the connection. Uncover why that Kesher, built and fought for every single day, is the most powerful thing Klal Yisrael has ever had.Hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper and produced by Eli Podcast Productions, this episode is part of the Why Did Rashi Say That series, available on RealJudaism.org. Don't forget to subscribe and share to stay connected with our weekly Torah insights!

  9. 19

    Purim Part 2- The New Connection

    What does it mean to give someone a gift instead of charity — and why does that distinction unlock the entire secret of Purim? Why do we drink on Purim specifically, and not on any other Yom Tov? And if Teshuva alone wasn't enough to reverse Haman's decree, what in the world was?Rabbi Klapper uncovers a stunning thread running through the four Mitzvos of Purim: every single one is an act of love, not obligation. Matanas Levionim isn't called Tzedaka — because on Purim, there are no charity cases. You give the whole amount, no calculations, no strategy. That's a Matana. The Maharal reveals that wine carries a Ruchni power to connect a person to their deepest root — which is exactly why drinking at Achashverosh's party was so catastrophic, and exactly why drinking on Purim reverses it. And the Taamei Minhagim asks: why does the Grogger spin upward, while the Dreidel spins down? Because on Purim, the Shefa had to come from us first.Discover why the Maharal compares getting drunk on Purim to fasting on Yom Kippur — two sides of the same Korban. Learn how Klal Yisrael didn't just do Teshuva on Purim; they created a brand new Kesher with Hashem through pure Ahava. Uncover why every moment of Purim is as charged as every moment of Yom Kippur — and what it means to actually use it.Hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper and produced by Eli Podcast Productions, this episode is part of the Why Did Rashi Say That series, available on RealJudaism.org. Don't forget to subscribe and share to stay connected with our weekly Torah insights!

  10. 18

    Purim I: Is This the End of the Jewish People

    Why did Hashem personally seal Haman's decree when He didn't seal one at the Egel Hazahav? What did the Jewish people do at Achashverosh's party that was worse than the Three Cardinal Sins? And why was Teshuva — the answer to everything — not enough this time?Rabbi Klapper uncovers a staggering idea embedded in the Gemara and Esther Rabbah: attending Achashverosh's party had nothing to do with the food. It was a declaration — we don't want You anymore. The very name Yehudi contains Hashem's name within it. To abandon that identity isn't an aveira you can do teshuva from. It's cutting yourself off at the root. Like flowers severed from the ground — they look alive, but they're already dead. This is why the decree was sealed. Not for what they did. For who they said they no longer were.Discover why the miracle of Purim demanded something beyond teshuva — an entirely new life-source for Klal Yisrael. Learn what your name as a Jew actually means, and why Purim is not a day of hefkeirus but possibly the most serious opportunity of the year. This changes everything about how you show up on the fourteenth of Adar.Hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper and produced by Eli Podcast Productions, this episode is part of the Why Did Rashi Say That series, available on RealJudaism.org. Don't forget to subscribe and share to stay connected with our weekly Torah insights!

  11. 17

    Parshas Terumah- Building Your Home For Hashem

    Why is building the Mishkan the very first thing Hashem tells Moshe on Har Sinai? What does a father losing his daughter at her wedding have to do with the Shechina? And if Hashem wants to dwell among us — why make it depend on voluntary donations that might never come?Rabbi Klapper reveals that the Mishkan wasn't just a building project — it was a love story. Through the Midrash of a king who can't bear to separate from his daughter, we see that accepting the Torah means accepting Hashem Himself into our homes. The same three miracles present in Sarah's tent — the ever-burning candle, the blessing in the bread, the cloud overhead — reappeared in the Mishkan. And the Nesiim, the tribal leaders who pledged to cover any shortfall, actually lost a letter from their name. Why? Because they underestimated how desperately Klal Yisrael wanted the Shechina. The donations poured in without them.Discover what it really means to invite Hashem into your home — not through a building campaign, but through wanting it so deeply that nothing stands in the way. Your home has that same potential today.Hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper and produced by Eli Podcast Productions, this episode is part of the Why Did Rashi Say That series, available on RealJudaism.org. Don't forget to subscribe and share to stay connected with our weekly Torah insights!

  12. 16

    Parshas Mishpatim- Real Judaism

    Why does Rashi point out that Mishpatim was also given at Har Sinai — isn't that obvious? What happens after the greatest spiritual moment in history ends and you still have to deal with your neighbors? And why would the Kitzur Shulchan Aruch — a dry law book — be the thing that inspires a non-Jew to convert?Rabbi Klapper uncovers a profound pattern hiding in Rashi's comment on the very first words of the parsha. The extra vav in "ve'eleh" ties every mundane law — how we do business, how we treat employees, how we speak to our spouses — directly back to the thunder of Har Sinai. Most religions ask for a piece of your weekend. The Torah asks for every second from Modeh Ani to Hamapil. Through the story of a convert who saw this truth in the pages of the Kitzur Shulchan Aruch, we see what separates a religion from a way of life.Discover why the nitty-gritty — the boring, daily, unglamorous choices — carries the same kedusha as standing at Sinai. Learn how to take your inspiration and live it, not just on Shabbos, but every single day you're given.Hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper and produced by Eli Podcast Productions, this episode is part of the Why Did Rashi Say That series, available on RealJudaism.org. Don't forget to subscribe and share to stay connected with our weekly Torah insights!

  13. 15

    Parshas Yisro- Kabalas HaTorah, Ladies First

    Why did Hashem tell Moshe to speak to the women before the men? At Har Sinai, the greatest event in history, what made "Beis Yaakov" come before "Bnei Yisrael"?The malachim argued the Torah should stay in Shamayim—humans would fail to keep it. But Moshe answered: Do you have parents? Do you eat? The Torah belongs on earth, brought to life by human beings. Rabbi Klapper shows that this is exactly why Hashem turned to the women first. The Torah needs a place to settle. Men may be the channel that brings kedusha toward the home, but the woman is the one who accepts it and builds it into something real. If there's no acceptance by the women, there's no place for the Torah to be.Discover why the little boy learning to talk hears emunah from his mother at bedtime. Learn why "Beis Yaakov" isn't just a school name—it's the answer to where Torah actually lives in this world.Hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper and produced by Eli Podcast Productions, this episode is part of the Why Did Rashi Say That series, available on RealJudaism.org. Don't forget to subscribe and share to stay connected with our weekly Torah insights!

  14. 14

    Parshas Beshalach- What Will Save the Jewish People

    Why did Hashem tell Moshe to stop davening? At the moment of greatest danger, with the sea ahead and the Egyptian army behind, why wasn't tefila the answer?The Ohr HaChaim reveals that the real danger wasn't on earth—it was in Shamayim. The malachim were accusing: these Egyptians worship avodah zarah, and so do the Jews. The Pesel Micha came through the sea with them. Why should Israel survive? Rabbi Klapper explains that tefila, as powerful as it is, wasn't enough to answer this accusation. Hashem needed something else—bitachon made visible. Not words about trust, but action. Jump into the sea. Show me you believe I'll save you. And when Nachshon jumped, the sea split.Discover why bitachon sometimes requires stepping into the unknown before the path appears. Learn how this applies when everything around us feels backwards and uncertain—parnasa, health, shalom bayis. Sometimes the answer isn't more tefila. It's the jump.Hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper and produced by Eli Podcast Productions, this episode is part of the Why Did Rashi Say That series, available on RealJudaism.org. Don't forget to subscribe and share to stay connected with our weekly Torah insights!

  15. 13

    Connect to Hashem - Parshas Bo

    Why would we even think a convert has to bring a Korban Pesach the moment he joins the Jewish people? What is it about gerus that echoes the night the Jewish nation was born?Rashi explains the logic: on that first Pesach night, Hashem destroyed every avodah zarah in Egypt—except the sheep, which the Egyptians worshipped. That one, Klal Yisrael had to destroy themselves. Take the god of your oppressors, shecht it, and bring it as a korban. That act of separation was the birth of the nation. Rabbi Klapper shows why a ger might seem to need the same process—he's leaving his world, cutting off his old allegiances, clinging to Hashem. But the pasuk teaches: once you're a Jew, you're like everyone else. No immediate korban required.Discover why the month of Nisan carries the sheep as its mazal—and what it means to shecht the things that pull us away. Learn how to identify your own small avodah zarahs, the obsessions and distractions we don't even realize we serve.Hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper and produced by Eli Podcast Productions, this episode is part of the Why Did Rashi Say That series, available on RealJudaism.org. Don't forget to subscribe and share to stay connected with our weekly Torah insights!

  16. 12

    Bringing Peace Between Fire and Ice

    How can fire exist inside ice without destroying it? What does it mean that two forces which naturally cancel each other out made peace—just to do the will of Hashem?Rashi calls the hail of Makas Barad a "nes b'toch nes"—a miracle inside a miracle. Fire and water intermingled, not separated by a pot or a wall, but truly mixed together. Rabbi Klapper shows how the fire worshippers and water worshippers of old used their gods to mock each other—fire makes water dance, water extinguishes fire. They're opposites by nature. Yet in the barad, they made peace. And this, the shiur suggests, is the model for marriage. When a husband and wife feel like complete opposites, fire and ice, the lesson of barad says: to do ratzon Hashem, make peace anyway.But here's what's even better—a couple isn't actually fire and ice. They're two halves of the same neshama. Discover why feeling opposite doesn't mean being opposite, and why what looks like conflict is really completion.Hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper and produced by Eli Podcast Productions, this episode is part of the Why Did Rashi Say That series, available on RealJudaism.org. Don't forget to subscribe and share to stay connected with our weekly Torah insights!

  17. 11

    Parshas Shemos- Your Name Your Essence

    Why does the Torah call Yocheved and Miriam by the names Shifra and Puah? These were the mother of Moshe, Aharon, and Miriam—and Miriam HaNeviah herself. Why hide their identities behind names that mean "she made the baby beautiful" and "she cooed to calm them down"?Rashi explains that names reveal essence—and Rabbi Klapper shows how this principle runs through the entire parsha. Moshe had ten names, yet Torah only uses the one given by Bas Paro, because it captured his core: mesirus nefesh for others. She pulled him from the water at risk to her own life, and that act of chesed became who Moshe was. So too, Shifra and Puah aren't lesser names—they're the truest names. The small acts of feminine care, the attention to making someone feel a little more loved, a little more comfortable—these are the qualities that built the houses of kehuna and malchus.Discover why the Torah honors what looks small. Learn how the details we dismiss—calming a baby, cleaning a newborn—are the foundation of everything that came after.Hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper and produced by Eli Podcast Productions, this episode is part of the Why Did Rashi Say That series, available on RealJudaism.org. Don't forget to subscribe and share to stay connected with our weekly Torah insights!

  18. 10

    Parshas Vayechi- A Solid Foundation

    Why did Yaakov suddenly ask "Who are these boys?" about Ephraim and Menashe—grandchildren he had just called his own sons? What happened in those three pesukim that made him stop recognizing them?Rashi reveals that the Shechina left Yaakov when he saw, through ruach hakodesh, that wicked kings would descend from these boys—Yeravam and Achav from Ephraim, Yehu from Menashe. If evil was coming, maybe the foundation itself was cracked. And you can't bless a cracked foundation—bracha only makes what exists bigger. Rabbi Klapper shows us Yosef's response: he didn't argue or explain. He showed his father the ketubah—the marriage contract with Osnas. The shorish, the root, was kedusha. The marriage was solid. That was enough. The Shechina returned.Discover why the foundation of a Jewish home isn't measured by what children do, but by how the marriage began. Learn why we never give up on any child—because a bad outcome doesn't prove a bad root.Hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper and produced by Eli Podcast Productions, this episode is part of the Why Did Rashi Say That series, available on RealJudaism.org. Don't forget to subscribe and share to stay connected with our weekly Torah insights!

  19. 9

    Yosef's Tears - Vayigash

    Why did Yosef and Binyamin cry about the destruction of the Temples at their reunion? After 22 years apart, with all the emotion of brothers from the same mother finally embracing—why is this the moment Rashi says they mourned the Churban?Rabbi Klapper uncovers a truth hidden in the sequence of events. Yosef had been dropping hints for weeks, begging his brothers to recognize him on their own. But when Yehuda threatened to destroy all of Egypt—and meant it—Yosef was forced to reveal himself before the teshuva was complete. The brothers got the shock of "Ani Yosef," but they never arrived at the realization themselves. And teshuva that comes from shock, like miracles that dazzle but don't transform, doesn't build foundations. The maidservant at Yam Suf saw more than Yechezkel—and remained a maidservant.Discover why introspection that we initiate is different from truth that hits us. Learn how Yosef and Binyamin's tears weren't just prophecy—they were recognition of what was missing in that very moment.Hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper and produced by Eli Podcast Productions, this episode is part of the Why Did Rashi Say That series, available on RealJudaism.org. Don't forget to subscribe and share to stay connected with our weekly Torah insights!

  20. 8

    Parshas Mikeitz; Why Did Yosef Do That

    Why did Yosef seat his brothers by exact birth order? Why reveal he knew the wood of their cribs—details only family could know? If he wanted to stay hidden, why leave hints that screamed it's me?Rashi reveals that Yosef banged on his cup like a magician, calling out each brother by name and mother. Rabbi Klapper uncovers something deeper: Yosef wasn't playing games—he was begging to be recognized. These weren't tricks; they were invitations. Yosef understood that complete teshuva required his brothers to see what they'd missed from the very beginning. Not just that selling him was cruel, but that dismissing his dreams was the original error. He wanted them to arrive at one realization on their own: we should have believed in our brother's greatness.Discover why true teshuva sometimes means revisiting not just what we did, but how we saw someone. Learn how Yaakov's quiet response to Yosef's dreams—holding onto possibility instead of dismissing it—offers a model for recognizing potential in the people around us.Hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper and produced by Eli Podcast Productions, this episode is part of the Why Did Rashi Say That series, available on RealJudaism.org. Don't forget to subscribe and share to stay connected with our weekly Torah insights!

  21. 7

    Parshas Vayeishev; Mashiach and the Power of Tznius

    Why does Rashi point to tznius as the reason Tamar merited to become the grandmother of Mashiach? With so many great middos—chesed, rachamim, emunah—why is hiddenness the one that births royalty? And what does modesty have to do with power?Rabbi Klapper uncovers a startling pattern: Tamar kept her strengths locked away, used only in the right place at the right time. Rashi tells us Yehuda didn't even recognize her because she was so tznuah in his house—she never made herself seen. This isn't about clothing. It's about focus. In a world that demands you show everything, broadcast every talent, let it all hang out, Tamar understood something different. Hidden power is concentrated power. Like a secret weapon that changes wars because the enemy never sees it coming, her focused koichos created an explosion of spiritual energy.Discover why the middah of tznius isn't about restriction—it's about directing your strengths to where they can actually transform. Learn how keeping your best hidden until the right moment creates the power to build dynasties.Hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper and produced by Eli Podcast Productions, this episode is part of the Why Did Rashi Say That series, available on RealJudaism.org. Don't forget to subscribe and share to stay connected with our weekly Torah insights!

  22. 6

    Parshas Vayishlach - Dina's Power

    Where was Dina? The Pasuk lists eleven children crossing the river with Yaakov—but he had twelve. Why does Rashi say Yaakov was punished for hiding his young daughter from Esav? What kind of father wouldn't protect his child from a well-known rasha?Rashi reveals something uncomfortable: Dina had an extraordinary ability to transform people. Rabbi Klapper points to what happens later in the Parsha—after Shechem commits a terrible act, he turns around completely. The Torah uses such profound language of love that Chazal say we can learn how Hashem loves Klal Yisrael from Shechem's words about Dina. This wasn't charm. This was a spiritual power to see someone's hidden potential and draw it out. And Yaakov, by hiding her, denied even the possibility that Esav could change.Discover the koyach that women carry—to recognize strengths in others that they can't see in themselves. Learn why believing in someone's potential isn't naivety; it's how transformation actually happens.Hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper and produced by Eli Podcast Productions, this episode is part of the Why Did Rashi Say That series, available on RealJudaism.org. Don't forget to subscribe and share to stay connected with our weekly Torah insights!

  23. 5

    Parshas Vayeitzei - What is True Life

    Why does Hashem never attach His name to a tzaddik while they're still alive? And why did He make an exception for Yitzchak? What does it mean that a person who no longer has a Yetzer Hara is considered "like dead"—even while still breathing, still learning Torah?Rashi reveals something startling in Parshas Vayeitzei. When Yitzchak went blind and became homebound, the Yetzer Hara stopped pursuing him. And because of that—not despite it—Hashem considered him as if he had already passed on. Rabbi Klapper uncovers the radical implication: our daily battles with temptation, with lashon hara, with the pull of gashmius—these aren't obstacles to living. They are living. The very struggles we wish would disappear are what make us alive in Hashem's eyes.Discover why your hardest moments are proof that Hashem believes in you. Learn how every test is actually Hashem saying, "I know you can win this—and I'm fighting alongside you."Hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper and produced by Eli Podcast Productions, this episode is part of the Why Did Rashi Say That series, available on RealJudaism.org. Don't forget to subscribe and share to stay connected with our weekly Torah insights!

  24. 4

    Parshas Toldos- Do You Love Food

    Why did Yitzchak make his blessing depend on food? Why demand that Esav hunt and serve him a meal first? Most puzzling: he used the word for "love"—the same emotion we use for a wife, a child, a soul—for this meal. What was Yitzchak really tasting?Rashi reveals something astonishing hidden in those hunting instructions: they're about kedusha, not just meal prep. Rabbi Klapper uncovers the deeper pattern: food is what connects your soul to your body. Rivka, a true tzedeket, infused her meals with spiritual holiness. Every time Yitzchak ate from her kitchen, he experienced kedusha—a real elevation of spirit. That's what he actually loved. That's what gave him the power to bless. When Yaakov brought Rivka's food, Yitzchak tasted it and felt "mikol"—everything—flooding through him. Only then could he give the bracha.Discover what this means for your own table: a righteous woman preparing food with intention, with kavanah, infuses every bite with kedusha. That's why food matters. That's why blessing flows from nourishment made holy. When you eat with awareness, you're not just feeding your body—you're connecting your soul to this world. That changes everything.Hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper and produced by Eli Podcast Productions, this episode is part of the Why Did Rashi Say That series, available on RealJudaism.org. Don't forget to subscribe and share to stay connected with our weekly Torah insights!

  25. 3

    Parshas Chayei Sarah - The Wife, Foundation of the Home - Ep. 1

    Why did three miracles suddenly return when Yitzchak brought Rivka into Sarah's tent? And what does it mean that he loved her after he married her—not before?Rashi reveals an astonishing pattern: the candle that burned all week, the blessing in the dough, and the cloud over the tent weren't just signs of Sarah's greatness—they were the spiritual DNA of a Torah home. When Sarah died, they vanished. When Rivka arrived, they returned. But why these three specific miracles? And what do they have to do with the mitzvos given uniquely to women?Rabbi Klapper uncovers the deep connection between Sarah's tent, the Mishkan, and the three mitzvos that bring the Shechina into every Jewish home: lighting Shabbos candles, separating challah, and keeping the laws of family purity. Through Yitzchak's story, we learn that real love isn't built on attraction or chemistry—it's born from witnessing your spouse build a home with kedusha. Discover why appreciating the "invisible work" of creating a Torah home is the secret to lasting love, and how every Jewish woman carries the power to make her home a dwelling place for Hashem.Hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper and produced by Eli Podcast Productions, this episode is part of the Why Did Rashi Say That series, available on RealJudaism.org. Don't forget to subscribe and share to stay connected with our weekly Torah insights!

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Why does Rashi explain the "obvious"?There's always something deeper.Every episode, Rabbi Ari Klapper takes one Rashi from the parsha and asks: Why did he need to say that? What gap was he filling? How does this commentary crack open our lives today?Not a parsha summary. A surgical strike on one idea—the Torah's hidden blueprint for relationships, character, and building you up. Just Rashi, depth, and tools to live differently.Rabbi Ari Klapper | Eli Podcast Productions | RealJudaism.org

HOSTED BY

Rabbi Ari Klapper

Frequently Asked Questions

How many episodes does Why Did Rashi Say That? have?

Why Did Rashi Say That? currently has 25 episodes available on PodParley. New episodes are automatically indexed when they're published to the podcast feed.

What is Why Did Rashi Say That? about?

Why does Rashi explain the "obvious"?There's always something deeper.Every episode, Rabbi Ari Klapper takes one Rashi from the parsha and asks: Why did he need to say that? What gap was he filling? How does this commentary crack open our lives today?Not a parsha summary. A surgical strike on one...

How often does Why Did Rashi Say That? release new episodes?

Why Did Rashi Say That? has 25 episodes. Check the episode list to see recent publication dates and frequency.

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You can listen to Why Did Rashi Say That? on PodParley by clicking any episode. We provide an embedded audio player for direct listening, and you can also subscribe via your preferred podcast app using the RSS feed.

Who hosts Why Did Rashi Say That??

Why Did Rashi Say That? is created and hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper.
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