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This morning’s episode of Breakfast & a Class opens Sefer Shemot with an unsettling question:
How does slavery return without chains? The Torah’s answer is not violence first, but language, reframing, and selective forgetting. Drawing from Chazal, Midrash, Zohar, and the Maharal, this shiur explores how exile begins when names turn into categories, when gratitude becomes historical footnotes, and when “being clever” replaces moral clarity. From Pharaoh’s calculated amnesia of Yosef to the Torah’s definition of Golut HaDa‘at—exile of the mind—we uncover how oppression takes root long before suffering is visible.
Without panic, politics, or prophecy, this class asks listeners to think clearly about patterns—ancient and modern. What does it mean when protections erode quietly, when definitions shift, and when Jewish legitimacy is reframed rather than attacked outright? Why does redemption in Shemot come quickly once clarity returns? And what does Torah demand of us now—not to run, but to remember? This episode is a sober, source-driven call to strengthen Jewish identity, normalize connection to Eretz Yisrael, and live with one eye open—because Mitsrayim ends when Jews remember who they are.
By JewishPodcasts.fm5
1313 ratings
This morning’s episode of Breakfast & a Class opens Sefer Shemot with an unsettling question:
How does slavery return without chains? The Torah’s answer is not violence first, but language, reframing, and selective forgetting. Drawing from Chazal, Midrash, Zohar, and the Maharal, this shiur explores how exile begins when names turn into categories, when gratitude becomes historical footnotes, and when “being clever” replaces moral clarity. From Pharaoh’s calculated amnesia of Yosef to the Torah’s definition of Golut HaDa‘at—exile of the mind—we uncover how oppression takes root long before suffering is visible.
Without panic, politics, or prophecy, this class asks listeners to think clearly about patterns—ancient and modern. What does it mean when protections erode quietly, when definitions shift, and when Jewish legitimacy is reframed rather than attacked outright? Why does redemption in Shemot come quickly once clarity returns? And what does Torah demand of us now—not to run, but to remember? This episode is a sober, source-driven call to strengthen Jewish identity, normalize connection to Eretz Yisrael, and live with one eye open—because Mitsrayim ends when Jews remember who they are.

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