Thursday, November 27, 2025

Fwd: Torat Imecha Haftorah: Vayeitzei


---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: The OU Women's Initiative <ouwomen@ounetwork.org>
Date: Thu, Nov 27, 2025, 7:00 AM
Subject: Torat Imecha Haftorah: Vayeitzei
To: <agentemes4@gmail.com>



Torat Imecha Haftorah

Torat Imecha Haftorah is dedicated as a zechus that all those waiting should find their zivug hagun soon and with ease.


Mrs. Michal Horowitz

 

Haftorah Vayeitzei

Mrs. Michal Horowitz

Listen Now

Mrs. Michal Horowitz delivers weekly shiurim in her community of the Five Towns, NY, while her Zoom shiurim reach audiences around the world. She has been a scholar in residence in schools and communities, nationally and internationally. In September 2023, Michal was a keynote speaker at Chief Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis' Pre-Yamim Noraim Conference, for the United Hebrew Congregations of the Commonwealth. At the OU Women's Initiative, she inaugurated the Torat Imecha Parsha program presenting weekly shiurim on Sefer Bereishit. Michal taught Yehoshua, Tehillim 36-41, and Divrei Hayamim II to over 5,000 women across the globe as part of the Torat Imecha Nach Yomi cycle I. She taught Tehillim 1-41, and Mishlei for cycle II. She taught Shoftim for cycle III. Michal presented Rosh Chodesh, Selichot Night and Nach Yomi Siyum shiurim and taught in-depth courses at the ALIT Virtual Summer Learning Programs of 2020, '21, '22, '23, and '24.  Michal's weekly OU Parsha shiur can be found on the AllParsha App. She has thousands of audio and video shiurim online.  Her writings have been published in YU's Torah-To-Go, HaMizrachi, the OU's Jewish Action magazine, and most recently in "Reclaiming Dignity: A Guide to Tzniut".  Her story can be found on all major streaming platforms on the "Rolling With the Punches" Podcast, Episode 14, Sounds of Silence. Michal lives in Woodmere, NY with her husband and family.


Dvar Haftorah

OU Women's Initiative 

Founding Director

Rebbetzin Dr.

Adina Shmidman

Rebbetzin Dr. Adina Shmidman

The Roar of Redemption

Hoshea 11:7-12:12

We usually think of a lion's roar as something frightening — a sound that makes you recoil, not gather. So why does the Navi describe Hashem's call to redemption as the roar of a lion? Wouldn't that push us away?

 

The Radak reframes the entire image. A lion's roar does not only scatter; in the animal world, it also draws the creatures toward him, because he is king. כְּאַרְיֵה יִשְׁאַג, He will roar like a lion - just as the lion's roar asserts authority and gathers the animals, so Hashem's roar is the sound that gathers His people. It is the voice that reminds us who leads us, who watches us, who calls us home. The Radak explains that this roar comes through a moment of revelation — through a prophet, a sign, or a wonder that breaks through the noise of exile and says: Return.

 

The Malbim deepens this image. He distinguishes between two kinds of Divine roar. In exile, Hashem does not roar with His full, overwhelming Divine voice — kol Elokim — because we could not withstand it. Instead, He "roars like a lion": He clothes Himself in the events of history, guiding us through natural means, bending the hearts of kings, softening decrees, and preserving us through hidden providence. It sounds like the roar of empires, but beneath it is the quiet Voice of Hashem.

 

But, says the Malbim, a time will come when that hidden roar will give way to the true roar — the unmistakable voice of Hashem performing wonders "כִּימֵי קֶדֶם." In that moment, וְחָרְדוּ בָנִים מִיָּם, even the children of the West, scattered far from the land, will tremble not in fear but in recognition. They will hurry toward the call they have been waiting to hear.

 

Together, the Radak and Malbim reshape our understanding. Hashem's roar is often hidden, softened, disguised in the noise of history. But the day will come when that quiet, protective roar becomes the full, unmistakable Divine voice. At that moment, even those scattered far away will tremble — not in fear, but in recognition — and will hurry toward Him.

 

The roar is not a sound that drives us off. It is a sound that calls us home.


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