This is really amazing. I was listening to a shiur by Rabbi Glatstien today and he happened to have mentioned the answer to this riddle!
He has a whole thing about Rivka, that when she first laid eyes on Yitzchok, she fell off her camel, like she was startled. Rashi says she saw that he had Hadar- a shine.
However, there is another explanation to that. He went in to explain that there is an opinion that says that Avrohom actually did in fact shecht Yitchok (or partially shecht him). And Yitzchok went up to Gan eden to heal. After 3 years, he came back.
On the day he came back, his kalla was arriving on the gamal. She fell off because she looked at Yitzhok and she saw he was UPSIDE DOWN. because apparently in olam haba, people walk around upside down. So when Yitzchok came back, he was still upside down. (Seems like Rashi says this in the gemara.) "Hadar" could also mean upside down.
Ps. It answers a bunch of other questions such as Rashi says that when Yaakov walked into the room, Yitzchok thought he smelled like Gan eden. How did he know how Gan eden smells? Because he was there, and he remembered!
Fascinating shiur. Also he explains about the business of being upside down in Gan eden.
I'll try to post it if anyone is interested.
Please do post it! Sounds fascinating!
Can anyone help with this? Someone asked me about the story with Shlomo Hamelech and the bee and the queen of Sheba, so I went to look up the details, and could not find a source for it... anyone know of one?
Can anyone help with this? Someone asked me about the story with Shlomo Hamelech and the bee and the queen of Sheba, so I went to look up the details, and could not find a source for it... anyone know of one?
Can anyone help with this? Someone asked me about the story with Shlomo Hamelech and the bee and the queen of Sheba, so I went to look up the details, and could not find a source for it... anyone know of one?
My kids have watched a video of it (I think it’s from Rabbi B on YouTube) but after looking it up now it seems that it’s a legend and not based off anything in Tanach.
Below is copied from a page I found while google searching.
After King Solomon forgives a bee for stinging him, it returns the favor by identifying the one real flower among a roomful of artificial ones—one of the riddles set the great king by the queen of Sheba. As Renberg explains in an excellent note, this story has Talmudic roots but is based on ``The Bee'' by Jewish poet Hayyim Nahman Bialik (``since this account doesn't appear in the Talmud, scholars are unclear whether Bialik based it on some other ancient folklore or whether he invented it'
The answer to this is that sometimes there is a fast day established in Eretz Yisroel for rain. If on the same day as the taanis, it starts to rain, so there is an interesting halacha regarding this- they turn the day into a yom tov and say Hallel.
After King Solomon forgives a bee for stinging him, it returns the favor by identifying the one real flower among a roomful of artificial ones—one of the riddles set the great king by the queen of Sheba. As Renberg explains in an excellent note, this story has Talmudic roots but is based on ``The Bee'' by Jewish poet Hayyim Nahman Bialik (``since this account doesn't appear in the Talmud, scholars are unclear whether Bialik based it on some other ancient folklore or whether he invented it'
My kids have watched a video of it (I think it’s from Rabbi B on YouTube) but after looking it up now it seems that it’s a legend and not based off anything in Tanach.
Below is copied from a page I found while google searching.
After King Solomon forgives a bee for stinging him, it returns the favor by identifying the one real flower among a roomful of artificial ones—one of the riddles set the great king by the queen of Sheba. As Renberg explains in an excellent note, this story has Talmudic roots but is based on ``The Bee'' by Jewish poet Hayyim Nahman Bialik (``since this account doesn't appear in the Talmud, scholars are unclear whether Bialik based it on some other ancient folklore or whether he invented it'
Thanks, I came across similar results when looking it up... was just wondering if anyone knew of a medrash or something that mentions it, but I guess not!
This happened today:
My seven year old son was in the car with me, and he started making a bracha out loud.
He said, "baruch Ata Hashem ELokeinu Melech haolam..." and then he stopped, seemingly stuck.
So I said "borei nefashos?"
He shook his head.
I said- "what are you making a bracha on?"
He said "I can't tell you."
I thought for a second and I understood. I helped him finish the bracha.
This happened today:
My seven year old son was in the car with me, and he started making a bracha out loud.
He said, "baruch Ata Hashem ELokeinu Melech haolam..." and then he stopped, seemingly stuck.
So I said "borei nefashos?"
He shook his head.
I said- "what are you making a bracha on?"
He said "I can't tell you."
I thought for a second and I understood. I helped him finish the bracha.
Why? Are we not allowed to tell people when we see a rainbow? I didn't know that.
I thought he'd sneaked a cookie from the kitchen and didn't want you to know that he'd eaten it. But then he'd have said the bracha a little quieter I guess.