About Rabbi Jack Abramowitz
Rabbi Jack Abramowitz served as Director of Programs for NCSY before becoming Associate Director of the Pepa and Rabbi Joseph Karasick Department of Synagogue Services. Rabbi Abramowitz holds degrees in Jewish studies, communications and Higher Education Administration. Among his accomplishments, he authored NCSY's Torah on One Foot series of educational pamphlets and created negiah.org, the first abstinence web site for Jewish teens. Rabbi Abramowitz is the author of The Shnayim Mikra Companion on Torah, The Nach Yomi Companion volumes 1 and 2 on the books of the Prophets and the Writings, and The Tzniyus Book.

Recent Posts

Taryag: A Mitzvah a Day

Questions? Contact us at taryag@ou.org


PARSHAT DailyPARSHAT Ki Teitzei
MITZVAH COUNTER
Mitzvos to date: 564
Positives:227
Negatives:337
That can be performed today:243
Plus those that can be performed only in Israel:23

564. Let Bygones Be Bygones: The prohibition against excluding Egyptians after two generations


…you shall not reject an Egyptian… (Deuteronomy 23:8)

Similar to the case of the Edomite convert in the previous mitzvah, an Egyptian convert was only to be excluded from the general marriage pool for two generations. The third generation was not to be excluded based on the Egyptian lineage. (Again, this would not obligate any one individual to marry the descendant of an Egyptian convert, it merely prohibits refusing them on the incorrect grounds that such a marriage is forbidden.)

As with the Edomite convert, the reason for this mitzvah is so that we should not assume that the indefinite ban on Ammonites and Moabites also applies to the Egyptians, who enslaved us. The stringency regarding Ammon and Moab only applies to those two nations, not to any other, regardless of any historical oppression we may have endured at their hands.

This mitzvah applies in all times and places. It is discussed in the Talmud in the tractates of Yevamos (75a-78b) and Kiddushin (75a) and is codified in the Shulchan Aruch in Even Ha’Ezer 4. This mitzvah is #55 of the 365 negative mitzvos in the Rambam’s Sefer HaMitzvos; it is not listed in the Chofetz Chaim’s Sefer HaMitzvos HaKatzar.



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