ParshaPix

PARSHA-PIX - Parshat Vayeitzei


ParshaPix

The Kipa is really first, but we'll save it for last.
The compass is for U'FARATZTA, and you shall spread out to the west and the east and the north and the south.
At the bottom is a rock, representing the rock(s) that Yaakov put near his head, the rock that covered the well for watering the sheep, the rocks that Yaakov and Lavan used to seal their deal. If you use the ParshaPix to go over the sedra with children (or guests), ask them for Rocks in the Sedra. (Try it with Kisses in the Sedra too. There are some easily remembered and others that we tend to overlook.)
Bottom-middle is the ladder with its feet on the ground and its head reaching to the heavens.
.1 (or as they say here 0.1) is the tenth, MA'ASER that Yaakov vowed to give to HaShem, so to speak.
The cradles are for the children born in the sedra. The column of ten is for the first 10 sons of Yaakov. The one turned the other way is for Deena, and the one in the boy's direction, but not in the column is for Yosef. Binyamin is not there yet.
The plant is a mandrake, DUDA'IM, as in the sedra.
The sticks and the striped, spotted, and plain sheep are for the whole business with Yaakov's wages.
How do we know that Yaakov wore a kipa? It says Vayeitzei Yaakov, would Yaakov go without a kipa?!

TTriddles
These were last week's (TO'L'DOT) TTriddles:
[1] 83 kilometers (51.6 miles)
[2] Appropriate to review this sedra with the commentary of the Beit Yosef's uncle.
[3] Happy "Say Hey"... - THIS IS NOT A TTriddle
[3] 10.68 below average. Tied with 12 others. The only 4-4-4.
[4] Do this TTriddle without the question
[5] Greenberg homonyms - not so Sasson's
[6] Some are still reviewing the sedra on Motza"Sh
[7] The two of Yom Kippur and of... what?

Solution set...
[1] After the Torah tells us that Yitzchak dug yet another well, and about this one there was no dispute, and that he called this third one REHOVOT, the Torah tells us that Yitzchak went from there to BE'ER SHEVA. The distance from Rehovot to Be'er Sheva is 83 kilometers (which is 51.6 miles).
[2] The Beit Yosef, a.k.a. the M'CHABEIR (author, of Shulchan Aruch), a.k.a. the Kesef Mishna, a.k.a. Rabbi Yosef Karo, was orphaned from his fatyher at a young age. He was raised by his uncle, Rabbi Yitzchak Karo, whose commentary on Chumash, in the form of questions and answers, is called TO'L'DOT YITZCHAK. An appropriate book to learn from on Shabbat Parshat To'l'dot, don't you think?
[3] This one was not a TTriddle. Nonetheless, MMBklyn submitted a solution for it. Say Hey is/was the nickname of Willie Mays, whose jersey number was 24. Of course, I could have referred to the gifts of the Kehuna or the books of Tanach, but... 
[3] The average length of a pasuk in the Torah is 13.68 words. The shortest p'sukim are three words long. There are 13 of these small p'sukim, one of which was the answer to the TTriddle - VAYEISHEV YITZCHAK B'G'RAR. It is 10.68 words below average, has 12 fellow 3-word p'sukim, and is the only one of the 13 three-word p'sukim to have each of its words consist of 4 letters.
[4] The answer to this TTriddle was the small KUF in KATZTI. A good wording for a TTriddle wasn't coming to me, nor was it necessary, since it is an obvious choice for a TTriddle solution.
[5] Greenberg in this TTriddle is an Ashkenazi that would pronounce ALEF-TAV-HEI and AYIN-TAV-HEI the same way, making ATA, ATA as in B'reishit 26:29 - ATAT ATA B'RUCH HASHEM, now you are the one blessed by G-d. Sasson, the S'faradi, however, would not see them as a homonym pair, since they are not really pronounced identically. 
[6] Those who say V'YITEIN L'CHA on Motza'ei Shabbat would be quoting from the parsha.
[7] The two goats of Yom Kippur and the two goats that Rivka asked Yaakov to fetch for Yitzchak. And Yitzchak needs two goats in a meal? asks Rashi. Rather they were for the Pesach Seder - one as Korban Pesach and one as the main dish. This Rashi gets from Pirkei D'Rabbi Eliezer.

This week's TTriddles
[1] Rachel Imeinu and a former chief rabbi
[2] Midnight with Ben & Jerry
[3] Then it was OG. Who is it this time?
[4] Reuven & Ruth, Shimshon & Shmuel, Beit Shemesh & Shavuot


David Ben Gurion, at the 21st Zionist Congress, 1937


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