Cover image of show Why Did Rashi Say That?

Why Did Rashi Say That?

Podcast by Rabbi Ari Klapper

English

History & religion

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About Why Did Rashi Say That?

Why does Rashi explain the "obvious"? There's always something deeper. Every episode, Rabbi Ari Klapper takes one Rashi from the parsha and asks: Why did he need to say that? What gap was he filling? How does this commentary crack open our lives today? Not a parsha summary. A surgical strike on one idea—the Torah's hidden blueprint for relationships, character, and building you up. Just Rashi, depth, and tools to live differently. Rabbi Ari Klapper | Eli Podcast Productions | RealJudaism.org

All episodes

27 episodes

episode Shavuos- Bring the Torah Home artwork

Shavuos- Bring the Torah Home

Why is the inauguration of the Mishkan called Hashem's greatest joy — even above the giving of the Torah? What does it mean that wedding language appears twice in the Torah, once at Sinai and once at the Mishkan, as if the two events complete a single sentence? And if the whole point of creation was Hashem dwelling in this world — where does that leave us right now? Rabbi Klapper uncovers a thread running from the Rambam through the Mishnah in Maseches Taanis that reframes everything we thought we knew about Shavuos. Yes, the giving of the Torah was the wedding — Yom Chasunaso. But the Mishnah reserves a separate category for Yom Simchas Libo, the day of deepest joy: the moment the Mishkan was completed and the Shekhinah actually descended into this world. Rashi's commentary on the Nasi Yissachar's korban traces the entire sweep of history forward to that moment — Adam, Noach, the seventy nations, the Avos, Moshe, all of them hinted at in a single korban — because every generation was one step in the same long courtship. Har Sinai was not the destination. It was the commitment. The Mishkan was when Hashem finally came home. Discover that Sinai was the wedding, but the Mishkan was when Hashem moved in — and those are two very different things. Learn that bringing Torah into your home isn't extra credit; it's the architecture that invites the Shekhinah in. Uncover what Chazal knew and we keep forgetting: the presence of Hashem in a home isn't a miracle waiting to happen — it's a choice you can make tonight. Hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper and produced by Eli Podcast Productions, this episode is part of the Why Did Rashi Say That series, available on RealJudaism.org. Don't forget to subscribe and share to stay connected with our weekly Torah insights!

19 May 2026 - 11 min
episode Parshas Bamidbar- The Cure for Jealousy artwork

Parshas Bamidbar- The Cure for Jealousy

Why does every tribe need its own flag if every tribe follows the exact same Torah? What does it mean that the nations of the world saw those flags and immediately wanted their own? And why was Korach's rebellion the one crack in a people that should have been completely immune to jealousy? Rabbi Klapper uncovers a Midrash that reframes the entire parsha in a single move. When Bnai Yisrael stood at Har Sinai and the heavens opened, they didn't just hear the Torah — they saw the angels, organized in legions, each group gathered under its own flag. And they understood something: every angel, from Gavriel and Michoel down to the countless nameless ones, knew their specific tachlis. The flag wasn't nationalism. It was a declaration — I know my mission, and I am proud of it. When Bnai Yisrael brought that structure into the desert, each shevet rallying around its own derech within the Torah, they built something the nations couldn't manufacture: a people with no structural reason for jealousy. Korach almost broke it. But almost is the whole point. Discover that jealousy dissolves the moment you know what you're actually here for. Learn that your specific derech isn't a consolation prize for not being someone else — it's the mission only you were built to carry. Uncover the quiet truth: satisfaction doesn't come from having everything; it comes from doing the thing that has your name on it. Hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper and produced by Eli Podcast Productions, this episode is part of the Why Did Rashi Say That series, available on RealJudaism.org. Don't forget to subscribe and share to stay connected with our weekly Torah insights!

12 May 2026 - 9 min
episode Parshas Behar-Bechukosai- The Chain of Life artwork

Parshas Behar-Bechukosai- The Chain of Life

How does a person go from simply easing up on learning to not believing in Hashem at all? Why does Rashi trace spiritual collapse not to dramatic rebellion but to something as quiet as relaxing your effort? And what does it mean that the unraveling can span generations — by the time anyone notices, it's already someone else's crisis? Rashi reveals that the opening words of Bechukosai — im bechukosai telechu — don't mean following the rules. They mean toiling in Torah, actively wrestling with it. And from there Rashi maps a chain almost unbearable to trace: not being amel leads to not fulfilling mitzvos, which leads to hating them, which leads to causing others to abandon them, which ends — mamish — at a kofer b'ikur, someone who stops believing entirely. Rabbi Klapper draws out the devastating logic: this isn't someone who gets angry and walks away. It's someone on a downward escalator who never notices which way it's moving. The Haskalah is the proof — people who thought they were modernizing Judaism watched their grandchildren marry out, because once you loosen your grip on Torah itself, the ground keeps moving beneath you. Discover that Rashi's chain runs in both directions — the logic of collapse is equally the logic of growth. Learn that the standard isn't scholarship; it's honest effort, because genuine effort is what keeps you moving against the current. Uncover what's actually at stake in your Torah today — you're not just living your own life, you're building the foundation the people after you will stand on. Hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper and produced by Eli Podcast Productions, this episode is part of the Why Did Rashi Say That series, available on RealJudaism.org. Don't forget to subscribe and share to stay connected with our weekly Torah insights!

6 May 2026 - 11 min
episode Parshas Emor- Its in Your Hands artwork

Parshas Emor- Its in Your Hands

What do you do with a man who never had a chance? Why does Rashi point the finger directly at someone whose father was murdered before he was born, whose tribe threw him out, and who had no corner of the world to call his own? And what does a blasphemer's worst moment have to do with the choices sitting right in front of you today? Rashi reveals that the megadef wasn't simply a criminal — he was a man built out of compounding wreckage. His father, an Egyptian, was killed by Moshe Rabbeinu sixty years earlier — meaning this man grew up without a father his entire life. His mother was a Jewish woman from Shevet Don who had been taken advantage of. When he finally tries to plant himself somewhere, to belong, he walks into Shevet Don because his mother came from there — and Moshe himself rules him out. Lineage follows the father. He has no father. Rejected, stateless, untethered — and then he curses Hashem. Rabbi Klapper traces how Rashi's comment on pasuk yud dalet, on the words es yadeihem, — the witnesses laying hands on his head and saying your blood is on your hands — isn't cruelty. It's the most radical statement of human dignity in the parsha: you were never merely the sum of what was done to you. Discover that the Torah's refusal to excuse him is actually the deepest form of respect — it insists he was capable of more. Learn that free choice doesn't disappear when circumstances get brutal; it's the one thing that cannot be stripped away. Uncover the uncomfortable truth that seeking help, turning around, choosing differently — that decision is always, only, yours. Hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper and produced by Eli Podcast Productions, this episode is part of the Why Did Rashi Say That series, available on RealJudaism.org. Don't forget to subscribe and share to stay connected with our weekly Torah insights!

28 Apr 2026 - 8 min
episode Parshas Acharei-Kedosim- How Do I Love My Friend Like Myself(1) artwork

Parshas Acharei-Kedosim- How Do I Love My Friend Like Myself(1)

Is V'ahavta L'reiacha Kamocha really telling you to feel genuine love for every single person you've ever met? Is it normal — or even possible — to love a stranger the same way you love your children? And if most people can't actually do that, are they violating one of the most fundamental mitzvos in the entire Torah every single day? Rabbi Klapper unpacks the layers hiding inside this famous pasuk. The most basic level — the floor, not the ceiling — is simply: don't hurt someone else the way you wouldn't want to be hurt. That's Hillel's one-foot Torah. But the Maharal reveals something deeper: the word Ahava itself means l'chaber — to connect. Which means the feeling of love doesn't have to come first. Do something for someone, and the love follows. Send the Mishloach Manos even when you don't feel close. Give the gift. Make the gesture. The connection builds from the action, not the other way around. And then the Rambam drops something unexpected: the language he uses to describe a husband's obligation to his wife is almost identical to the language of V'ahavta L'reiacha Kamocha — because your spouse is where this mitzvah finds its fullest expression. Discover why the mitzvah of loving your fellow Jew has levels — and which one you're actually responsible for right now. Learn why doing good for someone creates love rather than the reverse. Uncover why HaKadosh Baruch Hu put the deepest version of this mitzvah inside your own home. Hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper and produced by Eli Podcast Productions, this episode is part of the Why Did Rashi Say That series, available on RealJudaism.org. Don't forget to subscribe and share to stay connected with our weekly Torah insights!

22 Apr 2026 - 10 min
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