Twin Children and the Mystery of Perfection Within Imperfection
Twin Children and the Mystery of Perfection Within Imperfection

of Ulpan-Or, the International Center
for Hebrew and Israeli Culture Studies.
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The Mystery of Perfection within Imperfection
How a broken moment becomes the birthplace of redemption
Among all the dramatic narratives in Torah Portion Vayeshev, few are as surprising — and deeply redemptive — as the story
of Tamar and Yehudah.
In the same Torah portion where Yosef descends into darkness, another hidden ascent quietly begins.

But beneath the surface, the Torah hints at something astonishing:
The “perfect” pregnancy of Rivkah produces a “deficient” pair of twins — one righteous, one wicked — while Tamar’s “deficient” pregnancy (only seven months, say the sages) produces two fully righteous souls, the lineage of King David and Moshiach.
The Paradox
With Tamar, the opposite occurs: her pregnancy is unfulfilled, yet te’omim is written in its full spelling.
וַיְהִי בְּעֵת לִדְתָּהּ, וְהִנֵּה תְאוֹמִים בְּבִטְנָהּ.
Perfection produced imperfection; imperfection produced perfection.
Our sages explain:
Tamar’s courage — refusing to give up on her covenantal destiny — transforms a broken situation into the birthplace of redemption.
This is one of the Torah’s great messages:
A Chassidic Story — The Tear That Opened Heaven
The Maggid of Mezritch once told a student who felt unworthy:

The Maggid explained that G-d created two kinds of spiritual “offerings”:
The light of those who were born righteous.
And the light of those who struggle, fall, rise again, and choose holiness:
“Both lights,” he said, “are needed for redemption.”

The names of Tamar’s sons hold the secret of this Torah portion:
פֶּרֶץ — Peretz
This captures the spiritual idea of turning chaos into forward movement.
זֶרַח — Zerach
A Thought for Today — Israel, the Jewish World, and the Ongoing Breakthrough
- Families hosting displaced communities.
- Young Jews abroad feeling a renewed pull toward identity Israelis stepping into leadership roles they never imagined
- A global Jewish reawakening, despite (and because of) crisis

In this moving rendition, Sagee reflects on the heartbreaking reality of Kibbutz Nir Oz, while being accompanied on stage by the beloved Israeli artist Idan Raichel
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nysHJfiB8t8&list=RDnysHJfiB8t8&start_radio=1
Below is the English translation of the lyrics:
Where have the children of life gone?

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