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Parashat Vayelech

Deuteronomy 31:1-31:30

Moshe prepares to hand leadership to Joshua, ensuring continuity beyond his own life. The Torah is entrusted to the people, to be read, taught, and remembered. The parashah reflects on transition, legacy, and trust in God’s guidance.

  • When Torah Becomes a Song

    In Parashat Vayelech

    In Vayelech, God tells Moshe not only to teach Torah—but to write a song. Why a song at the edge of exile and failure? Because melody reaches where prose cannot. From the Levitical choir to the sing-song of the beit midrash, song resists staleness, awakens teshuvah, and turns text into encounter—until we no longer just read Torah; we become its music.

  • Now is the time to write the Song of our lives

    In Parashat HaShavua and Parashat Vayelech

    "Now, write this Song for Yourselves and Teach It". A song however is different from a mere inheritance. It is the result of being overwhelmed by something which touches the deepest level of one's soul. It is the speechlessness of the lips which carry the song to the ineffable. An authentic song is therefore a protest against words getting frozen.