Books by Title Centre for Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies
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3 Eventually, Serah became the heroine of several different legends. She told Jacob that Joseph was still alive by singing the Serach bat Asher has a greatness for which she deserves a special mention in the Torah. She knows how to use words to save life and to give life. She uses her long lifespan to preserve those life-giving words. Sidebar. Connect with Torah MiTzion. Serach bat Asher.
46:17 and Num. 26:46) symbolizes the importance of mesorah—oral tradition, by telling it as it was, and being the conduit for information.This is a tradition we honor tonight at our seder.Serach is reported to have been among the 10 or 11 people in the Torah who never died, like Elijah.You might add a cup for Serach next to Elijah’s cup Serach bat Asher Source Sheet by Caroline Morganti Genesis 46:17 (17) Asher’s sons: Imnah, Ishvah, Ishvi, and Beriah, and their sister Serah. The elders of Israel went to Serach bat Asher and said to her, “A certain man has come…and he said, ‘Pakod pakadeti etchem (I have taken note of you).’ She said to them, “He is the man who will redeem Israel from Egypt in the future, for so I heard from my father, ‘ Peh-peh , Pakod yifkod etchem (G-d will surely take note of you.’)” We grow, love, and die in the flash of a firefly on a summer evening. But not Serah bat Asher. She lives forever. As I described in my last post, “Serah bat Asher: Immortal Secret Keeper,” Serah had lived for two thousand years by the time she leaned into Rabbi Yohannan’s window to tell him that the Red Sea looked like lighted glass. By 2020, she’s nearing 4000. Hazzan Joanna Dulkin delivers a musical D’var Torah telling the story of Serach the daughter of Asher, in preparation for Shabbat Vayeshev.
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Why […] Serah bat Asher was, in the Tanach, a daughter of Asher, the son of Jacob. She is counted among the seventy members of the patriarch's family who emigrated from Canaan to Egypt, and her name occurs in connection with the census taken by Moses in the wilderness. She is mentioned also among the descendants of Asher in I Chronicles vii.
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30. Serah bat Asher & The Gift of Wisdom Serah was the adopted daughter of Asher and the granddaughter of Jacob, the Patriarch. She was first mentioned in the Torah in the list of Jacob’s household that moved to Egypt, under the protection of Joseph (6).
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Serah bat Asher, Werewolf Hunter! The Tanach, in II Samuel, tells of Serah saving a city during the reign of King David and of her hunting werewolves!
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Kalaureia 1894: A Cultural History of the First Swedish - DiVA
Rashi notes that Serach is counted because she still is alive, the sole survivor of the generation that left Canaan for Egypt. Serach bat Asher Among all the men mentioned in lists of Israelite genealogy, Serach, the daughter of Asher, stands out as one of those few women whose cryptic mention seems designed to raise questions.
With her own city under siege, Serach bat Asher negotiates a price of one man’s death in exchange for the safety of an entire population. Serah bat Asher was, in the Tanakh, a daughter of Asher, the son of Jacob. She is one of the seventy members of the patriarch's family who emigrated from Canaan to Egypt,[1] and her name occurs in connection with the census taken by Moses in the wilderness.[2] She is mentioned also among the descendants of Asher in I Chronicles vii. 30. In rabbinic literature Serah became the embodiment of wisdom. “Serah bat Asher is an exceptional figure in aggadic tradition because she represents a nearly unique instance in which this male-oriented literature fashioned a woman in the role of leader” (Bronner, From Eve, p.42).