Can we do תפילות prayers for: 
Rabbi Yitzchok Adlerstein and Torah.org
That also through them The האור Light,  רפואה The Healing  and The ואהבה Love of ישועת  יהוה Yeshuath YHWH may come back to הארץ The  Land of Israel?
 
             
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            |  | The Timeless Rav Hirsch |                 |  | by Rabbi Yitzchok Adlerstein |                  |  | Print Version |  |  |  | 
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             |  |               |  |               |  |               |  |                Parshas Vayigash      
          Life Imitates History1   
 | I will provide for you there –  for there will be five more years of famine – so you do not become  destitute: you, your household, and all that is yours. 
 Yosef had already explained in quite some detail what the future  would bring. He had told them that the famine was only beginning. Five  hard years of further famine were predicted to be ahead of them.  Furthermore, the Torah lavished several pesukim on Yosef’s attempt to  shake his brothers loose of their shame and guilt. He pointed to all the  good that ironically resulted from his sale. He went so far as to say  that the consequences were so profound, that they should see themselves  as instruments of the Divine Will, rather than brood over the guilt of  their fratricidal decision.
 
 What more remained to be said? After all the explanation that came  earlier, why does Yosef in this pasuk repeat what he has already related  to them?
 
 Yosef seized an opportunity to point out the ways of Divine  Providence. His story illustrated like no other how Hashem’s Will is  accomplished. Events and details that seem unrelated, come together to  produce whatever it is that He wishes to come about. Most of the time,  Man cannot see how the different strands of an unfolding story are  present or related. He remains blind and clueless to the intricate story  that is woven in front of him. Looking back at the events of the last  decades, Yosef points to the intertwining of so many events that  eventually bring about the desired result – protecting and sustaining  Yaakov’s fledgling family. The Torah wishes to make this episode an  object lesson to us of the manner in which Hashem’s Will works through  history.
 
 Shlomo said, “Hashem creates everything; He employs the fool, and  employs the transgressors.”[2] Humans plan on utilizing the best tools  and best personnel for the job. Hashem knows no such limitations. He can  and does make use of the most unlikely assistants – the fools, and even  those who flout His will. He deftly makes use of unwitting helpers, who  play a role in accomplishing His purposes.
 
 As Chazal say, by way of two small measures of silk the fearful  prophecies of the bris bein ha-besarim came to be. A chain of events led  from that bit of extra ornamentation that Yaakov added to Yosef’s  garment. That chain ended with the enslavement of the Jewish people.  Many circumstances in Yosef’s life seemed tragic and senseless when they  happened, but turned out to make crucial contribution to his role in  life. Such was true on a larger scale with respect to Yosef’s family and  their role in going from small group to a proto-nation to a large  nation. In truth, the chain did not end there, but repeats itself in  more recent times.
 
 In retrospect, staying in Canaan was not an option. Had they  developed and thrived there, it would have been inevitable that they  would in time have to move away from a central location, and disperse  throughout the land. Our early peoplehood, however, required incubation  away from any foreign influences. Staying in Canaan would have led to  diluting and adulterating their national ethos. Hashem’s Providence  instead sent them to an Egypt that shunned outsiders, and would  therefore reject the Jews as their equals. Yaakov’s descendents could  develop with a strong, separate, identity.
 
 We would experience the same for hundreds of years during the Middle  Ages. The fanatic bigotry of the day would isolate us in ghettos. This  was not pleasant – but in retrospect, has to be seen as an effective way  of keeping us apart from the primitiveness of the cultural surround of  the times. In closed circles, we were able to develop strong senses of  family and community, while the world around had little to contribute.
 
 Under Yosef’s guidance, the Egyptians weathered the storm of severe  famine. Having no more funds with which to buy food, the Egyptians  traded their lands for their survival. To consolidate the earnings of  his master, Yosef moved all parts of the population to new areas,  emphasizing Paroh’s ownership of the land. Here, too, Providence was at  work. The Jews could not be rejected merely for lacking rootedness in  the land; the contemporary Egyptians were strangers in the land as well!  In the European experience, while Jews were disdained as “different,”  that difference was at least tempered by the fact that most of the  European landscape was occupied by relatively recent arrivals when the  Jews first came. Their new hosts were themselves people who had migrated  relatively recently to their new homes. Jews would ultimately be  taunted with the words, “Jews get out! Jews to Palestine;” they would be  able to point back to their accusers. “Why is there no trace of your  ancestors in   the land we stand upon?”
 
 Most soberingly, we look back at Yosef’s odyssey and note that his  pain and suffering came about through jealousy and groundless hatred.  Here, too, later history was prepared for by earlier events. Our second  beis hamikdosh was destroyed because of the same jealousy and hatred. In  Egypt, the Jews would learn the hard way that they could not survive  without developing the gifts of brotherhood and equality.
 
 We still wait to acquire the same to rid ourselves of our present Galus.
 
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 1. Based on the Hirsch Chumash, Bereishis 45:112. Mishlei 26:10, following Rashi and the first
 approach of Ibn Ezra
   
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