Sarah's Light Turns Pharaoh's Palace Inside Out

Curated by Maggid·Edited by Arthur Sabintsev·

Sarah was hidden in a box because Abraham knew Egypt would not look away from her.

In Gertrude Landa's 1919 public-domain retelling, Abraham reaches the Egyptian border with Sarah concealed among his goods. The customs officers suspect treasure. Barley becomes wheat. Wheat becomes spices. Spices become gold. Abraham keeps offering to pay the higher tax, but the officials decide the box must be opened.

When Sarah steps into the light, the room changes. The officers send her to Pharaoh. Abraham is loaded with gifts, but wealth cannot soften the terror of seeing his wife taken into the palace.

Sarah sees what Pharaoh cannot see: a heavenly figure standing beside her with a staff. Every time Pharaoh tries to come near, the unseen protector strikes. Then the palace itself turns against him. Doors lead nowhere. Stairs seem to move. Corners strike him in the dark. By dawn, Pharaoh is covered with plague.

He sends Sarah back and begs Abraham to heal him. Abraham leaves with her and warns Pharaoh that any future king who persecutes Abraham's children will learn the same lesson. A palace is not strong when God has decided to protect the vulnerable person inside it.

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