Yehuda has transformed from a narcissistic young man into someone who considers others' needs before his own. When his brother Binyamin is accused of theft in Egypt, Yehuda rejects abandoning Binyamin or joining him in slavery. Instead, he offers himself in Binyamin's place, showing he has learned lessons of self-sacrifice, empathy, and responsibility from his daughter-in-law Tamar. Yehuda now displays leadership that places others' needs above his own, exemplifying true Jewish leadership of saving God's people through self-sacrifice.