This wall painting represents the transport of the statue of the provincial governor Djehuty-hotep (the one who honors the god Thoth"), big chief of the Hare nome. His father was Kay, hereditary prince of the city of the pyramid of Sesostris II, senior priest of the city.
He lived around 1900 B.C. under the reign of three pharaohs of the Middle Kingdom: Amenemhat II, Sesostris II and Sesostris III. This fresco was in his tomb at El Berseh in Middle Egypt.
The civil titles of Djehuty-hotep were: Crown Prince, Treasurer of the King of Lower Egypt, unique friend of the king, Big Chief of Hase nome, Door for all foreign countries (permitting the entry and leaving of the country), Head of senior offices of the Controller in the palace. And his religious titles were : High Priests, Superior of the Five in the temple of Thoth, regulator of the two thrones, Superior of the temples of the Mysteries, Who has power over the gods (in the temples).
All these honors evoke the character of Joseph son of Jacob become great dignitary of the kingdom of Egypt (Genesis 41 :40-44) by marrying the daughter of the high priest of the city of One (probably Wnw, Hermopolis Magna for Greeks, the town of Djehuty-hotep). It is known that at that time the hereditary charges could be passed by the daughters, so a son-in-law could inherit the title and duties of his father-in-law. By this fact by his marriage with the daughter of a high priest of Thoth at the city of Wn Joseph aka Thoth-hotep could inherit the titles of the father of his wife and became the most powerful of the ministers of pharaoh.
Thoth the great ibis god was associated with a minor deity, Iâh the Moon who was of Asiatic origin. But in Egypt he was a masculine character with an agressive mood. God Iâh acquired a great importance at the end of the 17th dynasty (Hyksos period) when the Theban rulers took him as their dynastic god, later replaced by Thoth himself by the kings of the 18th dynasty (New Kingdom).
The question is : Could god Iâh be the same god as Yoh=Yahwe the unique god of Hebrews = Ibrim or Ivrim, the inhabitants of Avaris*, the Hyksos' capital ?
*Avaris was the greek form of the egyptian name of the city Hat-waret meaning the capital of the region