Rashi does not give any answer about a ger yasom in the end of rashi ELAH ZE HABAH AL HAERVA do you have one i need it soon please
Gavi Blaxberg, baltimore, MD
An answer is given by Tosfos Shantz, printed in the margin, in the name of Rabeinu Shimshon of Kutzi. Someone had relations with a married woman, so the child was a Mamzer. The son knew that as a Mamzer he will not find a wife if he stays in his home town, so he went to live in a faraway city. This man is similar to a Ger because he is a wanderer living away from home. He is also like an orphan since his real father will not admit that he is the father.
His mother is equivalent to a widow because she became forbidden to her husband as a result of the adultery. Consequently, she lives alone like a "widow" whose husband is really alive. (See Devarim 27:9, which not only mentions Ger Yasom but also mentions the widow.)
We learn from all of this that the person who committed adultery thereby created a Ger, an orphan, and a widow, all at the same time.
Our apologies for the inordinate delay in answering this question.
Kol Tuv,
Dovid Bloom