The wife of Prophet Yaqub (Jacob) and the mother of Prophet Yusuf (Joseph) suffers from unbearable labor pains and asks to see Yusuf before her death. Her sister Leah conveys her request to Yaqub and asks him to pray for her recovery.
Rahil dies as she goes into labor, and Prophet Yaqub names the baby Binyamin (Benjamin). The villagers show concern and sympathy for Prophet Yaqub due to the death of his wife and the birth of his son Binyamin, and they notice the change in the behavior of Yusuf’s brothers (Simeon and others).
Yusuf's brothers' jealousy continues. Dayan asks Prophet Yaqub why he cares more about Yusuf than the rest of his brothers, and he answers that it is because of his young age and the vision he has told him.
Simeon and the brothers decide to kill Yusuf, and Yahuda (Judah) tries to keep the idea of killing away from them, so he suggests throwing Yusuf into the well instead of killing him. The brothers agree to this plan and go to their father, Yaqub, to allow them to take Yusuf with them.
Simeon, Yusuf, and the rest of their brothers go to graze as planned, and when they reach the well, they throw Yusuf into it, take his shirt, and slaughter a small sheep to prove to their father that the wolf ate Yusuf.
Simeon and his brothers arrive home and tell Prophet Yaqub that the wolf ate Yusuf, bringing his shirt as evidence. However, Yaqub knows that this was planned by his brothers and that what they said is not true. As some men find Yusuf in the well, they take him to Egypt to be sold there.
Egypt's courtier and the captain of Pharaoh's guard, Potiphar, buys Prophet Yusuf from the slave market and brings him to his wife as their son. Yusuf's stature in the palace increases, thanks to the knowledge and skills of interpreting visions that God granted him.
As the women of the city ask Zuleikha to see Prophet Yusuf, Zuleikha asks Yusuf to worship God secretly so that the priests and their men do not discover him.
Zuleikha admits her admiration for Yusuf, and despite her attempts to seduce and lure him, Yusuf refuses, adhering to his religious and moral values. However, she lies to Potiphar and accuses Yusuf of trying to get close to her.
Anushka falsely accuses Yusuf in front of Potiphar of getting close to Zuleikha against her will. As Yusuf asks for the testimony of Zuleikha's family and the little child, the child testifies and acquits Yusuf of the charges against him.
As Zuleikha's admiration for Yusuf raises rumors in the city, the King of Egypt asks Potiphar to limit these rumors. Zuleikha orders her servant to prepare a feast for the women of the city and to provide a knife for every woman attending.
The women of the city attend Zuleikha's feast, and she invites Yusuf to join. As the women are amazed by Yusuf's beauty, they cut their hands with a knife without noticing. Zuleikha threatens Yusuf with imprisonment if he does not do what she orders.
The temple men decide to kill Potiphar by putting poison in his food and assigning one of the servants to do so.
Potiphar orders that Yusuf be imprisoned, and the men of the city and the priests support his decision.
As Yusuf gets imprisoned, the other prisoners recognize him, so Yusuf explains to them the truth about his imprisonment. Potiphar reproaches Zuleikha for inviting the women of the city to see Yusuf.
Prophet Yusuf helps his fellow prisoners and takes care of the sick. The king asks Potiphar for a solution to the famine sweeping the country. The temple men suspect that Akhans ordered the servants to put poison in the king's food.
The prisoners admire the morals and style of Yusuf, so they ask about God and believe that there is no deity except Him. The temple men inform Potiphar of the theft of the temple's jewelry and tools, so he reports the incident to the king.
Potiphar tells the king that he is preparing a feast for the temple's priests, during which they will search their homes for the missing jewels. As the king orders that the temple guard Bukhis get released from prison to help them, Bukhis comes out of prison believing in God.
Bukhis decides to destroy the temple's gods as Ibrahim (Abraham) did to see whether they will defend themselves. The prisoners tell Yusuf their visions and ask him to interpret them.
Prophet Yusuf calls on the prisoners to believe in God, and some do. Strife begins among the city's people after Bukhis destroys the temple's gods and calls on them to worship Allah, and some of them are convinced.
Potiphar fails to find the thief and informs the king, so the king orders the temple priests to interrogate the imprisoned cupbearer and cook. They confess that the priest Akhnas ordered that poison be put into the king's food and that the gods' jewels get stolen.
The king has a dream he cannot interpret, and the cupbearer leads him to Yusuf, who interprets the dream, and the king orders his release from prison. Yusuf asks the king to absolve him, so the king declares his innocence, releases him, and condemns the women who confessed to their actions.
Prophet Yusuf asks the king to appoint him to take charge of the land storehouses, and he agrees. The king's guard invites the temple priests to the inauguration ceremony of Yusuf as Egypt's head of government, and they complain about his decision. Potiphar dies after a long illness.
Prophet Yusuf decides to plant wheat after assuming the Ministry of Treasury in Egypt to secure food for the people. He brings the people of Egypt to help in agriculture and orders that canals be constructed to distribute the Nile River water to agricultural lands.
As Yaqub orders his sons to seek help from Egypt's head of government after his success in growing wheat and preventing famine, Yusuf recognizes them when they meet him to ask for wheat.
Yusuf orders the servant Bukhis to provide hospitality to his brothers in the palace and to return the money he paid for the wheat. One of the brothers asks Yusuf for a camel's load for the eleventh brother, but he refuses unless they bring their brother to get his share of wheat.
Yusuf's brothers obtain their father's approval to take their brother Binyamin with them. They return to Egypt, and Yusuf receives them in his palace and shows them hospitality. Upon receiving their share of wheat allocated to their brother, Yusuf reveals his identity to his brother Binyamin.
The guards search Yusuf's brothers as they leave and find a vessel from the king's palace with Binyamin. They accuse him of stealing, so Yusuf takes him. Prophet Yaqub becomes sad about this, loses his eyesight, and asks his sons to return to Egypt with money to present to Yusuf.
The sons of Yaqub return to Egypt to take Binyamin and search for Yuauf, who reveals his personality and asks them to return to their father with his shirt so that he can restore his sight and bring their family to Egypt. As Yahuda returns to Prophet Yaqub with Yusuf’s shirt, he regains his eyesight.
Prophet Yaqub arrives in Egypt and meets Prophet Yusuf, who forgives his brothers. As they ask for forgiveness from their father, he asks God to forgive them.