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Latest Magazine Feature
Magazine Feature
Mishpacha Staff
Magazine Feature
Yisroel Besser
Magazine Feature
Aryeh Ehrlich
Magazine Feature
Eytan Kobre
Profiles
Esther Teichtal
Ask the Expert
A blind, penniless Holocaust survivor stumbles into England at the end of the war, half his family gone and his prospects nil. But what begins as a tragedy ends in triumph. Hershel Herskovic decided he’d continue living.   S ix hundred boys in striped prison clothing and clumsy wooden clogs are roughly shepherded toward their
Leah Reisman
Build your best
A blind, penniless Holocaust survivor stumbles into England at the end of the war, half his family gone and his prospects nil. But what begins as a tragedy ends in triumph. Hershel Herskovic decided he’d continue living.   S ix hundred boys in striped prison clothing and clumsy wooden clogs are roughly shepherded toward their
Sarah Faygie Berkowitz
Build your best
Read these tips, and prepare to up your cutlet game.
Sarah Faygie Berkowitz
FYI
Even though it’s not a medical condition, it’s not easy to be a teenager with hair getting thinner and thinner
Shoshana Itzkowitz
FYI
An eating disorder is a mental illness where a person refuses to eat or eats as minimally as they can
Shoshana Itzkowitz
Vacancies
The Vacancies writers fill in the holes behind the scenes
Family First Contributors
Vacancies
Those three women and their perfect stores, perfect lives, and a dance studio, it’s perfect, I can’t believe we didn’t think of it before!
Rochel Samet
A Face and A Place
Rebbe Gedalya Moshe was buried in one of the tiny graveyards in a corner of the city. Who knew of it’s power?
Hodayah Cohen
More Magazine Feature
Magazine Feature

A year after Professor David Kazhdan was knocked off the road by a hit-and-run semitrailer, he’s on his feet again, despite the dismal prognosis of the medical team who worked furiously to stabilize him. Launching a headstrong battle to get his life back, the mathematical genius learned about the resilience of the human spirit.

By Shlomi Gil

On Topic

Rav Reuven Leuchter shares a way of conceptualizing teshuvah and applying it to our daily lives

By Binyamin Rose

Profiles

“I’m the lawyer, the agent, serving as an advocate between you and your Father in Heaven,” Rav Dovid Chaim Stern tells those who seek his counsel. The work he demands isn’t easy, but Rav Stern, the mekubal of Bnei Brak, is ready to pour out his tefillos and bestow his brachos in exchange for spiritual “deals” he makes with his chassidim around the world.

By Israel Feler

On Topic

Hear the term “domestic violence” and you immediately conjure up an image of a terrified woman cowering in fear. But in reality, men are the victims as often as they’re the perpetrators. They’re just too ashamed to admit it.

By Barbara Bensoussan

Profiles

When Sender Kaszirer was looking for a position in chinuch, he made a quick calculation: He would go where he was needed, not where others expected him to go. But Lakewood wasn’t ready for a high school with no dress code, where talmidim wear colored shirts or jeans, so he established the mesivta in nearby Eatontown, with an approach tailor-made to the individual student regardless of history or past struggles. “Somehow, as parents we give children the benefit of the doubt. And as mechanchim, we have the same responsibility”

By Yisroel Besser

Profiles

Back in Israel of the 1950s — when Rudolph Kasztner took the witness stand to defend himself against allegations of collusion with Adolf Eichmann in facilitating the mass murder of Hungary’s Jews — the heroes, the villains, and collaborators all seemed so obvious. But 70 years after his rescue transport pulled out of Budapest carrying 1,684 Jews to freedom, the only thing that’s obvious is that — whoever he was or wasn’t — what once seemed so black and white has with time morphed into many shades of gray.

By Rachel Ginsberg