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Latest LifeLines
LifeLines
C. Saphir
LifeLines
C. Saphir
LifeLines
C. Saphir
LifeLines
C. Saphir
LifeLines
C. Saphir
Step 1
Today they’re household names, but it started with a leap of faith: “I saw my chance and the Hashgachah. I reached out and asked if I could design the entire building
Susan Strauss
Step 1
Today they’re household names, but it started with a leap of faith: “I wanted to be an artist, but not a starving one. Could I pursue my creative dreams, while fulfilling my responsibilities to my family?"
Rabbi Yonah Weinrib
Viral Growth
Two years later, those Covid-inspired kabbalos and resolutions are still keeping us going. Eight personal accounts
Esty Heller
Viral Growth
Two years later, those Covid-inspired kabbalos and resolutions are still keeping us going. Eight personal accounts
Eytan Kobre
My Corona Time Capsule
Endless days blurred into months of upheaval. We strove to forge forward. Twenty-one readers reveal the single object that defined the tenor of these times
Family First Contributors
Bakeaways
I figured I’d try to pack all my favorite flavors of a classic cheesecake slice into a bite-size portion
Faigy Grossmann
Bakeaways
While corn muffins have similar ingredients, they’re sweeter than corn bread
Faigy Grossmann
Make Her Day: Pesach 5782
Together with some generous sponsors, you helped to: Make Her Day; Pesach 5782
Ariella Schiller
More LifeLines
LifeLines

M y father, Melvin S. Landow z”l, grew up impoverished, in a tenement in Brooklyn’s Coney Island neighborhood. From the age of nine, he worked to help support his family, offering his services first as a shoeshine boy, then delivering newspapers, then as a “barker” at the famed Coney Island amusement park. (His trademark “bark”

By C. Saphir

LifeLines

Working in an environment where I was constantly exposed to death and the fragility of life, I began to understand that we are all in G-d’s hands

By C. Saphir

LifeLines

She wasn’t expected to survive her first day, and certainly not her first week, but to the surprise of the doctors, she did. We named her Chaya

By C. Saphir

LifeLines

“What zechus did my mother have? Well, the only zechus of hers that I can think of is that she wasn’t cremated”

By C. Saphir

LifeLines

With little family support in Israel, we found ourselves at loggerheads much of the time, and our relationship was under continual strain

By C. Saphir

LifeLines

Then, one Friday, my father called to tell me that my mother needed someone to spend Shabbos with her in the hospital

By C. Saphir