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Latest Windows
Windows
G. Shulman
Windows
Eliana Cline
Windows
Miriam Katz
Windows
Shira Isenberg
Windows
Sara Bonchek
FamilyTable Feature
“L ook,” I say to my seven-year-old son. “There’s a rooster.” We’re in Ashdod for Shabbos, celebrating my nephew’s bar mitzvah, staying on a yeshivah campus. It’s just after Krias HaTorah and we’re sitting outside the caravan-cum-shul, basking in the gentle warmth of the sun. The sweet sound of the bar mitzvah boy’s clear and
Danielle Renov
FamilyTable Feature
I served this soup to my guests last Succos, and it was a huge hit! It does require some advance prep work
Naomi Nachman
Fire Fighters
A small flicker, a smoldering ember. If left unchecked, it can become a raging inferno, consuming everything in its path. Unless someone stands tall and douses the flames. Four tales of courage
Fire Fighters
A flame left unchecked can become a raging inferno, consuming everything in its path. Unless someone stands tall and douses the flames. Four tales of courage
Devorah Grant
A Healthier You
Some different types of stomach pain and how you might be able to recognize, treat, or prevent them
Chaya Rosen
A Healthier You
When the force of a blow or fall is strong enough, the brain bangs against the skull, and this can cause injury to the brain
Chaya Rosen
By the Letter
“L ook,” I say to my seven-year-old son. “There’s a rooster.” We’re in Ashdod for Shabbos, celebrating my nephew’s bar mitzvah, staying on a yeshivah campus. It’s just after Krias HaTorah and we’re sitting outside the caravan-cum-shul, basking in the gentle warmth of the sun. The sweet sound of the bar mitzvah boy’s clear and
Mindel Kassorla and Mindel Kassorla and Cindy Landesman
By the Letter
Life is a cycle — and a spiral that pushes us higher
Cindy Landesman and Mindel Kassorla
Speechless Moments
She was stopped by her mother’s voice saying, “Raizele, no. There will be better times”
Adina Lover
Speechless Moments
The night of the speech, I still couldn’t talk. But I couldn’t cancel, either
Adina Lover
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The scarf is tied tightly around my eyes. I grope and stumble in the dark, looking for my Ima. Eventually, I catch hold of a figure. I rip the scarf from my face. But it is never Ima. It’s always one of her three faces.

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We made our own decisions, and we wrote our own exit. Both aspects were painful

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