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Jr. Feature
Everyday items that are disappearing... or already gone

By Malka Winner

True Colors
As we turned a corner, I went flying off the buggy, landing facedown on the rough asphalt, right in the buggy’s path

By Chaya Rosen

Down to a Science
I stared at my brother and realized that I had just watched him perform an act of sternutation!

By Yael Zoldan

Jolly Solly
“Jolly Solly, why do you have scaffolding up?” asked Fishel

By R. Atkins

Jr. Fiction
There were ten children in her family and not enough space, and although no one in their class ever said anything about all that, it was clear what they thought

By Deborah Guttentag

Story Time
“It’s too much to ask me to feel privileged that our lives are constantly being interrupted by people looking for handouts, Father!”

By Y. Bromberg

Building Dreams
“Is that all everyone knows me as? The granddaughter whose father was killed? The orphan?”

By Malka Grunhaus

Teen Diary Serial
I liked Vered; I liked how it sounded and I liked that it meant “rose” in Hebrew, like my real name

By Chaya Rosen

The Lens
Rabbi Moshe Weinberger davens at the kever of the Arizal

By Shmuel Botnick and Yosef Herz

On Site
A Long Island town's Nazi past is finally exposed

By Chaya Baumwolspiner

Second Thoughts
What is it about Jews that puts us in the forefront — for good or for ill — of so many cutting-edge areas of life?

By Rabbi Emanuel Feldman

Open Mic
NIMBY, or “Not in My Backyard.” It sums up the attitude of people who protest when those with disabilities move into their communities

By Stephen Glicksman PhD

Family First Inbox
“Dovid Hamelech first validates the pain, acknowledges the suffering (whether major or trivial), and only then moves on to focusing on the merit suffering has” 

By Family First Readers