What does it mean to love our children equally? It’s a question that many families wrestle with, especially when each parent’s and child’s personality, needs, and circumstance vary so widely.
Explore the intricate layers of Jewish history and its connections to the broader narrative of world events and identities.
A teen leader of a high school cultural club discovers how food, language and tradition can connect communities.
The transition from family to something more begins when Jacob wrestles — physically and spiritually — and emerges ...
“I didn’t bring my kid to a Chanukah party to have him hear about Santa Claus,” exclaimed one parent, joining several others ...
Urfa is known as the City of Prophets. Revered in Judaism, Christianity and Islam, it is associated with figures including Ibrahim, Job, Jethro and Noah. Muslim pilgrims head to the Dergah Mosque ...
Because “never again” is not just now, it is always. Like the Maccabees 2,000 years before us, we must continue to always be ...
In “The Testament of Ann Lee,” coming out Christmas Day, Amanda Seyfried plays a woman searching for another, better world.
The O.C.' may have popularized the term, but Hollywood families have been celebrating both the Nativity and Festival of ...
I want every child in the non-religious schools to understand that Judaism belongs to them just as much as it does to ...
Rabbi Chaim Shmuelevitz, the head of the Mir Yeshiva in Jerusalem during the 1960s and ’70s, would often visit Rachel’s Tomb. One day he overheard a woman on the other side of the divider, tearfully ...
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