Tetzaveh: You Know Who
People say I’m paranoid, but I’m not. I’m just perceptive. I notice things that other people miss. Then I combine what I notice with other
People say I’m paranoid, but I’m not. I’m just perceptive. I notice things that other people miss. Then I combine what I notice with other
Rabbi Rosenthal walked down the halls of the Nachmanides School at a rapid clip. Mrs. Weiner had tipped him off to what was going on
Sid Wasserman walked up to Rabbi Morgenstern during the kiddush after davening on Shabbat morning, a gefilte fish ball on a toothpick in one hand
Once in the town of Rutherford, three children sat down on a cold Friday afternoon, Erev Shabbat Kodesh, and tried to figure out how to
Anyone can tell the story of the splitting of the Red Sea. The Israelites were up against the shoreline. The Egyptians were bearing down on
It was a dark night at the campground. The moon and stars were shrouded in clouds. The campers had hiked for hours to get there,
Ronit was sitting in her playroom reading Where the Wild Things Are to Sam when they started pouring out of the wall. There were hundreds
The flight from Dallas to Newark was delayed because of a storm somewhere in the Midwest. The airplane was coming in from Chicago, and the
On a hot summer afternoon in the town of Fair Lawn, three children opened up a lemonade stand in front of their house. It was
Terminal B at Newark Airport had been very quiet when Adam Baskin first arrived at 6 a.m. He could hear the whirring noise of the
The shuttle from Reagan International Airport to LaGuardia was packed, and Jonathan Birnbaum wondered how many other passengers on board his 737 were thinking about
Once in the town of Kearny there lived a garbage man named Moshe. People had other names for garbage men, of course: sanitation worker, sanitation