Mazkeret Batya: The Inspiring Story of an Early Jewish Settlement
The background to the late 19th-century Jewish settlements in Israel was a wave of pogroms in Russia in 1881. This made most of Russian Jewry
The background to the late 19th-century Jewish settlements in Israel was a wave of pogroms in Russia in 1881. This made most of Russian Jewry
In mid-July, Israel’s Minister of Religious Affairs proposed a bill that would introduce a reform to the country’s kashrut industry. While this is a development
As students return to in-person classes, parents as well as many students have expressed concerns about their safety. We now know that, unfortunately, children are
In March of 2020, at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, Ian Mark, a 30-something oleh, reached out to his friends to join him in
Avi and Sara Schwartz, co-directors of The Orthodox Union’s Jewish Learning Initiative on Campus (OU-JLIC) at Rutgers University, have made it their mission to provide
Dr. Jonathan Koppell has always felt universities should do more than just provide students with the ability to make a living in their chosen fields,
Not feeling awesome about the Days of Awe? If you’ve ever said that you’ve dreaded Yom Kippur, then this companion is for you. The “HaKol
When Michael Eisenberg graduated Yeshiva University in 1993, I doubt he would have even dreamed that almost 30 years later he would have become a
Judea, Samaria and Gaza For many years, members of the diplomatic corps and the media have focused on Judea, Samaria and Gaza, which represents about
“Nobody has it all together,” observed Shira Lankin Sheps, author of The Layers Project, speaking to me from her home in Israel. “Miss Perfect doesn’t
Maayan Singer, 9, made aliyah with her parents Natalie and Arnie, her brother Yehuda, and her sister Ayelet, from Teaneck to Modiin in July, and
When COVID came around the corner in 2020, to say the families all around the world had to change their regular ways of living and