My Stories
Part 42 (written 2014)(Continued from previous week) We were served a delicious supper following a guided tour of the facility. During the meal, a 90-year-old
Part 42 (written 2014)(Continued from previous week) We were served a delicious supper following a guided tour of the facility. During the meal, a 90-year-old
A recent editorial in OU’s Jewish Action by its Executive Vice President Allen I. Fagin entitled, “Do We Have the Time and Energy to Lead
A 12-year-old from Staten Island, New York, became the first Orthodox Jew to win the Food Network cooking competition “Chopped” in an episode that aired
On Rosh Hashanah, there is an ancient custom to go to a body of water and recite various pesukim as we “cast off our sins.”
Unlike previous generations, today’s teens are expected to be constantly connected to the internet, to know what happened 10 seconds ago and to be able
I don’t think we go to shul just to daven. It’s just a theory. I’m not a rabbi, so take everything I say with a
Fasting on Yom Kippur is not easy but it is not intended to be torture or even a punishment. According to most scholars, it is
July 7, 2018, Shabbos morning, 5:50 a.m. I was lying in an ER bed in Scranton, Pennsylvania, in despair over the slow-as-molasses medical care. Don’t
Going to my mailbox several weeks ago, I encountered a beautiful silver envelope embossed with the names Tzvi and Esther Fass, and Reuven and Fay
In a few short weeks, Jews all over the world will unite in celebrating the annual completion of the Torah-reading cycle. Communities, families and individuals
If there was one month, in particular, where the news perhaps impacted us the most during 5778, it had to occur roughly in the month
Cruising down the aisles of Walmart, firmly holding my (almost) fourth grader’s sweet little hand as she excitedly waved her freshly printed school-supply list, I