יום שבת, 20 יוני 2026Saturday, June 20, 2026
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יום שבת, ה׳ תמוז תשפ״וSaturday, June 20, 2026
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Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Jerry Seinfeld Was Right – Palestine Doesn’t Exist

By Saul Jay Singer

Stripped of slogans and emotion, his statement invites a serious historical question. If Palestine was a country, when exactly did it exist? This is no mere rhetorical trick. Countries leave records, they have governments, capitals, rulers, borders, laws, armies, currencies, and diplomatic relations.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Stopping Short of Victory Against Iran Endangers America and Israel

By Morton A. Klein

The deal’s apparent long ceasefire also only plays into the Iranian regime’s delaying tactics. We’ve repeatedly seen that “ceasefires” with the Iranian regime and its proxies mean “we cease and they fire.”

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Trump’s Chaos and Incoherence Have Led to Failure on Iran

By Jonathan S. Tobin

The damage that Israel and the United States did to the Islamist terror regime was undone by an agreement that rewards Tehran and vindicates former President Barack Obama.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

The Iran War’s Unanswered Questions And Washington’s Fear of Victory

By Jonathan Braun

Russia had its own reasons for opposing a complete Iranian collapse. Moscow values Iran as both a partner and a counterweight to American influence.

Book Reviews / Features / Headline

The Faith You Can Live Inside

By Raffi Crouse

Albo insists that the highest form of divine service is performed from love rather than fear, and that even the commandments the mind resists should be done with joy, the way a person digs gladly through hard ground for a buried treasure.

Halacha & Hashkafa / Headline / Torah

Lessons for Life – and Politics – from the Mortally Wounded

By Rabbi Aaron I. Reichel

While we hope and pray for continued miracles, we of course have to do all in our power to make miracles unnecessary, and one way is to do a better job explaining to the world which people are interested in genocide and which people are interested in preventing it.

Featured / Headline / Parsha / Torah

When We Unsee Ourselves: A Reading of Shelach and the Quiet Work of Truth

By Raemia A. Luchins

The words are brief, but they open a window into the inner world that shaped everything that followed. The land had not diminished them. The giants had not diminished them. They had diminished themselves.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Amidst the Threat of Iranian Missiles, I'm Still Going to Israel

By Stephen M. Flatow

Israel is not an idea I support from a safe distance. It is part of my life and my family’s story.

Front Page / Headline / Perspectives

Filling up the Canvas, America 250

By Jeremy Koffsky

When struck with a crisis, I turn to the writings of America's greatest crisis manager, Abraham Lincoln.

Features On The Jewish World / Headline

The Oldest Matzah Ball Soup Tureen Behind a Rockower Award

By Tsadik Kaplan

I was fortunate enough to be the high bidder of the item, and thought little of it over the years.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

We Need Not Walk Alone

By Mark Trencher

I was surprised that the most often cited reason to interact with non-Jews was civic, political, and legal issues affecting the community.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

The Future of Jews in America

By Rabbi Efrem Goldberg

Dan Bilzerian, who has 30 million Instagram followers, is on the ballot as a Republican in Florida’s 6th Congressional District. While he has little chance of winning, as an extremist, vulgar antisemite, his mere presence on the ballot combined with whatever percentage of the votes he will get, is jarring. 

Arts / Features / Headline

Itzik Dadya: From IDF Rabbinate Band to Israeli-American Superstar

By Mendi Glik

At his parents’ home, everyone sang – not professionally, but they all loved to sing. He has bli ayin hara 11 siblings, so you can just imagine their Shabbat table when they were growing up. Not only did everyone sing, but every sibling wanted to be the lead singer.

Halacha & Hashkafa / Headline / Torah

Our Nation’s Niggun

By Slovie Jungreis Wolff

I wonder how many stood there, opening up their hearts and souls. How many knew that this would be their final prayer and yet they called out to Avinu Shebashamayim, ‘bring us home to Yerushalayim!’

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Israel’s Gaza Blockade Is Unequivocally Consistent with the San Remo Manual

By Saul Jay Singer

Israel has consistently maintained that the blockade exists to prevent the importation of weapons and military materiel into Hamas-controlled territory, a claim that is strongly supported by the historical evidence.

Front Page / Headline / Perspectives

Two Countries and the Rest of the World

By Jonathan Braun

When it comes to the technologies, medical breakthroughs, surgical innovations, and companies that have most shaped modern life since the 1990s, two countries stand out above all others: the United States and Israel.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

The Parade Was No Place for an Anti-Zionist Jew-Hater

By Jonathan S. Tobin

Say what you will about a demagogic politician dedicated to reviving Marxism – one of history’s bloodiest and costliest failures – as if the catastrophic events and slaughter brought on by it never happened. But on this issue, at least he wasn’t a hypocrite.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

The Rosh Yeshiva Who Taught Us How to Think

By Rabbi Roy Feldman

He was among the first rabbis to embrace the internet as a platform for Torah, publishing responsa as early as the 1990s. But these were not ordinary responsa. Every ruling stood behind an idea.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Five Dating Lessons I Didn’t Learn on Dates

By Jonah S.C. Muskat-Brown

In the wake of the Jewish people’s collective wedding anniversary on Shavuos, I offer five dating mindsets that I’ve gleaned from those summers – for those of us still on the journey toward our chuppah, and those genuinely offering support along the way.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Senator Van Hollen’s Op-Ed Misses the Mark on Israeli-Palestinian Reality

By Brian Romick

The United States should absolutely use its leverage to advance peace. But that leverage should not be focused solely on Israel.

Arts / Features / Headline

A Soulful Singer with a Breslov Beat

By Mendi Glik

Over the years, Cohen was in close contact with his uncle. He used to send him songs and consult with him. Shloime taught him that to sing is to pray.

Headline / Parsha / Torah

Parshas Naso: The Torah’s Architecture of Repair

By Raemia A. Luchins

It begins with counting. Order. Structure. Arrangement. But almost immediately the parsha shifts into the unpredictable terrain of human emotion.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

The Dark Roots of ‘Jewish Supremacy’

By Moshe Phillips

Ever since the Hamas-led terrorist attacks in southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, the use of Holocaust inversion by enemies of Israel has gone from being used only by pariahs to becoming chic.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Is the Palestinian Authority Using International Donor Funds to Finance ‘Pay for Slay’?

By Maurice Hirsch

With most of its primary source of revenue cut off, the question remains: How did the PLO-P.A. continue financing terror payments?

Features / Headline / News Briefs

NY Legislators Add ‘Buffer Zone’ Around Jewish Schools into State Budget Proposal

By Jessica Russak-Hoffman - JNS

The buffer zone would be twice the size of the one Mamdani vetoed earlier this year.

Columns / Features / Headline

Eyes Wide Open

By Rabbi YY Rubinstein

The question now is, at what point does the spread of the disease become so bad that the only solution is to flee.

Features / Front Page / Headline

The Iran War Was Decades Too Late

By Jonathan Braun

Imagine what another decade of inaction would have produced.

Book Reviews / Features / Headline

Timeless Torah, Contemporary Medicine

By Ben Rothke

The topics are all real, important, and relevant in this significant work.

Halacha & Hashkafa / Headline / Torah

Lashon Hara Without a Listener? ChatGPT and the Personal Costs of Negative Speech

By Rabbi Daniel Z. Feldman

From a philosophical perspective, many Jewish thinkers have focused on the unique role of speech as a defining element of humanity. Speech, at least in its fully realized form, distinguishes Man from the animal; for humans, speech expresses thought, making this distinction especially profound.

Book Reviews / Features / Headline

Torah Inspiration Loud and Clear

By Dr. Chani Miller

Throughout the narrative, Horowitz points out examples such as this, where things in her life could have been so much worse, and woven throughout the entire sefer is evidence of the incredible gratitude she has to Hashem for the many gifts she has received that help her navigate through a world without sound.

Features / Headline / Movie and Play Reviews

Was Roald Dahl an Antisemite?

By Alan Zeitlin

The play presents Dahl as a man in physical pain, desperate to secure his marriage to his second wife, and increasingly cornered by public backlash.

Featured / Headline / Holidays / Parsha / Torah

Standing Still at Sinai: A Journey of Choice

By Raemia A. Luchins

Ruth’s story is not about conversion as a moment. It is about covenant as a life. Her geirus is not described as a ceremony. It is described as a relationship.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Every Jew’s Torah

By Rabbi Micah Greenland

Torah speaks differently to different souls. Every Jew has a unique relationship with Torah, a unique derech in serving Hashem, and a unique contribution to make to the Jewish people.

Halacha & Hashkafa / Headline / Holidays / Torah

Can You Take In Shavuot Early?

By Rabbi Yaakov Hoffman

It is surprising, then, that this practice is so entrenched, especially since it has no basis in Chazal or the Rishonim. … In the late 16th century, however, two Eastern European authorities record a tradition not to recite Kiddush on the first night of Shavuot until nightfall.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Preparing for Shavuos: The Holiness in Separation

By Jonah S.C. Muskat-Brown

If our personal foundation isn’t all it can be at that time, regardless of how strong our spouse’s foundation is, our future together will be shaky; our weaker qualities will ultimately reveal themselves more clearly rather than improve.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

The Courage to Let Go: What Ruth Teaches Us About Identity

By Rabbi Moshe Miller

Identity, in Ruth's case, is not something preserved through careful self-protection. It is something discovered through openness – through relationships, risks, and responsiveness to the unexpected.

Features / Headline

Training College Professors to Fight Antisemitism

By Shlomo Greenwald and Joey Aron

The key question is not whether the conduct hides behind the veil of political language. As we mentioned, antisemitism almost always borrows the respectable vocabulary of its time. The question is whether Jewish students are being treated equally.

Halacha & Hashkafa / Headline / Torah

When Is a Person Ready to Serve Hashem?

By Adina Broder

People may have varied religious practices, ideologies, or political views. They may come from different backgrounds, affiliations and persuasions. But this doesn’t mean that there needs to be strife between us. 

Features / Headline

Hundreds of Jews Attend Rally Protesting The New York Times

By Alan Zeitlin

“So, we are here today not to accommodate, not to give permission, not to bow our heads,” Louis-Klein said. “We are here today to say no. To say that we, as Jews and as Israelis, will not be erased from this society. We will not countenance a racist hate movement. We will not accept antizionism...

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

The Antisemitism Industry: From Tsarist Disinformation to Digital Media

By Jonathan Braun

The modern business of antisemitism begins, like so much else in modern Europe, in Paris.

Features / Headline

Souvenirs from the Dawn of Zionism

By Tsadik Kaplan

Seventy-eight years ago this week, on May 14, 1948, the State of Israel was established. To celebrate this monumental event in Jewish history, here are some related medals from my personal collection.

Featured / Headline / Parsha / Torah

Bamidbar and the First Map

By Raemia A. Luchins

The midbar is often imagined as a place of danger and emptiness. The Torah presents it differently. The wilderness is not chaos. It is unwritten space.

Featured / Headline / Parsha / Torah

Yerushalayim – A City the World Cannot Ignore

By Rabbi Moshe Taragin

Religious perfection requires transcendence, an encounter with the Ribbono Shel Olam, a presence that does not conform to human categories.

Headline / Torah

The Rosh Chodesh Jew

By Rabbi Dr. Kenneth Brander

Although as a festival, Rosh Chodesh is not dressed in much external pomp and circumstance, it determines the timing of all the other festivals in our calendar and thus enables our annual spiritual and ritual rhythm.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

The NEA Is Indoctrinating America’s Children with Antisemitism

By Jeffrey Lax

Those same union delegates and officers walk into our classrooms every day. Their attitudes don’t stay behind in the (largely Marxist) union halls – they shape how they teach, what they tolerate from students, and the messages they send about who belongs in American society.

Front Page / Headline / Perspectives

Federal Tuition Relief Comes to New York

By Esti DeAngelis

Left-leaning opposition has argued that school choice programs divert funds from and thereby harm public schools. 

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

America Gave Jews Freedom of Faith

By Stephen M. Flatow

American Jews did not respond to that freedom by standing apart from the country. They helped build it.

Headline / Torah

Chief Rabbi Mobilizes Global Shabbat Project in Support of Presidential Shabbat Proclamation

By Jewish Press Staff

At a time of rising antisemitism and deep polarisation, Rabbi Goldstein, who serves as the Chief Rabbi of South Africa, believes the proclamation offers a rare opportunity for national unity: "Shabbat is above politics. Whatever our differences, whatever our background, whatever our level of observance, Shabbat belongs to all of us."

Arts / Features / Headline

Yom Yerushalayim: Songs to Celebrate Jerusalem

By Mendi Glik

For thousands of years, throughout the long years of exile, the Jewish people have never forgotten Jerusalem. And indeed, after two thousand years in the Diaspora, Hashem performed a huge miracle and returned Am Yisrael to the land of Israel, and to Jerusalem.

Features / Headline / Money Matters

Finances & Shalom Bayit: 10 Reasons Why Couples Fight About Money

By Jonathan I. Shenkman

A healthier approach is to adopt a strategy both partners can live with emotionally. The mathematically optimal portfolio is irrelevant if it creates stress or conflict.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Approaching Antisemitism from the Inside Out

By Avi Ciment

Whether it was lies about Jews poisoning wells, spreading plagues, or killing Christian children for their blood, we have always been the target of persecution.

Front Page / Headline / Perspectives

American Orthodox Jewry: A ‘State of the Kehilla’ Address

By Mark Trencher

Rising antisemitism from both the left and right (we can argue which is worse, but there is widespread understanding that it emanates from both), fear of danger, and uncertainty about long‑term safety in the U.S.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Walking in the Covenant of Yitzchak

By Rabbi Yehuda L. Oppenheimer

Between Yaakov and Avraham stands Yitzchak – often the least discussed of the Avot, but nevertheless the most relevant to us.

Features / Headline / Money Matters

Shavuot and Generational Wealth: What Jewish Tradition Teaches About Leaving a Lasting Legacy

By Jonathan I. Shenkman

Financial research shows that wealth, even when substantial, rarely survives more than three generations. What seems permanent in one era often fades in the next.

Features / Headline

Jewish Comedian Gives Israelis Some Moments of Laughter Across the Miles

By Alan Zeitlin

Lebowicz performs across the country for synagogues and organizations that want clean, kosher comedy that still makes them laugh. His comedy is easily accessible, drawing from Jewish laws and customs as well as from some popular culture that everyone is familiar with.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

A Miscarriage of Justice: The Lesson of Tobianski Street

By Gedaliah Borvick

That the injustice was later recognized – and that his name is publicly honored – reflects a society willing to confront its grave mistakes.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Why I Wrote My Father's Story – And You Should Write Your Family Story, Too

By Amrom Gottesman

After I spoke at my father’s memorial and received that feedback, I knew what I had to do: I was going to write his biography. Then, I could show my family members and future generations the full picture of who their Zaidy was. They would be able to learn from him and emulate his ways.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Shushhhhhhh!

By Ronald Neal Goldman

For me, the dissemination of conversation during services had not, in the past, been so much a violation of halachic decorum, but an annoying impediment to clearly hear the ba’al tefillah and ba’al koreh enunciate each and every word.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Are You Trying to Inspire People Toward Aliyah but Pushing Them Away?

By Rabbi Efrem Goldberg

Nobody ever started keeping Shabbos because a rock was thrown at them or because they were told that if they do not, they are a bad Jew. People embrace Shabbos because they were lovingly invited to experience it, shown its beauty, exposed to its meaning. They were invited to learn about why it is important and right for them.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

A Tale of Two Popes

By Saul Jay Singer

For all his caution, Pius XII never suggested that it was wrong to fight Nazi Germany; rather, he operated within a long-standing Catholic moral framework that recognized the tragic necessity of war under certain conditions: the “Just War Theory,” which does not glorify violence; it constrains it.

Book Reviews / Features / Headline

Israeli Soldiers’ Last Words Home

By Noah Rothstein

The editors made one decision and held it absolutely: not a single word was changed, misspellings included, half-finished sentences included.

Halacha & Hashkafa / Headline / Torah

What Happens When We Truly Pray?

By Rabbi Mordechai Weiss

There is something uniquely powerful about the prayers of a child. Watch a young child daven, and you will see a kind of purity that is difficult to replicate in adulthood.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Rahm Emanuel Gets Aid to Israel All Wrong

By Moshe Phillips

The outright wrongheadedness inherent in each of these statements needs to be exposed. Not just for Israel’s well-being, but for America’s.

Features / Headline

Mets Jewish Heritage Day Controversy Is Both Revealing and Confounding

By Alan Zeitlin

Reactions were swift, with some saying it was an offense to our community to no longer have a Jewish Heritage Day and others saying it was not a big deal and there could be innocuous reasons.

Featured / Headline / Parsha / Torah

Ve’ahavta and Tzelem Elokim

By Rabbi Moshe Taragin

Avodas Hashem is shaped not only by obligation, but also by how we understand the human being, by the moral awareness embedded within us and by the way we see the world and our place within it.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Israel: A Mediterranean Power

By Jonathan Braun

Measured globally, the fleet is modest in size. Within the eastern Mediterranean, it ranks among the most capable forces, with clear advantages in technology, training, and readiness. Larger fleets operate in the region, yet Israel’s navy is structured for high-intensity missions and rapid response.

Front Page / Headline / Perspectives

Alone, Or Set Apart? Israel’s Dilemma

By Rabbi Yehuda L Oppenheimer

Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitchik famously began his work The Lonely Man of Faith with the stark words, “I am lonely.” He wasn't talking about a lack of friends. He was talking about the inherent loneliness of a person of faith, the realization that your deepest commitments might never be fully understood by the world around you.

Book Reviews / Features / Headline

My First Family Shabbat Dinner

By Kylie Ora Lobell

It was at that Chabad in North Brooklyn, on Bedford Avenue, where I experienced the kindness of the Jewish community and, during dinner, felt a warmth in my chest that I immediately knew was G-d.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

In an Age of AI, the Work of the Soul Remains

By Rabbi Aaron Zimmer

AI can generate, summarize, and analyze. But it cannot become you. It cannot build your character.

Featured / Headline / Parsha / Torah

Stepping on Others Makes One Small, Not Tall

By Raphael Grunfeld

Now that he had served out his time and would soon be eligible to rejoin the world, why was he not eager to undergo the purification ceremony to be administered by the kohen which would be his ticket back to freedom?

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Maniacs with Missiles: Iran’s Insane Foreign Policy

By Jonathan Braun

In both cases, a fanatical regime chose to double down on ideology, sending its own youth to die.

Features / Headline

Yom Ha’atzmaut Without Closure

By Rabbi Moshe Taragin

We have just emerged from our shelters, literally and figuratively, after six weeks of war. The air is heavy with mixed emotions shaping how we approach this moment. There is relief, but also grief. Pride, but also fatigue. Nothing feels simple or settled.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Zionism Explained

By Moshe Phillips

There’s no good reason for any Jew who is pro-Israel to resist using the term Zionist to describe themselves. Zionism is a team sport, and the object of the game remains what it has always been: the saving of Jewish lives.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Is It Real or Is It AI?

By Richard Kronenfeld

For what it’s worth, there are people who are honest about the use of AI.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

The Party of Iran

By Jonathan Braun

Carter’s handling of the Iran hostage crisis was the defining culmination of an administration that never understood the revolution it was appeasing, epitomized by his own U.N. ambassador Andrew Young, who in February 1979 was still serenely predicting that Khomeini would be hailed as “a saint” once everyone “got over the panic.”

Features / Headline

Toronto City Council Bans Foreign Flags from Flying Over City Hall

By Howard Jay Meyer

Since October 7, hate crimes against Canadian Jews have skyrocketed. In recent weeks, shots were fired at area shuls in two separate incidents. Police have now banned pro-Palestinian protestors from demonstrating in Jewish areas.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

The European Challenge to Brit Milah

By Saul Jay Singer

Critics of circumcision frequently frame the issue as one of children’s rights or bodily autonomy, but this framing overlooks the reality that parents routinely make irreversible decisions on behalf of their children in many contexts, including vaccination, medical treatment, and education.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Trump Finally Jabs Tucker Carlson – But Is It Enough?

By Alan Zeitlin

While at the height of his powers as the host of his top-rated Fox News show, Carlson brought on rapper Kanye West, who said some questionable things about Jared Kushner, but Carlson deleted a portion where West said that he’d prefer his children celebrated Chanukah instead of Kwanzaa for “financial engineering.”

Arts / Features / Headline

Songs of Forgotten Heroes of the Holocaust

By Mendi Glik

In the concentration camps and the gas chambers, Jews were murdered on the cursed soil of Europe. And while their brothers and sisters in the United States couldn’t do much for them, the little they could do was to shout.

Featured / Headline / Parsha / Torah

Familiarity and Respect

By Raphael Grunfeld

We are not there to reason on behalf of G-d. If G-d promises that something will happen, it will happen. How? That’s not our business. Our business is to fulfill the positive commandment of Kiddush Hashem and G-d will work out the rest as He did with the ram that showed up to save Yitzchak.

Front Page / Headline / Perspectives

A White-Shirt Pesach

By Rabbi Moshe Taragin

That story about the crumpled white shirt deeply changed my life. So often, when I felt confined by circumstances and life’s difficult conditions, I returned to that white shirt and challenged myself to rise above my frustration.

Headline / Names and Numen / Torah

Shulamit and Shlomit

By Rabbi Reuven Chaim Klein

Despite the original Shulamit not being a name (but rather a description), in post-Biblical times, that word came to be used as a personal name given to Jewish girls, and in the last generation or so has actually become quite popular.

Halacha & Hashkafa / Headline / Torah

The Torah Elevates You

By Rabbi Simcha Feuerman

Anyone who has gone through a traditional yeshiva education is familiar with this unique aspect of Jewish tradition. Torah study is not just for knowledge, nor is it merely a mitzvah to study, but it is also a redemptive, elevating process.

Headline / Holidays / Torah

Seeing the Pattern: What Passover Teaches Us About the War with Iran

By Itamar Frankenthal

In that sense, this article is itself an act of haggadah. The goal is to point at what is happening around us and say: look, this is what the hand of G-d looks like in history. That obligation falls on every Jewish parent and teacher…whenever history offers a teaching moment. And this year, history is not being subtle.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

I Grieve for Thee, My Brother Moshe

By Moshe Phillips

Traditionally, we are supposed to limit eulogies in the Hebrew month of Nissan, as it is the season when our people’s liberation from slavery in ancient Egypt was brought about by G-d.

Front Page / Headline / Perspectives

Wonders Just Like the Exodus!

By Yossi Baumol

When one thinks about a miracle, in order to give thanks to the Ribbono Shel Olam, it is insufficient to give thanks only for the miracle itself; one must also understand the means, the circumstances, the causes that He set in motion, how the Ribbono Shel Olam orchestrated events – and every separate reason, every cause, every factor is a miracle in itself.

Headline / Holidays / Torah

The Responsibilities (and Possibilities) of Education

By Jonah S.C. Muskat-Brown

If we’re asking questions solely for the purpose of receiving answers, we’re missing the point.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Sefiras HaOmer: Bridging Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow

By Dr. Chani Miller

As slaves to Pharaoh, our time was not our own. The gift of freedom also granted us the gift of time, and our very first commandment shapes that gift by giving us the Jewish calendar, a framework for our days.

Features On The Jewish World / Headline

Pedigreed Pesach Paraphernalia  

By Tsadik Kaplan

Beginning in 1947, the JRSO searched out heirless Jewish assets and unclaimed property in the American-occupied zone of Germany and distributed them to Jewish institutions and organizations, primarily in the USA and Israel.

Halacha & Hashkafa / Headline / Torah

Cleaning for Pesach Too Efficiently?

By Rabbi Meir Orlian

Mrs. Klein replied, It doesn’t seem fair that I should pay you for two idle hours when there’s still work that could be done!

Features / Headline / Money Matters

When Everyone Depends on You: Financial Survival for the Sandwich Generation

By Jonathan I. Shenkman

Values such as kibbud av va’em and the importance of supporting children as they build their lives are deeply ingrained. These are not obligations people take lightly.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Demand Congress Fund Security for Our Shuls, Schools

By Nathan J. Diament

If the Temple Israel shooting isn’t a wake-up call to Congress to get its act together, I don’t know what is.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

From Obama to Mamdani: How Islamist Rhetoric Captured Western Elite Discourse

By Jonathan Braun

Before Mamdani’s meteoric ascent to power, October 7, 2023, tore away the last pretense. Hamas named its massacre Al‑Aqsa Flood and proclaimed it a religious war – a summons to Muslims in all Arab and Islamic countries to join the battle.

Features / Headline

‘It's Not That Bad’: The Quiet Toll of Stress You Keep Dismissing

By Yisroel Picker

Unacknowledged stress doesn't stay quiet. It finds other exits. It comes out in how we speak to our children at the end of a hard day, in the walls we build around our hearts, in the subtle withdrawal from connection and meaning.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

Does My Son Know You?

By Jeremy Koffsky

Other challenges in life can pass through us with resilience, but nothing can replace those we love and can no longer see. The pain remains; we simply get better at carrying the broken pieces of ourselves.

Headline / Op-Eds / Perspectives

American Jewry and Gambling

By Rabbi Reuven Chaim Klein

The critique is not merely legal but civilizational: instead of producing, building, or creating, the gambler sits passively, hoping that chance will deliver profit.

Features / Headline

Over 500 Government, Clinical, Academic, Tech & Nonprofit Professionals Come Together to Respond to Israel’s Trauma Crisis

By Jewish Press Staff

While Israel is recognized as a leader in trauma care and innovation, participants emphasized that the central challenge is not a lack of expertise or activity, but that the current system is too fragmented to effectively meet the scale and complexity of the growing national need.

Featured / Headline / Parsha / Torah

Vayikra and The Altar of the Heart

By Raemia A. Luchins

The Mincha is the simplest of all offerings – flour, oil, a measure of frankincense. Ingredients drawn from the rhythm of daily life. Nothing extravagant. Nothing that signals wealth or status. Nothing that would draw attention in the courtyard of the Mishkan.

Features / Headline

Springtime, Sirens, and Eretz Yisrael

By Ariela Davis

Despite the desperation of seminary kids and tourists to get out of the country in time for Pesach, those of us who have chosen to build our lives here wouldn't want to be anywhere else.

Book Reviews / Features / Headline

The Case for an Armed Jewish Community

By Inna Vernikov

It is not just that those outside the Jewish community see American Jews as weaklings who cannot defend themselves; it is that too often we see ourselves this way.

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Freedom Is the Ownership of Time

By Itamar Frankenthal

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