יום שבת, 11 יולי 2026Saturday, July 11, 2026
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יום שבת, כ״ו תמוז תשפ״וSaturday, July 11, 2026
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review

In Print / Editorial

Annexing Judea and Samaria?

By Editorial Board

They also make no mention of the Arab side’s inability to finally accept Israel’s existence in the Middle East and its entitlement to borders that would be defensible in the next Arab onslaught.

In Print / Editorial

A Ban Without A Plan

By Editorial Board

Growing families on a budget will either have to shell out money for paper bags where available ... or invest in reusable cloth or other bags.

In Print / Columns

Zechariah Baumel Comes Home

By Michal Popper

No matter what was left physically, Zechariah’s soul was soaring high above the crowd even after 37 years.

In Print / Columns

Tears

By Michal Popper

A person can get hurt, insulted, or offended by anyone. And when a person gets hurt by someone they care for and love, the pain is even greater.

In Print / Editorial

A Welcome Human Rights Development

By Editorial Board

New technologies such as electronic locks can easily prompt conflicts with our religious needs since most of our fellow citizens don’t share them.

In Print / Features On The Jewish World

A Shul With A Story: The Hollywood Shtiebel

By Judy Waldman

It was time to not just start a new synagogue, it was time to create an atmosphere that assured that davening with kavanah was an attainable goal.

In Print / Columns

Choices

By Michal Popper

The more natural something is, the less attention we pay to it. Every morning we get up and take care of the morning routine almost by rote.

In Print / Editorial

Democratic No-Shows At AIPAC

By Editorial Board

While some may minimize these no-shows, this is clearly a departure from years past, when supporting AIPAC was seen as an uncontroversial move.

In Print / Parsha

Joy Renewed

By Rabbi Dani Staum

When there is cause for celebration our complete focus should be on that celebration.

In Print / Features On The Jewish World

Adar Artwork

By Tsadik Kaplan

It was customary to hang decorations such as yours on the synagogue wall at the start of the month of Adar, and for them to be taken down once the Purim holiday concluded.

In Print / Columns

Self-Sacrifice

By Michal Popper

Mordechai was all she had – he was her family. And now she must live apart from him forever. Why?

In Print / Editorial

The Attempt To Kosherize Rep. Ilhan Omar

By Editorial Board

Sounds like something the timid Jewish officials could sink their teeth into? After all, she seems to disavow the Palestinian narrative that Jews have had scant historical connections to Israel.

In Print / Editorial

An Important Supreme Court Case

By Editorial Board

Although the 1977 ruling has benefited countless Sabbath observers over the years, the requirement of only a limited accommodation has prevented the law from reaching its full potential.

In Print / Columns

Miracle Baby

By Michal Popper

Every heart was filled with gratitude to the Almighty for granting this special soul a chance to live.

In Print / Potpourri

Almond Blossoms

By Faigie Heiman

History has some of the most tragic events and deaths listed for the month of Adar, events that reach as far back as the great scholarly houses of Hillel and Shammai...

In Print / Columns

A Smart Heart

By Michal Popper

To build the Mishkan, one must have the ability to hear G-d every step of the way, so that it will come out exactly the way G-d wanted it.

In Print / Editorial

Pelosi Must Do More To Punish Omar

By Editorial Board

Surely, someone with such skewed and prejudiced views on international affairs has no place on the foreign affairs committee to which she was appointed by Pelosi.

In Print / Editorial

Time For U.S. To Recognize Golan Heights As Part Of Israel

By Editorial Board

It is important to keep in mind that it is not only Israel that has a significant interest in Israeli control of the Golan.

In Print / Editorial

NYPD Tows Hatzolah Paramedic's Car

By Editorial Board

This incident is the latest of several apparent breaches of various city protocols, which heretofore had recognized Hatzoloh’s life-saving role.

In Print / Columns

Share The Worries Of Your Heart

By Michal Popper

Worries have been around since the beginning of time. How we react is the only thing that really changes.

In Print / Features On The Jewish World

A Shul With A Story: Baron Hirsch Synagogue (Part II)

By Judy Waldman

This time period covered the sons of Baron Hirsch members serving in wars, including the American Civil War, the Spanish American War, World Wars and I & II, and the Korean War.

In Print / Parsha

Don’t Panic

By Rabbi Dani Staum

The soul must be saved from panic, for panic can destroy it.

In Print / Features On The Jewish World

A Menorah Marvel

By Tsadik Kaplan

If I were to walk into a retail store, I doubt I could purchase your chanukiah for anything less than $5,000.

In Print / Columns

Chesed

By Michal Popper

The Torah specifies that the home is the first place that one should do chesed, and only after that should we look to help others.

In Print / Editorial

A Critical Opportunity: Eric Ulrich for Public Advocate in February 26 Special Election

By Editorial Board

In his role as public advocate, he will have a bully pulpit to hold the mayor publicly accountable for his actions.

In Print / Editorial

The Amazon Debacle

By Editorial Board

Problem, though, is that the $3 billion was a plan for tax breaks – not money otherwise available to the state for spending.

In Print / Editorial

The Anti-Trumpers Are Leading Us To Dangerous Territory

By Editorial Board

Senators Kamala Harris and Corey Booker, both now having declared for the presidency in 2020, were particularly intense and argumentative. And the media followed suit.

In Print / Editorial

Possible Coup Discussions And Trump’s Declaration Of Emergency

By Editorial Board

It would seem unthinkable that Americans would be asking the question as to whether high officials of the DOJ and FBI actually met to seriously discuss a plan to remove President Trump from office.

In Print / Editorial

A Key To Mueller’s Frolic?

By Editorial Board

We found intriguing a report in Sunday’s New York Times that could end up explaining the unusual length and sparse results both now and at the end of the probe, if that should be the final result.

In Print / Columns

In Memory Of 3 Holy Women

By Michal Popper

We must all feel as though the traumatic event is part of us; we must cry and pray to Hashem to have mercy on all of us as individuals and as one big family as well.

In Print / Features On The Jewish World

A Shul With A Story: The Young Ladies’ Club Of Congregation B’nai Israel

By Judy Waldman

The Sisterhood arrived at the decision to create the “Young Ladies’ Club of Congregation B’nai Israel," where there would be interesting activities for young women in their late teens and twenties.

In Print / Travel

Yaya Tours – A Treat For Your Eyes And Palate

By Hannah Rubin

Particularly, Yaya Tours focuses on the post-Inquisition heritage of Sephardic Jewry, so most of their expeditions are concentrated in Southern Europe and North Africa.

In Print / Columns

A Four-Pound Miracle

By Michal Popper

Leah couldn’t wait to hear what the Rabbi had said. Deep down in her heart she wanted so much to hear and believe that everything was going to be all right...

In Print / Columns

Appreciation: A High School Reunion

By Michal Popper

Who looked for wisdom? Who sat so quietly in class taking in every word that the rabbi was trying to teach us?

In Print / Editorial

A Very Fast Leftward Lurch By The NYS Legislature

By Editorial Board

It remained somewhat speculative as to how far Democrats would go once they controlled the governorship and both houses of the legislature...

In Print / Features On The Jewish World

A Shul With A Story: Baron Hirsch Synagogue (Part I)

By Judy Waldman

Although some Memphis Jews were slaveholders and slave traders, they mostly favored secession primarily due to their Southern acculturation rather than by the defense of slavery.

In Print / Features On The Jewish World

A Nordia Menorah

By Tsadik Kaplan

The constant upheaval, violent persecution and expulsion of various Jewish communities in Europe has had an acute effect on extant Jewish ritual objects.

In Print / Columns

Good Follows Good

By Michal Popper

Thinking about all of our troubles or tests will not help us. Gloom and depression don’t solve anything.

In Print / Editorial

The Supreme Court And Transgenderism

By Editorial Board

But the court’s decision is as much about court procedure and how policy is properly set as it is about the rights of transgender people.

In Print / Editorial

Mahmoud Abbas Objects To Terrorism Liability

By Editorial Board

What this new law does, however, is require a foreign entity – as a condition of accepting U.S. aid – to agree that American courts have personal jurisdiction, whether or not U.S. citizens were the targets.

In Print / Columns / In Memoriam

Family: A Tribute To My Zaidy

By Michal Popper

It is very important to know who and where your family came from since history has a way of repeating itself.

In Print / Editorial

NYS Bill Could Bankrupt Yeshivas

By Editorial Board

Yet the legislation languished because of evidentiary concerns: memories fade, what exactly occurred, if anything, could not be clear in the accuser’s mind.

In Print / Editorial

Our Socialist Governor And Mayor

By Editorial Board

What seems to be totally lost on the governor is that unlimited and unchecked immigration, irrespective of any racial or ethnic makeup, is anathema to the notion of a sovereign America.

In Print / Columns

A True Story: My Teacher And Me

By Michal Popper

I felt that as a psychology teacher, who knows and teaches so much about human nature and emotions, to explode and get so angry was not the right thing to do.

In Print / Editorial

Why Are Democrats Opposing The Anti-BDS Bill?

By Editorial Board

Perhaps the new congresswoman should study up on the history of Israel’s international recognition as a sovereign state – even by the Palestinian Authority and the PLO.

In Print / Editorial

More On NYSED's War Against Yeshivos

By Editorial Board

Since the issue broke, The Jewish Press has consulted with several key figures from our community who have now assumed leadership roles on the issue – most notably Rav Yisroel Reisman, a rosh yeshiva at Torah Vodaath, and Rav Elya Brudny, a rosh yeshiva at the Mir.

In Print / Editorial

Senator Simcha Felder Deserves Better

By Editorial Board

Felder may have been the public face of the caucusing maneuver, but eight other elected Democrats also occasionally voted with the Republicans.

In Print / Editorial

Stock Market Manipulation?

By Editorial Board

There are some savvy observers who are suggesting that old-time manipulation by key traders – and maybe even foreign powers – may be in play.

In Print / Editorial

The Lev Tahor Case

By Editorial Board

Lev Tahor reportedly avoids technology and requires its female members to wear black robes from head to toe.

In Print / Editorial

Trump Replaces Obama’s Bizarre, Race-Based School Discipline Rules

By Editorial Board

The Trump Department of Education has now revised another, even more bizarre Obama Guidance, this one designed to apply to disciplinary actions in lower public school and ensure racial equity.

In Print / Columns

The Deeper Side Of People-Watching

By Michal Popper

By noticing others, you are simply acknowledging that there are other people around you who have desires, lives, families, joys, aches, and hardships.

In Print / Editorial

Trump Derangement Syndrome

By Editorial Board

To be sure, we are concerned that the Turks and Saudis will not have the same deterrent effect on the Russians, Iranians, and Hezbollah vis-à-vis Israel as has the presence of U.S. military personnel.

In Print / Editorial

Are Senators Imposing A Religious Test For Judges?

By Editorial Board

As far as we can tell, there was nothing in his background that suggested that he would be anything but impartial and not a person with integrity.

In Print / Features On The Jewish World

How Much Is Your Antique Chanukiah Worth?

By Tsadik Kaplan

Editor’s note: Antique Judaica Roadshow will appear monthly. We encourage readers to email pictures of their Judaica to Tsadik Kaplan at tsadik613@gmail.com. He may choose to assess your antiques in his future columns.   Perhaps the most ubiquitous piece of Jewish ritual art in our society is the menorah. The Chanukah menorah as we know […]

In Print / Features / Books

Out Of The Ashes, The Talmudic Encyclopedia Nearing Completion

By Toby Klein Greenwald

Perhaps the Nazis could destroy the bodies of the Jews but not the Torah and the soul...

In Print / Parsha

Personal Blessings

By Rabbi Dani Staum

Yaakov's blessings conveyed to his children the characteristic at the epicenter of their being.

In Print / Columns

G-d 24/7

By Michal Popper

Is G-d our best friend? Do we think of Him first before anyone else?

In Print / Jewish Community

A Transatlantic Fund

By Hannah Rubin

The project had a dual objective: to alleviate these families’ financial woes, and to establish personal ties with them with the aim of showing that Jews in America cared.

In Print / Columns

Seize The Moment

By Michal Popper

Sometimes you are having a bad day. Nothing seems to be going as you expected. And then you see someone at work or school who needs help with something and you help them out.

In Print / Editorial

The New UN Ambassador

By Editorial Board

What appeals most about her to us at The Jewish Press was the way she handled then Secretary of State Rex Tillerson’s apparent coolness towards Israel.

In Print / Columns

A Time Of Miracles

By Michal Popper

A person can be anywhere in the world and he or she can feel the holiness of the holiday or of the Shabbat, no matter what.

In Print / Editorial

Chacham Shaul Kassin, Zt"l

By Editorial Board

He was revered for his great Torah scholarship and halachic expertise, and his influence reached across the Sephardic world.

In Print / Holidays

Undying

By Hannah Rubin

Daughters and sons were washed away: many drifted, some drowned. Each child that left the woman dealt her a fresh salvo of pain.

In Print / Op-Eds

What YouTube Can Teach Us

By Sarah N. Pachter

Can we really be persuaded to do or buy something in that amount of time? Apparently, we can. Skeptical? Even the Torah discusses the power of a few moments. We can accomplish much in "the blink of an eye"

In Print / Columns

Broken Hearted

By Michal Popper

We can take our hard moments and turn them into a deep connection to the one above. We can take each opportunity of hardship and turn it into our special prayer to G-d.

In Print / Editorial

Do The Democrats Even Have A Legislative Agenda?

By Editorial Board

There’s no other way to say it. The Democrats have Trump on the brain.

In Print / Columns

Humble And Assertive

By Michal Popper

In our relationships, when do you forgive and forget, and when do you demand redress from those who hurt you? When do you say “No”? When do you say “Yes”?

In Print / Editorial

On Campus Due Process

By Editorial Board

In retrospect, we cannot understand how some members of the Senate Judiciary Committee urged voting against Kavanaugh.

In Print / Parsha

Sincere And Everlasting

By Rabbi Dani Staum

If one wins the lottery and is instantly transformed from pauper to millionaire, although at first he can hardly give enough charity, he soon acclimates to his new lifestyle.

In Print / Columns

The Maccabees: Ideal Idealists

By Michal Popper

Sometimes a person who rises to heroic heights for the sake of ideals is routed by the day-to-day hardships of living.

In Print / Columns

The Power Of Speech

By Michal Popper

Ask any counselor or therapist and you will hear of the great damage caused to children who were insulted by their parents or teachers, siblings or peers.

In Print / Editorial

Midterm Elections Results

By Editorial Board

Ironically, therefore, they may be more inclined to deal with Mr. Trump than when they were relegated to the political wilderness.

In Print / Editorial

Anti-Semitism Is Distinct

By Editorial Board

Understandably, these comments caused a firestorm. The outrageous characterization of the shootings as “random” defied belief.

In Print / Columns

Boundless Love

By Michal Popper

Cold-blooded, fanatical, baseless, relentless hatred can be uprooted from its core only by saturating our world with pure, undiscriminating, unyielding love and acts of kindness.

In Print / Editorial

Schumer and Nadler’s Shameful Dereliction of Duty

By Editorial Board

Weren’t Jews unable to walk safely in many European cities well before Donald Trump began his quest for the presidency?

In Print / Columns

Mama Rachel

By Michal Popper

Rachel, our loving mother, still lays buried near Bethlehem. Though she was buried along the road, today her grave is included in the city proper, yet it is still far from the grave of her husband Yaakov Avinu.

In Print / Supplements / Parenting Our Children

Behind Open Doors: Approaching the Open House Season

By Hannah Rubin

I feel it’s crucial that a school exudes warmth, and that I get the sense that my child will receive the attention he needs. At too many schools, one of these ideals is neglected in pursuit of the other, she says.

In Print / Parsha

All The Way To The Top

By Rabbi Dani Staum

If we want to achieve personal greatness, we have to hold onto our goals and dreams.

In Print / Columns

Generations

By Michal Popper

When a child is born and we give them a name, we really have no idea how this child will develop and in which way this little neshama will grow.

In Print / Editorial

Mayor De Blasio And The Guilty Parents

By Editorial Board

The tale of NYCHA’s outrageous treatment of its tenants is a long and notorious one and includes not only lead paint, but also water and heat deprivations and rodent infestation.

In Print / Editorial

That Harvard Discrimination Lawsuit

By Editorial Board

Federal law has been interpreted as allowing the use of race as one factor in the admission process but not the only or primary one.

In Print / Editorial

What A Justice Kavanaugh Could Mean For Core Jewish Issues

By Editorial Board

Frankly, in terms of true “Jewish” issues in America, we can think of nothing more significant than the viability of Jewish education and facilitating the ability of Jews to avoid having to choose between a livelihood and fealty to their religious beliefs.

In Print / Features

Power And Politics: Feminized (Part IV): A Woman In The Modern World (1750-1900)

By Faigy Grunfeld

Jewish women made their mark in education, welfare for the poor, and care for orphans, sometimes even manipulating public policy.

In Print / Columns

Praying For Someone Else

By Michal Popper

Does G-d answer our prayers? Definitely! Sometimes the answer is "Yes" and sometimes it's "No." And whatever God's answer, it's always what's best for us.

In Print / Editorial

The Nikki Haley Resignation

By Editorial Board

She has followed the paths of several UN ambassadors who distinguished themselves in their roles at the UN.

In Print / Columns

Beginnings

By Michal Popper

When should we be tough, soft, when are we truly honest with ourselves and our surroundings? And when are we just putting on a show.

In Print / Editorial

Sens. Booker and Gillibrand Confirm Schumer’s Declaration of War

By Editorial Board

Extraordinary. After all the wholly uncorroborated shmutz and vile accusations thrown Kavanaugh’s way, it doesn’t matter if they are true or not or that he has categorically denied them? Can the man be serious – or be taken seriously?

In Print / Editorial

Whom Does Mayor De Blasio Think He’s Kidding?

By Editorial Board

The bottom line is that the highest performing middle schools will start admitting many sixth graders who score lower on standardized tests that has been the case in the past.

In Print / Columns

True Happiness

By Michal Popper

We will never find happiness when all we see is the surface of life, without examining its core.

In Print / Editorial

The Undrained Swamp

By Editorial Board

And now we know that the effective head of the Department of Justice, Rod Rosenstein, has taken to discussing a coup against Mr. Trump with officials and Cabinet members.

In Print / Columns

G-d's love

By Michal Popper

There are so many examples of something that looks harsh or not pleasant when in fact it is for the benefit of the individual suffering.

In Print / Editorial

Jewish Press Wins One For Transparency

By Editorial Board

The request for the information was made to the Department of Education in May of 2017 but Department officials failed to comply.

In Print / Columns

Living In G-d's Backyard

By Michal Popper

Life in this special land can be difficult. Sometimes what makes it so hard is not so much the physical work but the mental and spiritual work.

In Print / Columns

Believe In God

By Michal Popper

Bitachon is not measured by your success in climbing over the gate. Bitachon is measured by your response upon seeing the gate – whether you grimace and give up, or whether you appreciate that God has put the gate there for your ultimate benefit.

In Print / Editorial

The New York Times Weighs In Against Yeshivas

By Editorial Board

Yet, for the Times, the lack of virtual symmetry between public and private school curricula is not the beginning of the inquiry, but the end of it.

In Print / Features

Power and Politics (Part IV): The Italki Community

By Faigy Grunfeld

Even before the Renaissance, the meager scattering of sources that reveal the Italki experience suggest that Jewish influence was alive and well on the peninsula.

In Print / Editorial

Cuomo’s Gaffe

By Editorial Board

How does someone who has been involved in serious politics since his teenage years (under the tutelage of his eminent father), and served as New York’s governor and attorney general, not have the smarts to foresee what critics would make of such a statement?

In Print / Editorial

Lauder’s Lament

By Editorial Board

It is an interesting thing he does – suggesting that Israel's adherence of eternal verities is a sign of the country “losing its way.”

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