In Vayera, this week’s Torah portion, Abraham is in extreme pain — yet he is eager to reach out to strangers in warmth.
It is not only about survival, but about the sacred duty to protect life itself. Noah was not merely saving animals from the flood; he was preserving the breath of existence, the nefesh that lives in ...
Ninety-six teenage boys from fourteen countries recently completed a thirty-day commitment to put on tefillin every day, ...
We have arrived at ... a place where we are asked to look deep within ourselves and consider our identity and the future.” ...
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Beyond the Headlines: Light that endures
It was reported that Avinatan lost three centimeters in height during captivity—his body had simply shrunk and weakened. He ...
The Protocols of the Elders of … WHAT?! Antisemitic Forgery versus Anti-Zionist Erasure. The profound contradiction embedded ...
When he saw them, he ran from the tent entrance to meet them and bowed himself to the earth.” Abraham invited the three ...
The generation of the Flood could not stop Noah from boarding the ark and the American VP cannot derail the sovereignty train ...
Julie Kupershtein, mother of released hostage Bar Kupershtein, had been dreaming of this rally for almost two years. Her ...
Cincinnati Shlucha Chana Mangel has been named as one of The Cincinnati Enquirer’s annual 'Women of the Year,' which ...
Abraham needed to grow in faith on his long journey through life. It was his willingness to learn such faith that commended ...
They were young Israeli men and women. Held in captivity by savage terrorists, one would expect them to question the ways of ...
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