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Latest Cut ‘n Paste
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Shaindy Horowitz
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Gershon Fordsham
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Akiva Fox
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Elya Krolik
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Benyomin Wolfson
Step It Up
T here were only six chairs in the waiting area, three facing three. Hardly enough for an enormous bank like that. Facing me was an old Jewish woman, her non-Jewish helper, and a young frum mother holding a double stroller. On my side were two young yeshivish men, discussing something quite excitedly in Yiddish. Twice
Mindel Kassorla
Step It Up
When you focus on the now, the future becomes possible
Mindel Kassorla
Who Knows Eight: Chanukah Theme 5785
As we count our flames each night, do any of those numbers take on a life of their own?
Mishpacha Contributors
The Lonely Wait
Within all the sound, do we hear the voices of the young men and women themselves?
Faigie Zelcer
The Lonely Wait
Adopt a Shadchan (AAS) began with a small group of dedicated shadchanim, committed to helping singles find their match
Lisa Elefant
Silent Heroes
"Yes, it’s all true, and this is what makes yeshivah cooks heroes. But Zev is the leader of them all”
Shoshana Itzkowitz
Silent Heroes
In my heart of hearts, I was envious of each of them. They were touching souls and elevating spirits
Yocheved Kreps
One Day Closer
“Everyone wants to quit at some point, but if you don’t push yourself, you fall further behind and you’ll soon be off the wagon."
C.S. Teitelbaum
One Day Closer
The Torah tells us that after the death of Aharon’s two sons, “Vayidom Aharon — and Aharon was silent.” “But what about his wife?” asks Baruch. How did she cope?
Baila Rosenbaum
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Laureate’s Chef Buck, is a 60-something non-Jew who will surely merit Olam Haba. He is most certainly from the Chassidei Umos Ha’olam

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At one point, my mother asked me what I planned to do “when I grow up.” I was taken aback by her question. Wasn’t it obvious?

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Many times we regret our hurtful or negative words. But we almost never feel remorse for refraining from saying something or rethinking a response

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She told me she thought the book might be in Hebrew. I offered to look at it and confirm whether or not it was.

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The next day I took my tefillin, which I’d had since my bar mitzvah almost 30 years earlier, to my sofer, Reb Shua Lichtenstein.

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How could I demonstrate the indescribable?,Cut ‘n Paste: The Moment,How could I demonstrate the indescribable?

By Rochel (Grunewald) Samet