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“Put down the device. Talk to a real human. Protect your soul”
Mishpacha Readers
Open Mic
Something is shifting in the kiruv world, and it’s not happening where you’d expect it
Dovy Grossman
Trigger Point
Here’s a ten-point guide to watching Trump’s foreign policy
Gedalia Guttentag
Trigger Point
Behind the mystery unit that blasted into Maduro’s military complex
Yitzchok Landa
Top 5
In honor of Shavuos, my top five
Ahron Cohn
Top 5
"This historically themed but very relevant train adventure puts you in the shoes of a shtetl Yid seeking a shidduch!"
Ahron Cohn
My Corona Time Capsule
Endless days blurred into months of upheaval. We strove to forge forward. Twenty-one readers reveal the single object that defined the tenor of these times
Family First Contributors
In Sights
“From the time of my bar mitzvah, I never slept in a bed except for Shabbos, and I attribute that to why I was saved”
Rabbi Chaim Aryeh Zev Ginzberg
In Sights
One has to be very careful about speaking lashon hara about Eretz Yisrael
Rabbi Chaim Aryeh Zev Ginzberg
More EndNote
EndNote

How to give kavod to boys who’d rather be elsewhere

By Riki Goldstein

EndNote

The privilege of praying with tzaddikim.

By Riki Goldstein

EndNote

Singer Isaac Honig: I can give you a few examples of songs that give me a real uplift. These are songs that were surely composed with a great feeling of connection because that comes across, giving the listener a derhoibene feeling. Yossi Green classics, like “Ka’ayol Taarog” and “Emes Ki Atah Hu Yotzrom” on Avraham

By Riki Goldstein

EndNote

If music has the power to transport us back in time, the distinctive voice of Reb Abish Brodt singing on last month’s release Mashmia Shuloim took listeners back a few decades. The Regesh series of albums were a well-loved heimishe sound in the 1980s and 1990s, and Reb Abish — also famed for his singing at

By Riki Goldstein

EndNote

“I was three years old when I first stood next to my grandfather, Chazzan Aaron Schwebel, when he led the davening on the Yamim Noraim,” says singer/composer Eli Schwebel. Today, a choir of 20 people stands around Eli’s father, Rivie Schwebel, when he davens for the amud on Rosh Hashanah, and grandson Eli is involved in

By Riki Goldstein

EndNote

How do you know you’ve made the right choice?

By Riki Goldstein