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Latest The Current
Washington Wrap
Omri Nahmias
A Few Minutes With
Gershon Burstyn
Metro & Beyond
Yochonon Donn
Inside Israel
Eliezer Shulman
Eye on Europe
Gedalia Guttentag
Mind Your Business
Gain exposure and credibility by writing a blog
Naomi Elbinger
Pesach Without Pressure
Windex — it’s all about happy Jews and Windex.
Bracha Stein
Pesach Without Pressure
If you’re getting frustrated, you’re probably spring-cleaning
Bracha Stein
Match Quest
Rules are a lot like clichés. They came about for a reason. And like clichés, sometimes they apply and sometimes they don’t
Sara Eisemann
Match Quest
I discovered two significant patterns regarding the women who were “skipped”
Sara Eisemann
Moonwalk
I wonder if the path is as lonely as I’ve been imagining, after all
Rochel Samet
Moonwalk
Wait, since when do I joke about these things? What’s happening to me?
Rochel Samet
Second Thoughts
When sleepless nights are haunted not by nightmares, but by indecision over a $25,000 wristwatch
Rabbi Emanuel Feldman
Second Thoughts
Why Torah study — in addition to being a crucial mitzvah — is so absorbing , intellectually stimulating, and all-consuming
Rabbi Emanuel Feldman
More The Current
Washington Wrap

As this national spectacle commences, we decided to take a look at what each side has to gain, or lose, from the process

By Omri Nahmias

Metro & Beyond

“The residents are very welcoming to the Jewish community,” he said. “Everyone will tell you that they have great relationships with their neighbors”

By Yochonon Donn

Inside Israel

  Will the tense security situation help facilitate the formation of a new government in Israel? Early in the week, it was the New Right’s Naftali Bennett who was the center of attention. After Blue and White party leader, Benny Gantz, reportedly offered Bennett and his running mate Ayelet Shaked the positions of defense minister

By Eliezer Shulman

Washington Wrap

Twitter and terrorists, and it’s probably time for Ilhan Omar to take a look in the mirror

By Omri Nahmias

Global View

Photo: AP/IMAGES I t would be easy to dismiss the protest movements in Lebanon and Iraq as a minor news item — disgruntled demonstrators complaining about the price of bread soon to be crushed by their countries’ militaries. But it’s also possible that something real is brewing in Beirut and Baghdad, something that might threaten Iran’s

By Gershon Burstyn

The Current

After an economic crisis that hurt almost everyone, Argentine Jews have high expectations for the new government — while remembering incidents of the past

By Yaakov Lipszyc