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Latest The Mix
Shul with a View
Rabbi Ron Yitzchok Eisenman
Shul of My Youth
Jean-Yves Camus
LifeLines
C. Saphir
5 to 9
Moe Mernick
Second Thoughts
Rabbi Emanuel Feldman
Anchors
American Jewry — all but the Orthodox — long ago lost this struggle W   e have come a long way. Once upon a time, the Jewish community viewed intermarriage as a calamity, to be fought vigorously. Those who married out were all but ostracized. Some parents whose children married out of the faith even sat shivah
Family Table Contributors
Point of View
Pesach brings a unique opportunity to take a deeper look at what our eyes are actually seeing
Rabbi Moshe Grylak zt"l
Point of View
The purpose of a succah is to curb the harmful influences that come with the joy of accumulating property
Rabbi Moshe Grylak zt"l
Double Take
I know you mean well, but my son is not your project
Rochel Samet
Double Take
Are you taking advantage of my daughter to build your booming businsess?
Rochel Samet
Text Messages
Thank you, for both your honest feedback and your friendship-from-afar
Eytan Kobre
Text Messages
It's the day when as a community, time and again we fail mightily in our designated role on this earth
Eytan Kobre
Second Thoughts
But why do I assume that this “it” is a reincarnation of a human being?
Rabbi Emanuel Feldman
Second Thoughts
Esteemed and honored professor: Half of Israel is proud of you, but the other half... is embarrassed by you
Rabbi Emanuel Feldman
More The Mix
Day in the Life

Chaim Sinai Orbach is the president and CEO of CSO Radio in Lakewood, New Jersey

By Rachel Bachrach

Double Take

Did the eighth-grade rebbi shut my son out of high school?

By Rochel (Grunewald) Samet

Shul with a View

And then it happened. I knew it would

By Rabbi Ron Yitzchok Eisenman

LifeLines

My parents were people of faith, devout Catholics, while Larry’s parents, though nonobservant, were proudly Jewish. But what identity were we giving our children?

By C. Saphir

5 to 9

“Rejection is Hashem’s protection” 

By Moe Mernick

Second Thoughts

All of us can reset the titles of our own lives

By Rabbi Emanuel Feldman