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Barbara Bensoussan

Barbara Bensoussan

Barbara Bensoussan is the quintessential Jewish dropout who never finished her Ph.D. but went on to teach English and Introductory Psychology at the University of Michigan.  She worked as a social worker for OHEL, an ESL teacher, and various other stints before easing into full time writing.  Her 20-year-plus career followed the growth of frum publishing, and she wrote articles for many Jewish publications before settling in at Mishpacha.  Barbara is the author of the young adult novel A New Song (Targum), the food memoir The Well-Spiced Life (Israel Bookshop), and the co-author of Converted Masters, an art book; she has also authored private memoirs and taught writing workshops.  All of this, of course, gets accomplished in the margins of Barbara’s day job as a wife, mother and grandmother.

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Tuesday, December 03, 2024
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Profiles
Wednesday, August 30, 2017
Rabbi Avraham Kelman z”l’s greatest achievement: the founding of a yeshivah back in the 1950s against all odds, and four ...
Profiles
Wednesday, August 23, 2017
“The Jews had forgotten how to do shechitah for lamb and cows, so they ate only chicken,” Geula says. “They kept many traditions, but no longer remembered why.”
Profiles
Wednesday, August 23, 2017
Chef Shalom Kadosh creates sumptuous kosher cuisine for heads of state — and he’s put Israel on the culinary map.
Profiles
Wednesday, August 09, 2017
Rabbi Harry Berkowitz went from riding shotgun with transit police to serving as chaplain for the MTA.
Magazine Feature
Wednesday, July 26, 2017
Frum housewife-turned-activist Linda Sadacka and her band of “Moms on a Mitzvah” won’t rest until they do all they can ...
Profiles
Wednesday, June 21, 2017
The newly released Early Years, documenting the Lubavitcher Rebbe's early life, represents the painstaking efforts of researchers ...
Profiles
Wednesday, May 24, 2017
While he still sees patients from eight till six, after hours Queens pediatrician Dr. Hylton Lightman has become a quiet ...
On Topic
Wednesday, May 10, 2017
You may be separated by hundreds of years and thousands of miles, but DNA testing is making it possible for far-flung family members to reconnect
Magazine Feature
Wednesday, April 05, 2017
How did a group of ragtag amateurs from the 1960s launch today’s Jewish music scene? And whatever happened to these players, who were a newfangled alternative to the old-fashioned ...