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Family First Feature
Matti Dushinsky transformed a challenging childhood into vibrant art

By Sara Bonchek

Family First Feature
We follow a typical frum family on Purim and see just how much men and women are on different communication planets

By Rivki Silver

Family First Inbox
"Instead of coddling our young adults, why don’t we let them grow up, take responsibility for their feelings, and let them come to the realization that their happiness and content ...

By Family First Readers

Family Farce: Purim 5782
Here, we reach out to teens for answers to some of our most pressing parenting issues

By Adina Lover

Family Farce: Purim 5782
In other words, it's The Room Next to the Kitchen, closest to Mommy

By Ariella Schiller

Family Farce: Purim 5782
How many other foods have achieved the widespread popularity that ketchup has enjoyed for decades?

By Yaakov Taub

Family Farce: Purim 5782
Bruchy suffered terribly, either with the challenge of mothering eight kids under the age of nine, or with an only child, or with the sudden fear that her first sentence was terri ...

By Esty Heller

Family Farce: Purim 5782
As a thinking, thoughtful woman, who realizes there is nothing random in the world, I wasn’t going to allow a pebble to ruin the beauty of my day

By Sara Sofer

Yiddishe Gelt
"We felt that the money was taken for granted, and it became an expectation, uncomfortably close to a demand"

By Mishpacha Readers

Recipes
They’re perfect as a much-needed snack, or for casual nibbling when you’re too full to cut a piece of meat.

By Sima Kazarnovsky

EndNote
Finally, the answers that have been eluding you

By Riki Goldstein

Magazine Feature
A city whose Torah glory was long in the past and had become a mussar byword for decadence, finds itself once again on the Torah map

By Gedalia Guttentag

Voice in the Crowd
Writing breathlessly about a trip to Yerushalayim is a bit high-school-yearbooky, but I don’t care

By Yisroel Besser

About-Face
In the spirit of V’nahafoch hu, Mishpacha contributors share the axioms they were sure of…until they weren’t

By Yael Schuster