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Family First Feature
When the cards are not in your favor

By Chav Eisenberg

Flashback
“One’s good deeds are one’s most authentic offspring.”

By Miriam Kosman

Family First Feature
Six students of Rebbetzin Denah Weinberg reminisce about this great woman and the transformational impact she had on their lives

By Ariella Schiller

Family First Feature
Family First convenes a panel to study why we’re so overwhelmed — and how to combat it

By Naomie Rubner

It Happened at Midnight: Pesach Theme 5783
While the world dreams and the stars twinkle, the Creator neither slumbers nor sleeps. Ten stories of midnight miracles, epiphanies, and revelations

By Family First Contributors

Family First Feature
Three women looked around, saw the void in their families, and realized they could be the ones to fill it

By Shterna Lazaroff

Family First Feature
 In this honest diary, Batya Sherizen recounts how encountering death shaped her into the woman she is today

By Batya Sherizen and Rafaella Levine

Family First Inbox
“Assign me with a Day of Defiance — so I can publicly, proudly buck the intimidating silliness. Perhaps I’ll be a voice of reason”

By Family First Readers

Magazine Feature
Rav Yitzchok Zilberstein is driven by a mission to show that there’s no sweetness like Torah when it’s practical and clear

By Eliezer Shulman and Gedalia Guttentag

Story Supplement
But then he went to America, and I could forget I had a brother. Which was fine with me! Why did he have to come home now?

By Penina Steinbruch

Magazine Feature
An observant Jew faced warlords and despots in risky territory, but never hid his Jewish identity

By Binyamin Rose

Jr. Serial
“So you moved to a brand-new place, with no family, and you just stayed there until you got married?”

By Rochel Samet

Magazine Feature
Lavi Greenspan went blind at age 26, but the challenge opened new vistas  that he hadn’t seen before

By Barbara Bensoussan

Sidekick
It’s like a conglomeration of the years of plenty and the years of hunger. There’s nothing, nothing to eat, and yet, there are egg kichels

By Esty Heller