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Magazine Feature
What happens when you are so far from civilization that you never hear any news? In the vast world around us, you can run, but can you hide?

By Yisrael Rutman

F is for Friendship
I roll my eyes. It’s the first time I can remember wishing that Penina lived too far away from my house to just walk over.

By Ruchama Schnaidman

Story Time
“I’m not letting your husband free until he can dance the hopak in my bear costume. How do you like that, eh?”

By Yehuda Bromberg

Crisscross
Ima looks upset. “He said,” she whispers, “that he’s willing to trade. He will get his son and we can keep his daughter.”

By Tovy Mann

Teen Fiction
“Uh huh, what a surprise, trying to shirk your job, as usual! Well, too bad! No way will I pick up the slack just because you can’t manage to do the little bit Mommy assigned you! ...

By Rachelli Weinstein

Bricks and Ladders
“RaRa, where’s Hadas today?” I swallow and shift from foot to foot. Mommy’s green eyes flash, she doesn’t say anything.

By Ariella Schiller

Magazine Feature
Seemingly innocent baby toys and products may be harmful. Check out the research behind ten different baby products to see how you can minimize their risks or avoid them in the fi ...

By B. Gordon

Profiles
When Chaya Levy was diagnosed with cancer, she resolved she'd give her unborn child the greatest gift: life. Throughout her illness, she fought to see only Hashem’s good — and to ...

By Ariella Schiller

Normal Like Me
“It’s unethical for us to give him his eyesight back, but it’s ethical for him to insist on being blind and make the whole village take care of him? Are we going to stand by and l ...

By Ruti Kepler

Shared Space
Kivi had waved his hands — big deal, everyone is entitled to make a parnassah — but inside, he’d felt a prick of annoyance. This was going to be his concept. His place to make a m ...

By Dov Haller

Fiction
I dubbed him “the Monster.” His hulking figure, his glee at my near failures, made him monstrous in my eyes.

By Miri Sonnenfeld

The Money Trap
When they discovered that all of their possessions had been stolen, they thought they’d hit rock bottom. But things only went downhill from there.

By Gila Arnold