Today, as we witness burial after burial, it is painfully clear that nothing replaces children who are lost. Their memory remains forever, etched in the soul. Despair is easy; carrying on is hard.
Well, we have come to the end of the 53 (gematria of the word GAN – meaning garden) portions of the Torah. This week we start all over again. I once asked some first graders why we keep reading the ...
Despite his global travels, Tucson has remained a meaningful and beloved place for Alterowitz and his family. He and his wife ...
"Pundits" kept Sanskrit scholarship alive in remote settlements as British control swept across India, a major new research ...
MANY Christians “need to go back and re-read the Gospel” because they have forgotten that faith and love for the poor go hand ...
Veteran educators on a common sense way to fill teacher vacancies in the Philadelphia School District: Invest in the teacher pipeline ...
Nancy Grand will receive the Robert Sinton Award for Distinguished Leadership at the Jewish Federation Bay Area's annual Day ...
Leo wonders, ‘even though the teaching of Sacred Scripture is so clear about the poor, why many people continue to think that ...
Antisemitism, an American Tradition comes at a time when some sectors of America have embraced hatred toward Jewish people.
A Northwestern University professor has been awarded the Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences for his historical studies on ...
The Christian New Testament says that a good tree produces good fruit, and a bad or corrupt tree produces bad fruit (Matthew 7:17 ff; Luke 6:43). A Dutch saying flips that around, claiming the fruit ...