Helping Each Other Become the People We Are Meant to Be
The only connection to Judaism I maintained in high school was through sporadic summers at camp. I returned there as a counselor before college, after my mom came out.
Remembering the Victims of Pogroms: Who Will Light a Candle?
A century ago, more than 200,000 Jews and others were killed in pogroms in the Pale of Settlement. Learn what’s being done to remember these horrific acts and those lost.
Taking Stock of Reform Jewish Education
Reform Jewish education has changed radically since 1955, when the National Association of Temple Educators (now the ARJE) was founded.
An Israeli Hospital of Humanity and Hope
On a recent visit to Israel, I witnessed extraordinary acts of human kindness at a hospital near the Syrian border.
Is There a Blessing for a Blintz?
When we moved to Israel, I kept Grandmother’s blintz pans. They were a link to the past: to heritage, to history, to family.
Is Israel Too Crowded?: Reflections from the Galilee
Israel cannot support the kind of population growth it has experienced over the past 70 years. What can we expect as this growth rate continues?
Gun Violence Prevention, One State at a Time
The Reform Jewish community has been very active in the Massachusetts Coalition to Prevent Gun Violence.
When You Step in the Shoes of the Stranger, Beware
While being beaten with a belt, Armoush managed to capture on video one of the attackers, a 19-year-old Palestinian from Syria identified by the police as Knaan S.
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