Jerusalem post magazine
Miracle at Soroka: How a frontline hospital weathered October 7, survived Iran war
From one war to the next, Soroka has learned to work smarter and create a level of response to meet the needs of their patients.
With the end of the pandemic, comes the return of choice - opinion
The pain and the pride in remembrance days for Holocaust, fallen soldiers
Make Remembrance Day meaningful by visiting these memorial locations
When there is no right answer
When loss begets more loss
Breaking the silence: Birth control and its side effects
Today’s young women are self-aware and wise.
First female mayor of Beit Shemesh: There is strength in acceptance, love
After her exciting surprise win, the city’s new female mayor tells us about her plan to rise above religious struggles and create a richer, more varied Beit Shemesh that represents everyone.
A Holocaust victim's diary depicting life in the Kovno ghetto
‘The urge to deny the horrific reality – or alternatively to adapt to it and concentrate on the here and now and cling to a seemingly ordinary life – was characteristic of life in the ghettos’
Fluctuating religious observance
In Tel Aviv, there are 29,700 formerly religiously observant people; this comprises 11% of the adult non-religiously observant population, which numbers 263,800.
In search of something
Tova Reich’s latest novel features maternal themes, international travel and flashes of reckoning on the bounds of Jewish life.
A familial tragedy
The heart-wrenching tale of a Russian Jewish family’s decision to emigrate to Israel is available in a new English translation.
PARASHAT VAYETZEH: Promise and hope
If we ask how so many men and women managed to preserve their identity and faith despite the suffering, the answer would be ‘the promise.’
Printing and popularity
It is of particular interest to find suggestions to study works that are not tainted by devotee allegiance.
A hassidic grandmama...
... who was an Internet troll