How Tu B’Av, the ancient Jewish holiday of love, was revived
In 1932, a group of Orthodox girls celebrated the holiday by taking a nighttime hike into the woods.
Jeremiah Lockwood sought to revive the early 20th century style of cantorial music; he found unexpected partners in the Brooklyn Hasidic community.
In 1932, a group of Orthodox girls celebrated the holiday by taking a nighttime hike into the woods.
In all the author’s art history graduate courses, the word ‘Jewish’ was never mentioned
"Often I see someone after a hiatus and my breath catches in my throat, because suddenly they look just like their parents," Sokolsky writes.
Hungarian Yiddish may be today's most common Yiddish dialect but many Hungarian Jews in the old country didn’t even speak Yiddish.
The $470,000 grant will support research based on Yiddish-language testimonies from the USC Shoah Foundation.
Knowing how religion could separate people made my father find all faiths ridiculous at best, evil at worst.
Two women in Jennifer Stern's family were garment workers, like many Jewish immigrants and immigrants’ children at that time.
Before World War I, the Marienbad resort had hotels for the rebbes, replete with glatt kosher restaurants and ritual baths
For years, the author's parents hosted lively gatherings of Holocaust survivors in their home in Bensonhurst, Brooklyn.
Gitl Schaechter-Viswanath doesn't just edit Yiddish dictionaries. She's a maven in Indian cooking, too.
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