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Frieda Vizel left an ultra-Orthodox Jewish sect in New York in a crisis of faith at 25. But instead of cutting ties, she ...
"Keeping the Jewish community safe in NYC, and setting groundwork for the future, is the most important thing," said Rabbi ...
Many people in their 20s and 30s cheered and sang along with the klezmer stars onstage, kind of like a Yiddish rock concert.
As the Rebbe counseled during antisemitic violence in Brooklyn in the 1960s, it’s better to plant roots than to flee.
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After centuries of isolation, ultra-Orthodox Jews are engaging with the world more than everBrooklyn. Her sold-out tours and popular YouTube channel explore how this traditionally insular subculture is increasingly engaging with the wider world after centuries of separation. A recent ...
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