Dedicated in memory of Rick Faber, the “kindness Torah” is small enough for children and the elderly to carry.
Chabad of Orange County recently hosted a Jewish Pop Art Event with “Pop Art Rabbi” Yitzchok Moully.
Memories of family and friends gathered as the four cups of wine are poured, the four questions asked and the Matzah served, all contribute to Passover’s popularity in the Jewish community.
The Thursday before Rabbi Yossi Marozov’s Saturday bar mitzvah in 1988, he made a special trip from his home in Montreal to the Crown Heights neighborhood of Brooklyn, N.Y.
MK Bezalel Smotrich (Jewish Home) toured a number of institutions in Beitar Illit and Kfar Chabad affiliated with the Chabad movement on Thursday, accompanied by Beitar Illit councilman Yeky Hershkof and Rabbi Yaakov Miyuhas.
An Israeli Broadway star who was exempt from performing on Friday nights and Saturday matinees because of his devoutness entertained an auditorium full of people celebrating the Chabad of Palm Beach Gardens.
ringing the warmth and tradition of Passover to the West Hartford Community, Chabad will be holding no less than seven public Passover Seders in Greater Hartford area!
A Jewish blessing handwritten on a tiny scroll protects township resident Debbie Mackow and her family every time they walk through their front door.
The Chabad Jewish Student Center at Arizona State University recently marked a milestone as construction began on a new, state-of-the-art student recreation center.
A Russian appeals court affirmed an expulsion order issued against an American rabbi working in Sochi, in what a local leader of the Chabad movement called a “dark day” for Jews.
“From the week of Purim, the phone will be ringing off the hook with questions on how to prepare for Pesach,” said Rabbi Meir Moskowitz of Lubavitch Chabad of Northbrook.
As Passover approaches and boxes of matza start hitting the supermarket shelves across the United States, the options seem endless: egg, whole wheat, rye, onion-flavored, chocolate-covered and many others. But in recent years, American consumers have been going back to basics: shmura matza, the hand-made kind used by the strictly observant.