There are some places you’ll almost never find a secular Jew at. Shabbat services. A Richard Spencer rally. NASCAR. The Orthodox section of Crown Heights? Oh, most certainly not. What’s there to like ...
Kashrut, pronounced “kash-root,” meaning eating kosher, is a series of laws that some Jews observe with respect to food. These laws come from the Torah and have been in place for thousands of years.
Religious Jewish women, the primary cooks in Orthodox families, have long ruled kosher kitchens and served as crucial, informal kosher watchdogs for their families and guests. But those women are ...
The IDF is currently working to update the General Staff guidelines concerning religion, kashrut, and the rights of religious soldiers in all military units. Yedioth Aharonoth reported on Tuesday that ...
The Torah in this week’s portion mandates that for animals to be kosher they must possess two characteristics – cloven hooves and chew the cud. (Leviticus 11:3) In contemporary times there is much ado ...
The Orthodox Union is limiting its certification of kosher meals aboard El Al flights after two incidents in which nonkosher food was brought onto planes. Officials at the union, which certifies the ...
The Torah in this week’s Parsha mandates that for animals to be kosher they must possess two characteristics – cloven hooves and chew the cud. (Leviticus 11:3) In contemporary times there is much ado ...