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Tania Shalom Michaelian

American Jewish teenagers came to Israel to study its history. Then Israeli history found them.
Buyers are holding back and unsold apartments are piling up as Israel navigates an uncertain period in the shadow of war, according to Treasury data.
A recent OneFamily retreat gives 47 widows and 120 children of Oct. 7 victims a chance to breathe, connect and build new memories alongside their loss.
Almost two years after being uprooted from their homes, children in northern Israeli are finally returning to classrooms.
From a culinary institute to a state-of-the-art medical center, Jewish National Fund-USA is helping to turn Israel’s northern region into a place of possibility.
A new poll by Israeli advocacy group Chochmat Nashim reveals that of nearly 400 women surveyed across 11 countries, 45.5% experienced “get” refusal.
“The loss is more than physical; it’s a blow to the story each place tells and the role it plays in the community,” Omri Shalmon, CEO of SPIHS, tells JNS.
At the Joe Alon Center near Kibbutz Lahav, survivors call for a shared future.
As part of the “Stories That Bind Us” initiative, the oldest released hostage reveals that he sang “Hatikva” hundreds of times during captivity.