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The English Mishpacha launched in 2004 with a weekly package including the flagship Mishpacha Magazine and Mishpacha Junior. Mishpacha was the first full-color weekly magazine targeting the Anglo-Orthodox population worldwide, with the standalone children's magazine also serving as an innovation.
Avraham Yaakov Tarkieltaub (born 1986/1987) [1] is an American journalist and humorist who writes under the pen name Turx.The senior White House correspondent and chief political correspondent formerly for Ami magazine and now for Mishpacha, [2] [3] he is currently a political contributor at Newsmax.
[1] One humor column in Mishpacha magazine cataloged the idiosyncrasies and nuances of Jewish life. [10] Bashevkin has written extensively on Jewish theology, publishing articles on sin, failure, and Jewish doctrine and tradition, including the application of Jewish scripture in the 21st-century digital age.
Wrote articles for Mishpacha Magazine [14] Writes weekly articles in Yated Neeman [15] Blueprints: Torah views of the world and events around us (ISBN 1-4226-2614-8): Mesorah Publications [16] Days of Reflection, Days of Joy Discovering the Gifts of Elul, the Yamim Noraim and Succos(ISBN 1-4226-3909-6): Mesorah Publications [17]
In 1944, he became Rosh Yeshiva of the newly opened Ponovezh Yeshivah in Bnei Barak. [2] Rozovsky placed a strong emphasis on Talmudic skills, and also stressed personal perfection [5] and Mussar, [1] as well as the need to study other facets of Torah including Chumash with the commentaries of Rashi and Nachmanides.
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Greenblatt was born to a family with strong roots in the Brisk tradition and Soloveitchik dynasty, his father Rabbi Yitzchak Greenblatt being close with rabbis Chaim Soloveitchik and his son Yitzchok Zev Soloveitchik.
Avraham Yeshaya Karelitz (7 November 1878 – 24 October 1953), also known as the Chazon Ish (Hebrew: החזון איש) after his magnum opus, was a Belarusian-born Orthodox rabbi who later became one of the leaders of Haredi Judaism in Israel, where he spent his final 20 years, from 1933 to 1953.