More than an Advice Column: A Bintel Brief

“My girlfriend and I are Russian revolutionists and freethinkers, but our parents want us to have a religious wedding—what should we do?” “Should I marry a woman with a dimple in her chin, when everyone says that people with dimples in their chins will lose their first husband or wife?” “I was a prosperous businessman[]

Being Alive: Chava Rosenfarb and Tree of Life

The Tree of Life: A Trilogy of Life in the Lodz Ghetto. Book One: On the Brink of the Precipice, 1939 Translated from the Yiddish by the author in collaboration with daughter Goldie Morgentaler

January 30 marked Eight years since the passing of Chava Rosenfarb, one of the most significant, albeit underrated, Yiddish writers of the late 20th century. Rosenfarb was born in 1923 in Lodz, Poland. At that time, Lodz was about one-third Jewish, and the experience of growing up in a city with such a strong and[]

Kosher Tartan: A Clan for Scotland’s Jews

The Northern Region Rabbinical Board during the annual Robert Burns dinner party, Glasgow, Scotland 1983 (Beit Hatfutsot, the Oster Visual Documentation Center, courtesy of the Scottish Jewish Archive Centre, Glasgow)

Tartan, a checkered pattern that is formed when the same set of colored bands intersect horizontally and vertically, is one of the defining visual features of Scottish culture. Tartan is taken so seriously, in fact, that there is official legislation defining tartan and the process of registering it officially. Historically, tartan was associated with the[]

Visions of Wontons: Jews and Chinese Food on Christmas

For those who celebrate, Christmas might conjure up images of sleigh bells, snow, and dancing sugar plum fairies. But for Jews, the holiday is just as likely to prompt mouthwatering visions of wontons, Kung Pao chicken, and other Chinese dishes. Jewish people eating Chinese food on Christmas is an image that has become so pervasive,[]

Is Turkey Even Kosher: Jewish Thanksgiving

Gershom Mendes Seixas, c. 1784 (Wikimedia Commons)

Every year, on the fourth Thursday of November, Americans celebrate the holiday of Thanksgiving. Thanksgiving is a quintessentially American holiday, one that not only ushers in the winter holiday season, but also tells a story about the country’s founding and its values. Thanksgiving as a holiday whose purpose is to set aside a time for[]

Pittsburgh Strong: Historic Tribute to a Vibrant Jewish Community

Grandfather, father and son at Bar Mitzvah. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA 1983. Photo:Morris Cohen, USA (Beit Hatfutsot, the Oster Visual Documentation Center, courtesy of Morris Cohen, USA)

From its founding, Pittsburgh was a city that was open to Jews, and a place where they could prosper. Jewish achievements are wound into the literal fabric of the city; Frankstown Road, which runs through the city, was named after David Franks, a veteran of the Revolutionary War and a prosperous merchant who sent so[]

The Lynching of Leo Frank

"In Georgia" Antisemitic caricature, Published: Masses, Robert Minor August 6, 1915 (From the John and Selma Appel Collection, Michigan State University Museum)

This week marks the 103rd anniversary of the lynching of Leo Frank, a Jewish industrialist who was falsely accused of a terrible crime and whose violent murder shook American Jews’ sense of security in their new home. Frank was born in Paris, Texas but his family moved to Brooklyn, New York, where he grew up.[]

Welcome Barbie! An Interview with Tefillin Barbie’s Creator

Tefillin Barbie Getting Ready to Learn Some Talmud. Photo Courtesy of Jen Taylor Friedman

With the opening of Beit Hatfutsot’s new exhibition, “Let There Be Laughter – Jewish Humor Around the World,” the Museum has welcomed Tefillin Barbie into its collection of objects that inspire, amuse, provoke, and enrich the story of the Jewish people. This year, Tefillin Barbie is celebrating her bat mitzvah: 12 years of bringing joy,[]

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