What happens after Trump?
Everybody who didn’t vote for Donald Trump is in a panic over what will happen during his time in office.
Everybody who didn’t vote for Donald Trump is in a panic over what will happen during his time in office.
Chef Aaron Clayton may be something of an anomaly in the observant Jewish neighborhood of Pico-Robertson.
West Hollywood resident Roman Finarovsky was sitting on a bench recently, watching his fellow seniors play chess and dominoes in Plummer Park.
An idea that came up again and again over the course of the recent Women’s Leadership Network’s fourth annual Woman to Woman Conference benefiting Jewish Vocational Service (JVS) was the importance of support by family and those who become like family.
A couple of weeks ago in my column, I asked Donald Trump’s Jewish voters if, in their minds, our historical experience as Jews created any doubts or even a dilemma about supporting him.
Sim Shalom, the prayer for peace traditionally recited at the end of the Amidah in most Jewish prayer services, will get a new interpretation when it is performed at St. Ambrose Catholic Church in West Hollywood on Dec. 4 during the Hollywood Master Chorale’s annual holiday concert, “Anticipate!”
That books form the core of Jewish culture is not a new idea. Adam Kirsch reminds us, in the preface to his recently published “The People and the Books: 18 Classics of Jewish Literature,” that books are the “binding force” that has sustained a civilization and culture.
Urban legend has it that a golem lived in the Weissensee Cemetery in Berlin during the Nazi era, protecting the Jewish landmark from destruction while Jews successfully hid among its tombstones.
Nachum Inlender, a self-made entrepreneur with deep connections to the Southern California Jewish community, died Nov. 17 after a battle with cancer. He was 68.