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Menachem Posner

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Rabbi Menachem Posner serves as managing editor at Chabad.org, the world’s largest Jewish informational website. He has been writing, researching, and editing for Chabad.org since 2006, when he received his rabbinic degree from Central Yeshiva Tomchei Temimim Lubavitch. He lives in Chicago, Ill., with his family.
Unless you’ve been living in Outer Space, and perhaps even if you have been, there’s a good chance that you are aware of the historic mission of Artemis II, which just took four crew members further from Earth than any human has ever been: a total of 252,...
A practical solution to a religious dilemma that has grown within certain Jewish cultures.
This past weekend, 5,000 Jewish teens from around the world gathered for a Shabbat of inspiration, Torah study, connection and Jewish pride. Here are our top 4 moments from the program:
Throughout the evening, many stories were told. Here are six that will bring tears of joy to your eyes.
Question: I'm a flight attendant, and I've noticed that many Hasidic Jewish passengers board flights carrying plastic shopping bags. For the longest time, I didn't even notice it, but now that I’ve started seeing it, I cannot help but wonder if there is s...
The Angel of Death is not an evil being or an enemy of G-d, but just one more faithful servant of the Creator.
Shalosh Regalim literally means “three feet” and refers to the three times when every Jewish male was obligated to appear before G-d in the Holy Temple.
The word sichah, שיחה, means “speech” in Hebrew. In the context of the Rebbe’s teachings, a sichah refers to a semi-formal speech given to the general public or a group of people.
The Torah records that Moses and his wife, Zipporah, had two sons, both born in Midian before Moses returned to Egypt—as G-d’s agent—to lead the people of Israel out of slavery.
Oneg Shabbat (עונג שבת, pronounced OH-neg shah-BAHT or OY-neg SHA-boss) is a Hebrew term that literally means “delight of the Sabbath.”
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