Rabbi Jonathan Morgenstern By Steve Lipman About half a year before the pandemic struck in the United States, Rabbi Jonathan Morgenstern, rabbi of the Young…
An “Author” in History
Sara Lea Wetstein By Steve Lipman Summer began three months early in Baltimore last year. At least it did for a staff member of one…
“Rafi” By Steve Lipman During his eight years as an emergency room physician “BC” (Before Covid), Rafi* saw “just about everything.” Heart attacks. Broken bones.…
Yvette Kaweblum By Steve Lipman During the first weeks of the pandemic, Yvette Kaweblum, a Mexico-born resident of Boca Raton, Florida, rarely left her home;…
This is not a monolithic community, and therefore there are going to be multiple stories . . . multiple realities . . .
A great rabbi once told me: God closes one door and opens another. I hope the second door opens quickly.
Overnight we went from filling twenty [home delivery] orders to 120—sometimes even more than 150 a day; it flooded the system.
Just because the pandemic seems to be winding down, the economic impact is not over for everyone.
For locally owned businesses, new clients and sales are so often based on networking and word-of-mouth
Eleven shuls in four communities were surveyed at three time points during the pandemic.