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  • Belief section icon
    What My Kippah Means to Me

    As a butch lesbian, wearing a yarmulke connects me to my people—and to myself

    byOlivia Swasey
  • Chanel's Pharrell Williams at the 13th Métiers d'Art show in Paris, France, December 6, 2016.
    Chanel's Pharrell Williams at the 13th Métiers d'Art show in Paris, France, December 6, 2016.
    News section icon
    Pharrell Sports a Chanel Kippah (or Something Like That)

    The world of fashion has the power to unite. Make it so.

    byRachel Shukert
  • Belief section icon
    Honor Thy Mother and Father

    Sure, fine, but what does that actually mean in practical everyday terms? This week’s ‘Daf Yomi’ Talmud study unpacks filial duty.

    byAdam Kirsch
  • An Ultra-Orthodox Jew celebrates the holiday of Purim in Jerusalem, Israel, March 6, 2015.
    An Ultra-Orthodox Jew celebrates the holiday of Purim in Jerusalem, Israel, March 6, 2015.
    News section icon
    8 Last-Minute Kippah-Related Costumes for Purim

    You’re welcome, adults

    byMarjorie Ingall
  • Community section icon
    China Dolls

    Most of the world’s Judaica isn’t made by Jews. Much of it comes from the Far East. Should we care?

    byDavid Zvi Kalman
  • Patrick Reilly.(Image reproduced with permission by the author.)
    Patrick Reilly.(Image reproduced with permission by the author.)
    News section icon
    Uncovering Anti-Semitism in Malmö, Sweden

    Journalist Patrick Reilly wore a kippah for a day and documented the reactions

    byElissa Goldstein
  • Nørrebro Street(Bo Nielsen/Flickr)
    Nørrebro Street(Bo Nielsen/Flickr)
    News section icon
    Hiding Judaism in Copenhagen

    In Denmark, known for its historic tolerance, Jews are now threatened and told to remove their ‘Jewish hats’

    byMichael Moynihan
  • (AFP/Getty)
    (AFP/Getty)
    News section icon
    Marine Le Pen Calls for Kippah Ban

    Front National Party says kippot not kosher in public

    byAdam Chandler
  • The ark of Beth Shalom Rodfe Zedek in Chester, Ct., designed by Sol LeWitt with architect Stephen Lloyd.(Lon Seidman)
    The ark of Beth Shalom Rodfe Zedek in Chester, Ct., designed by Sol LeWitt with architect Stephen Lloyd.(Lon Seidman)
    Arts & Letters section icon
    Consequence

    Sol LeWitt’s minimalist installations for synagogues and Jewish institutions have given the late conceptual artist an afterlife he’d approve of

    byRobin Cembalest
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