All posts by y_litvak@hotmail.com

Feature article in Tachlis Magazine and two articles in Jewish Home

It’s vacation time, and my children and I are enjoying spontaneity, lack of formal schedule, exploring places we’ve never been to, painting their rooms, and just spending lots of time together as a family. I haven’t had much time to work, but some articles were published this week, though the one in The Tachlis Magazine I wrote week ago: Being Jewish in Tokyo (page 48).

Two articles in Jewish Home LA: on Israel advocacy on campus at University of California, Irvine and on Los Angeles volunteers in Israel helping feed the poor.

Have a wonderful Shabbos!

Articles in Jewish Home and book update

Two short articles in Jewish Home this week: on the appointment of new dean at Touro College LA and on the new KosherQuest app that helps access kashrus information on the go.

My novel, Swords and Scrolls, is almost ready to go to print! I received a proof, my daughters and I went through it, found some typos and the like, and sent in the corrections. IY”H will keep you posted. For now, here’s the blurb from the back cover:

It’s not easy being a teenager in Eretz Yisrael in the days of King Antiochus. Fifteen year old Elisha is curious about the mysterious new building in Yerushalayim, while his newly married cousin Rivka is suspicious of the changes that threaten to disturb her peaceful existence. Rumors abound that a large army is on its way. Will Rivka have the courage to stand up for her beliefs? Will Elisha win the battle raging in his soul?

Have a wonderful Shabbos and an easy and meaningful fast!

The Secret Ingredient — now online

In case you didn’t get a chance to read this story in Inyan last year, I just put it up online. If you’re on the Torah through Literature mailing list you should be getting the link in your email.

Otherwise, you can get it here.

If you don’t have internet access please email me directly and I’ll be happy to email it to you as an attachment.

The story is about the Beis Hamikdash — timely for the Nine Days. Hope you enjoy it!

Story in this week’s Inyan and other updates

Hi everyone!

Hope you had an easy and meaningful fast. It was a little lively here, with the heat outside too much to handle without a drink, and with certain kids getting bored enough to wash the bathtub. Of course, getting themselves and everything around them not only wet, but covered in piles of soap bubbles.

I’ve been thinking that with the Three Weeks, with all the sadness and sorrow, comes hope. Once something is destroyed completely there is a possibility for rebuilding. Somewhere in between the soap bubbles, the children and I learned about the Beis Hamikdash and looked at pictures and diagrams. Our collective hearts and souls are longing to be back in the special place where the Divine Presence rests, where Heaven touches earth. Feeling this longing is what the Three Weeks are all about.

Speaking of rebuilding, my story, Rebuilding the Wall, will be published in this week’s Hamodia’s Inyan Magazine, IY”H. I actually wrote it last summer, but it’s just as appropriate for this time of the year.

My book is, B”H, coming along. Officially named Swords and Shields, it should be out before Chanuka, IY”H.

Another project I’ve been working on, especially useful when traveling, is a list of Jewish books available on kindle. Here it is: www.kosherjewishebooks.com.

Have a wonderful week!

Article on the west coast NEFESH conference

Here is my article in Jewish Home on the local conference for Orthodox mental health professionals. The talks were fascinating. Unfortunately, I could only include a fraction of them in the article.

Have a wonderful Shabbos!

Article in Tachlis Magazine this week

Here, on page 40, is my article in Tachlis Magazine on Hava Siman Tov’s healthy cooking classes. If you’d like to connect with Hava, here is her Facebook page.

I’ve been really busy getting the older kids ready for camp (which, with teen girls, mostly involves shopping), and working on the final draft of my novel. Our schedule (or lack thereof) has been hectic this week, but I’m enjoying having all the kids home from school. If only I could find more time to get work done…

Have a wonderful Shabbos!

Articles and book update

My first article in Tachlis Magazine is here, on page 40. It’s about the same sefer Torah that I wrote about in the Jewish Home, but it’s a much longer and more involved article, with more details about the process and the journey, and with great pictures.

Here is a short article in Jewish Home, about celebrating Yom Yerushalayim in Los Angeles.

My Chanuka novel will be published, IY”H, by the new Jewish Children’s Book Club! I’m hoping that it will be out in time for Chanuka. IY”H will keep you posted. Meanwhile, I’m running it by several rabbis and rebbetzins, and B”H, getting lots of positive and helpful feedback. Now I’m busy addressing the editor’s comments, big and small.

Have a wonderful Shabbos!

Shavuos: The wedding day is almost here!

It’s almost Shavuos, the ultimate wedding day, with Hashem as the groom, the Jewish people as the bride, and the Torah as the wedding ring. At matan Torah, Hashem picked up Har Sinai and held it over us as a chuppa. Har Sinai was decorated with flowers. The shofar and the thunder provided the sound effects. It must have been a beautiful and awesome experience. All the Jewish souls were there, and the experience is engraved deep into our souls, even if we don’t remember it consciously.

Like every relationship, the marriage between Hashem and the Jewish people needs conscious effort in order to succeed. And Shavuos is our yearly opportunity to renew our commitment.

It’s not always easy. I’m sure all of us at times wring our hands in desperation and feel ready to throw in the towel. But we push on, and keep going. Persistence is a Jewish trait, honed throughout centuries of exile. And ultimately, we know that it’s all worth it. Looking at the world around us, sinking deeper and deeper into relative morality, I feel fortunate to have the Torah with its absolutes.

May Shavuos this year be joyful and powerful, as we reconnect to Hashem and His Torah once again. Have a wonderful Shabbos and Yom Tov!

Two articles in Jewish Home this week

This article is about an upcoming local event where women and girls will be able to donate their hair to be made into wigs for children with cancer.

This article is about the new sefer Torah at a local shul and its journey to kivrei tzaddikim. A longer and more detailed article about it is coming up, IY”H.

Good Shabbos!

Learning and Loving it

I wrote this for a Jewish homeschooling conference that took place yesterday in Baltimore. Here’s the full text:

The day after Pesach my ten year old daughter decided to make a siyum on a perek of Navi that she had finished. Two weeks before Pesach, when she had actually finished the perek, I had vaguely mumbled something about making a siyum some time soon and promptly forgot all about it. But once Pesach was over I had no excuse to delay her party. Especially since it involved real milchig ice cream.

Excited, my daughter began to discuss with her older sister who she’d like to invite. “I’m not inviting anyone who goes to school,” she said. Her list only included homeschoolers. Her sister agreed with her wholeheartedly. A siyum is not a birthday party. It is a celebration of Torah learning. My daughter wanted to give a speech and share what she had learned with other girls who would actually appreciate it. She didn’t want anyone rolling her eyes or spacing out. School kids are just not interested in learning, according to my daughters.

The beauty of homeschooling is the genuine love of learning I’ve been privileged to observe in all my children, even the older ones who are now in school. Homeschooled kids never lose their curiosity and their joy of discovery. When we learn Chumash with my daughter and her friend each of them gets excited when it’s her turn to read. After my husband learns Mishna with my son he is always eager to tell me what he learned. My children think about what they are learning outside of our official learning time and apply what they learned to real life situations. To them, learning is about life and life is about learning.

All children are born with a natural desire to learn. It is beyond the scope of this article to discuss why and how school children lose this desire. But I would like to describe how homeschoolers nurture it and maintain it.

Homeschooling parents are attuned to their children. We enjoy spending time with our children and getting to know them. We try to let go of any expectations or preconceived notions of what our children should be like, and we learn to appreciate them just as they are. And along the way, we learn about their interests, strengths, and weaknesses. Intuitively, we pick up on their learning styles and recognize which approaches work best in teaching them whatever they need to know. We give them all the time in the world to develop at their own pace, without measuring their achievements against someone else’ scale. At the same time, we notice the areas where they get stuck and help them over those humps. Sometimes, that involves hiring a tutor, as was the case with my daughter who struggled with reading due to dyslexia. And other times, it simply involves lots of encouragement, and perhaps even pushing. We are aware of our children’s potential and do not accept anything less than them doing their very best.
And of course, we make learning exciting. For our family, that involves reading lots of books and using a literature-based curriculum whenever possible.

The concept of using living books in a literature-based curriculum has been around for over a century, since the days of Charlotte Mason, a British educator who devised an innovative approach to education. Her methods are still widely used by homeschooling families. The living books approach is frequently used by Christian homeschoolers, and there are many materials available for them. These days, with the growing number of secular homeschoolers, there are many secular living books out there. Currently, we use Life of Fred for math, The Sassafras Science Adventures for science, and various well-researched historical fiction novels for social studies. My children look forward to reading these books every day. My six year old son has been known to sabotage my laundry folding efforts by begging me, “Can we do science now? Pleeease?”

Over the years, as I observed my children’s excitement about a literature-based curriculum, I’ve been trying to use a similar approach to Torah studies. Unlike secular studies, there is nothing ready made available for Jewish homeschoolers. So I’ve been putting together my own list of living books. We’ve read the Naftail in the Beis Hamikdash series by Rabbi Yaakov Meir Strauss. We all enjoyed it, and learned a lot. We’re reading Avner Gold’s Ruach Ami series, currently volume 8. From previous volumes, we learned about Jewish life in Europe in the 17th century, about the Shabtai Tzvi saga and its tragic aftermath, and about living as a secret Jew in Spain during the Inquisition. Right now, in honor of Sefiras Haomer, we are reading And Rachel was his Wife, a novel about Rabbi Akiva’s wife. This morning, when we began our learning, the children asked if we could read it first.

There are many other good Jewish living books out there. But there aren’t enough. I would love to see a lot more books, on various Torah topics, that could together form a whole comprehensive curriculum.
We homeschoolers are creative problem solvers. If something we want is not yet available we think of a way to solve that problem. And so I embarked on an adventure. As a writer, I am working on the kinds of books I’d like my children to read. But one person can only do so much. So I invited other Jewish writers to join me. G-d willing, we will be working together on producing living books that inspire as well as educate. I began a Torah through Literature blog, where I post book lists, book recommendations, tips, and G-d willing, announcements about new books as they come out.

I invite you to join me on this journey and visit the blog at torahthroughliterature.com. Please subscribe to receive the updates as soon as they are posted. Who knows, maybe by the time our children are raising their own children, G-d willing, there will be not one, but many literature-based Jewish curricula to choose from.