The trucks are headed home to prepare for Shabbat using their special talents.
A teenage Yosef Yekutieli dreamed up the idea to hold an Olympic-style competition for Jewish athletes. Twenty years later, motorcycle brigades traveled the world to spread the word. The true story of the first Maccabiah Games.
From social justice activist to Nobel-winning scientist to the first woman (and first Jewish!) president of Mexico, Claudia Sheinbaum faces each new challenge by saying, "si!", "yes, I can."
A young girl is able to evoke smiles and memories when she plays the music of Swan Lake for her grandmother, a former ballerina who now suffers from Alzheimer's.
Told over a year of Jewish holidays, this rhyming book for preschoolers celebrates bodies of all shapes, sizes, and abilities.
A young girl thinks her town's Yemenite tradition of a pre-wedding henna ceremony is hopelessly old-fashioned until her grandmother enlists her to help prepare for the elaborate event.
This non-fiction picture book chronicles the lesser-known journey of thousands of Jews immigrating from anti-Semitic Russia through the port of Galveston, Texas in the early 20th century in search of a safer, brighter future in the vast Midwest.
When a young boy's neighbor calls him a “strange bird,” he decides to try out being a bird himself, discovering in the process that he'd rather just be himself even if others think him odd.
This interpretation of the familiar biblical story of the Exodus shifts the focus to Moses’ older sister Miriam, whose bravery and celebratory dance provided hope for her... Læs mere
When antisemitic flyers are posted around 1785 Boston, Joseph, Catherine, and Judah set out to investigate. With careful sleuthing, can the three friends find the culprit and get him to stop?
With its poetic message of welcome, the Statue of Liberty holds an important and beloved place in American history. In time for anniversary of our nation's founding, this biography of the woman who wrote the poem on its pedestal has deep relevance for readers today.
In this true story of courage and defiance, prisoners of the Warsaw Ghetto write and bury deep underground a complete record of what they endured. After the war, Hersh Wasser, the only survivor who knows where the records are buried, leads the effort to recover them.