“Please, it’s time to change the narrative and focus on what’s a bigger struggle to many. We must love every Yid… even a chareidi one”
Thank you for the beautiful article about Rav Ezra Neuberger. I read the letter from the girl who wrote that Rav Ezra deepened her appreciation for daas Torah and ended by saying that among the many talmidim mourning his loss, there is also one single girl out there mourning, too.
I am another girl mourning this loss. I went through a difficult challenge and Rav Ezra gave me hadrachah and guided me step-by-step with careful thought and compassion. There is so much that I learned and gained from his extraordinary hadrachah. The amount of time he gave me was so incredible, as if there weren’t so many others who needed him. His impact reached beyond the walls of the beis medrash, touching lives of so many, quietly and personally.
Name Withheld
I wanted to add to the excellent piece by Rabbi Moshe Walter about the dangers of social media.
It’s known how incredibly dangerous social media can be, but even the “innocent” part should play no role in frum society. I don’t need to see your holiday/matching kids/simchahs/joke/quote on your WhatsApp profile picture or videos on your status. Why do we keep sharing every detail of our lives with others? Is it to cause jealousy, to show we are keeping up with the Joneses?
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