Inside ArtScroll – Week of July 7 08

Tour Jewish Europe with Rabbi Paysach Krohn – right from the comfort of your own home!

Through his unique book, Traveling with the Maggid, and three sets of CD-Rom videos, you’ll experience Rabbi Krohn’s trips to the historic sites of pre-war Torah life in Europe. The videos feature hours of awe-inspiring touring to such sites as Vilna, Volozhin, Telshe, Baranovitch, Minsk, Mir, Nikolsburg, Pressburg and more. You’ll absorb insightful background on such legendary giants as the Chofetz Chaim, the Tosafos Yom Tov, Reb Noam Elimelech of Lizhensk, Chozeh of Lublin, the Gerrer Dynasty, Rav Meir Shapiro, the Rama, the Bach, the Netziv, Sarah Schenirer, the Alter of Slabodka, Reb Chaim Ozer, Reb Elchonon Wasserman and other great leaders whose legacy still inspires us.

Rabbi Krohn’s book, Traveling with the Maggid, chronicles his journey through Lithuania and Belarus in 2003 with 125 group members, among them Rabbi Shlomo Brevda, Rabbi Moshe Mordechai Chodosh, Rabbi Shmuel Avigdor Feivelson, and Rabbi Avrohom Zelig Krohn. There are over 100 color images highlighting Rabbi Krohn’s stirring narrative. Readers will love this pictorial guide through eleven Torah centers.

The three-disc CD-Rom Catching Sacred Letters preserves the powerful impact of this tour, including many surprising encounters along the way. Eternal Luminaries is a three-disc expedition with Rabbi Krohn to renowned German, Austrian, and European towns & villages of past Torah giants. From Majestic Peaks to a Valley of Tears, also three discs, takes you on an unforgettable exploration of Jewish Poland.

Rising fuel costs are curtailing trips for many, but you can still enjoy exciting Jewish travels this summer. With the book, the CD-Rom’s and your computer, you can spend many evenings discovering the greatness and grandeur of the Torah world of yesteryear.  It’s been said “we can’t know where we’re going until we know where we’ve been”. Through his one-of-a-kind book and CD-Rom’s, Rabbi Krohn has opened up a remarkable portal in time and space to enrich your personal journey into the Jewish future.

Publisher’s Note: Rabbi Krohn’s next book, In The Spirit of the Maggid, is scheduled for publication for this coming Chanukah season.

It’s Official! Announcing Susie Fishbein’s Next Cookbook Project!

Kosher by Design series have inspired a revolution in kosher cooking, bringing simple elegance to home dining and entertaining. Now author and chef Susie Fishbein announces the pending release of her sixth project, Kosher by Design Lightens Up. Susie says, “These nutritious recipes are easy to integrate into your everyday menus. Anyone looking to migrate into a better way of eating and living will find delicious options here.”Kosher by Design Lightens Up is a gorgeous culinary guide, bursting with easy-to-do ideas for eating and feeling better. This cookbook teaches healthy cooking and food combining techniques, with special commentary by certified nutritional expert Bonnie Taub-Dix, spokesperson for the American Dietetic Assn.
 
Kosher By Design Lightens Up will feature:
·       Over 145 brand new recipes
·       Over 160 full color photos
·       Over 320 pages
·       Creative entertaining ideas, including oil olive tasting, a party spritzer station and more!
·      Simple, healthy approaches to: cooking oils, sweeteners, whole grains, superfoods, smarter shopping, and more efficient kitchen gadgets.
·       Comprehensive cross-reference index
 
Kosher By Design Lightens Up is scheduled for release on November 3. To pre-order your copy, just click HERE.

Rabbi Abraham Twerski on Nachum Segal Radio Tue July 1

Celebrated author, teacher, lecturer, and clinical psychiatrist Rabbi Abraham Twerski, M.D., was a guest on NY radio JM in the AM, hosted by Nachum Segal on Tuesday, July 1. You can hear his 15 minute interview HERE. Rabbi Twerski has written over 50 books, over 30 with ArtScroll Mesorah Publications. His most recent work is the two-volume Shabbos Companion. He’s currently work on a new book, due out near Chanukah, which is a delightful commentary on four profound Chassidic stories.

Author Interview: Project Y.E.S. Director Publishes Straight Talk Book on Parenting


Rabbi Yakov Horowitz is the dean of Yeshiva Darchei Noam in Monsey and the director of the Agudath Israel’s Project Y.E.S. (Youth Educational Services). He recently published Living & Parenting: A Down-to-Earth Guide,his first book with ArtScroll Mesorah Publications, which features some of his best, most pragmatic solutions for helping all of today’s Jewish youth – mainstream and at-risk – maximize their potential. For over 25 years, he has specialized in reaching out to marginalized Jewish youth and assisting their parents in raising them effectively. His results have been significant and some former students have admitted “this rabbi saved my life”. He spoke to broadcaster Gavriel Aryeh Sanders in this exclusive first-person interview.

GS: Rabbi Horowitz, every book has a process of germination. What was yours for Living & Parenting?

RYH:
It wasn’t so sophisticated, actually. I’ve published numerous articles over the years on the subjects of parenting, education and dealing with pre-risk/at-risk youth. I felt that presenting the most practical ones in a single volume would help parents raise their children more effectively.

GS: What’s the meaning behind the title of “Living & Parenting”?

RYH: Parenting is really a reflection of our own lives, as all-too-often, the challenges that we face with our children are really related to issues that we face as adults. I wanted to address the bigger picture and help parents, along with educators, improve their quality of life while equally helping them help their kids do the same.

This book is all about helping parents think outside the box and develop a multitude of approaches and solutions to child rearing. Using a tool analogy, if all you have is a hammer, then everything looks like a nail. My goal is to give students, parents, and teachers more tools to manage their lives better.

GS: You started out at 22 years old teaching a weaker class of eighth grade boys. Did you know what you were getting into?

RYH: Colleagues said I’d be pigeon-holing myself, that I’d never get a strong class. But the naiveté of my youth worked to my benefit. I believed I could do it. More importantly, I believed the kids themselves could rise to my level of expectation. It often took some individualized and unique approaches, but they were often effective with children who had never previously succeeded in school.

GS: How so?

RYH: Rabbi Abraham Twerski told me years ago that spiritual health is invariably linked to healthy self-esteem and conversely that spiritual deficiency was linked to weak self-esteem. Poorly performing students tend to have pretty low self-esteem; they don’t easily trust authority figures, either. I took the approach of empowering my students with incremental successes which affected their educational, social, and familial worlds. I remember one case where I inherited a new class. Nice kids but very passive; lots of quiet desperation in their lives. My first action was to take them outside for a spontaneous half-hour of baseball. That earned me the right to hold their attention on matters of learning.

GS: What is your approach to learning, especially Talmudic skills?

RYH: You said the right word. It’s skill-based. Many kids today are in “sink or swim” mode. They don’t have a solid foundation in the essentials of understanding language, which is the key to understanding thought and meaning! This applies to Gemara, Chumasheven the SiddurThe bright ones figure it out; the average ones lope along; and the rest sink into a malaise of despair, always running but never catching up until at some point, they start dropping out of the race. Adults may view it as defiance; I view it as exhaustion. I’ve worked hard to create systematic, consecutive, and success-based steps which have kids smiling to themselves. Early on in our learning, they sense that I believe they can do it. The tipping point occurs when they believe they can do it.

GS: How did you structure Living & Parenting?

RYH: Bnei Torah. Two chapters comprise a checklist to determine if sending your teen to learn in Israel is in their best interest. Three chapters are devoted to understanding and nurturing your child’s unique learning patterns. Eight chapters detail a methodology for constructive criticism. I discuss life skills, independent learning skills, dealing with kids who’ve lost a parent. I share my experiences of talking to kids who are angry, disenfranchised, confused, and sometimes just plain bored. I even have a chapter on kiruv (outreach) for our children.

GS: You mention mastery of the rudiments of Lashon Kodesh. Why?

RYH: Take the study of Chumashfor example. More than ninety percent of all words that appear in Chumash are variations of only 270 root words! There are 26 verbs and 38 nouns that appear in Chumash more than 500 times each! If we were to give children a proper rudimentary understanding of these, teaching them the shorashim (roots) and the shimushim (prefixes, suffixes, etc.) at the time they start to learn Chumashwe’d be giving them the educational training wheels they need to succeed. One cannot master Rashi’s commentary without this basic knowledge.

The same thinking applies to Gemara. Think about it. Once boys start learning Gemara, we remove the nekudos, introduce Aramaic, and dive into lengthy exchanges of logical interplay. A little time invested up front in the early learning stages can make all the difference when the student reaches the teen years. I believe it’s a significant component of academic self-esteem.

GS: How independent are your methods and views?

RYH: I’m certainly no maverick. My life, work, perspective, and values are based on the best of wise counsel – what we call DaasTorahThe first chapter in Living & Parenting explains what that is and why it’s so important. Perhaps what makes me a little different is that I’ve never become jaded by the job. I still do what I did back when I was 22 in that first eighth grade class – I see students not as they are, but rather as they can become.

GS: Hatzlacha rabbah with the book, the yeshiva, with Project Y.E.S. and with every student and family you help.

RYHThank you. Early feedback on the book has been very encouraging. What makes all the time put into the book worthwhile is when I get a note or email from a grateful parent informing me that they are finding child rearing easier now that they have more tools in the box.

View Table of Contents and Sample Pages from Living & Parenting here.

Order the book online here.

Visit Rabbi Horowitz’s website here.

Hear Rabbi Horowitz’s recent radio interview here.

Yet Another Cookbook in the Kosher by Design Series?

Absolute fact! Susie Fishbein is rapidly finishing up her sixth culinary creation in the most popular kosher cookbook series ever published.  Anyone concerned with healthy eating and cooking (that should be most all of us, no?) will love the delicious new recipes in Kosher by Design Lightens Up.  Watch this blog for more news on the release of Susie’s latest.  

By the way, just because Passover is over doesn’t mean Passover by Design is a closed cookbook till next year.  130 of the recipes are gluten-free, which makes Passover by Design a source of year round delight for anyone affected by Celiac disease.  
To see the complete series of Kosher by Design cookbooks published to date, click here

Life Is A Test Going International

The impact of Rebbetzin Esther Jungreis’ Life Is A Test has been extraordinary. Now in its fourth impression since Nov. 7 (over 30,000 copies in print) , this remarkable book is literally changing lives across the English-speaking world. A Spanish and a Hebrew edition are in preparation now, with plans for other languages in the coming year. Over the next few months, Rebbetzin Jungreis plans to present her Life Is A Test message in France, Venezuela, Argentina, the UK, Israel, and South Africa.

"Holy Woman" on Tour

Two years ago, ArtScroll published Holy Woman: The road to greatness of Rebbetzin Chaya Sara Kramer, written by Sara Yoheved Rigler, a seasoned writer who was privileged to have a close relationship with Rebbetzin Kramer. This remarkable book, now in its seventh printing, has rocketed to become ArtScroll’s second bestselling biography. A featured columnist for Aish HaTorah, Mrs. Rigler anticipates a second new book through ArtScroll in August. She is currently on a whirlwind speaking tour America. She is speaking twice in the NYC area this week – tonight (Wed) at Congregation Aish Kodesh in Woodmere NY and Sunday night, June 17 at the Bialystocker Shul, 7-11 Willett St., Lower East Side of Manhattan. For information, call 718-921-9000, ext. 226.
To learn more about the book Holy Woman, click here.
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