Sharing with you a poem titled “Ours is the night” that describes the contrasting feelings of peacefulness and worrying in the dark night.
Sharing with you the poem “Remember me” that deals with commemorating the memory of those who are no longer with us.
Sharing a poem called “After you left me” which invokes the sense of longing and sorrow that leads to going after a lost thing.
Sharing with you the poem “Hide and seek” that deals with loss, pain and memory.
Sharing with you a poem called “At the gates of my heart” that features loyalty and love along with despair and worries.
In the depth of the cold, dark winter, two well-known holidays filled with light, miracles and hope are celebrated: Hanukkah in Judaism and Christmas in Christianity. Are there more resemblances than it seems between these two holidays, why are they even celebrated and do other cultures observe similar holidays?
Halloween is a Christian holiday celebrated every year on October 31st and is mainly known today in its American version: costumes, haunted houses, carved pumpkins, creepy decorations and kids going from door to door and saying “trick or treat!” to receive candies. But have you ever wondered why is Halloween celebrated, what is the history of this holiday and how did it all even start?









