Ask the Sources
First leave your name and email. After registration, Israel will read the question, understand the situation, find suitable sources, and assemble a human answer.
Ask your question
Write in your own words. You do not need perfect language. The real situation matters.
Israel
Guide through Jewish sources
First he identifies the essence of the question, then searches the sources: Torah, Tanakh, Talmud, Shulchan Aruch, Rambam, Rashi, Ramban and other sages. Only then does he assemble the answer.
How it works
- 1
Registration
Name and email are required before the answer.
- 2
Understanding
The system looks at the essence of the question and does not mix it with neighboring topics.
- 3
Sources
The answer is assembled through Torah, Tanakh, Talmud, Shulchan Aruch, Rambam, Rashi, Ramban and other sages.
Important
Israel helps you look at the question through Jewish sources. When personal help from a rabbi, beit din, doctor, lawyer or another specialist is needed, the answer will say so.
Questions and sources
What you can bring to Jewish sources
One Jewish Step is not built to pull a random quote. It helps clarify the real situation: what happened, what you are trying to understand, what next step is needed and which sources truly fit.
Family, children and grief
How to speak with a child, how to sit with pain, and why listening often comes before advice.
Shabbat, prayer and kashrut
How to begin practice without pressure, choosing one honest step instead of trying to become perfect at once.
Conversion, belonging and direction
How to check your motives, prepare questions and distinguish a personal feeling from a real process with a community and rabbi.
How to ask a better question
- 1Describe the real situation in simple words.
- 2Name what you need now: understanding, a decision, words to say, repair or comfort.
- 3Do not try to sound perfect. The living context matters more.
- 4If the situation involves danger, health, law or Beit Din, a competent person is needed, not only a website.
Related pages
Common questions
Can I ask personal questions?
Yes. Write the real situation simply. The system looks for suitable sources and assembles a calm answer.
Does this replace a rabbi?
No. One Jewish Step supports learning and orientation, but it does not replace a rabbi, community, Beit Din, doctor or lawyer.
Why are some answers cautious?
Because an honest boundary is better than confident invention. If sources are not enough or a specialist is needed, the site should say so.
