Leah R., Educator and Parent

I’ve read many books on wealth and mindset, but none grounded their advice in such profound spiritual clarity. Think and Grow Rich Like a Jew doesn’t just teach you how to manage money—it shows you how to elevate it into a sacred practice. The concept of Shefa, or divine abundance, helped me shift from fear to trust, and from scarcity to purpose-driven giving. A beautifully written guide for anyone seeking both material success and soulful alignment.

David M., Financial Coach

This book gets right to the point: your thoughts, words, and actions must align if you want to grow wealth—and the author shows you how to do it. I appreciated the blend of Jewish philosophy with neuroscience and practical financial habits. It’s rare to find a book that’s this values-driven and actionable. The budgeting and goal-setting exercises alone are worth the read.

Rachel T., 29, Freelancer

Honestly, I didn’t expect a book with ‘Jew’ in the title to hit so hard, but wow. This book breaks down so many toxic money beliefs I didn’t even realize I had. The stories and exercises make it really personal—and it somehow blends Torah, psychology, and real financial advice without being preachy. Super refreshing

Get the Book

Paperback (Israel Only)

Ships locally within Israel.

Payment available via credit card, Bit, or PayBox.

Paperback (US)

Available in the US through
Barnes & Noble.

Will be available soon on Amazon

Ebook (Worldwide)

Instant digital access.

Read on your phone, tablet, or computer anywhere in the world

Who this book is for

This book is written for readers who want to think clearly about money, success, and responsibility—without slogans, shortcuts, or spiritual evasions.

It draws on Jewish thought, sources, and tradition, but it is not written only for Jews.

You do not need to be Jewish, religious, or familiar with Jewish texts to benefit from this book. The ideas are explained in clear, modern language and are presented as a framework for real life—not as insider theology or cultural commentary.

Jewish wisdom has always taken the material world seriously: work, property, contracts, debt, investment, and obligation. While these ideas developed within a particular tradition, they address universal human questions—how to earn honestly, how to use resources wisely, and how to live with purpose.

This Book Is For You If:

  • You are uncomfortable with both prosperity hype and poverty romanticism
  • You want to understand how Jewish tradition actually thinks about wealth, effort, and responsibility
  • You care about values, but also about results
  • You want a framework you can apply to real financial decisions—not inspirational quotes
  • You believe money should serve a meaningful life, not replace it


This Book Is Not For:

  • Get-rich-quick formulas
  • Mystical guarantees or segulot
  • Guilt-based religious messaging
  • Motivational hype disguised as wisdom



If you’re looking for shortcuts, this book will disappoint you.
If you’re looking for a way to think responsibly and act deliberately, it was written for you.

About the Book

Think and Grow Rich Like a Jew explores how Jewish thought understands wealth, success, and responsibility — not as ends in themselves, but as tools for building a meaningful and disciplined life.

For thousands of years, Jewish tradition has engaged seriously with money: how it is earned, how it is used, and what it demands of the individual. From Abraham to medieval statesmen and rabbinic thinkers, wealth was never romanticized — nor was poverty idealized. Instead, money was treated as a form of responsibility.

This book brings that intellectual tradition into conversation with modern financial life.

Rather than promoting slogans or “abundance thinking,” it examines the deeper philosophical foundations behind prosperity: how beliefs shape behavior, how speech reinforces internal narratives, and how disciplined action creates lasting results.

At the heart of the book is a simple but demanding framework:

Machshava → Dibbur → Ma’aseh
(Thought → Speech → Action)

Through this lens, readers are guided from internal clarity to external mastery — with practical tools for financial literacy, budgeting, debt management, investing, and long-term planning.

Inside the book, you’ll explore:

  • How commonly misunderstood rabbinic teachings can become limiting beliefs — and how to read them correctly
  • Why Jewish tradition never asked people to reject the material world, but to elevate it
  • How to design a financial life that reflects your values, not just your income
  • The relationship between faith, effort, and responsibility — without guilt or mysticism
  • How money can move from a source of stress to a tool for purpose

This is not a book about getting rich quickly.
It is a book about thinking clearly, acting responsibly, and building wealth in a way that strengthens rather than fragments your life.

About the Author

Sami Benoliel (Baba Sami) is a financial coach and Jewish educator whose work bridges classical Jewish thought with modern financial life.

He has guided over 150 families through budgeting, debt recovery, and long-term financial planning, helping them rebuild clarity and stability in complex real-world situations. Alongside his coaching work, he teaches Jewish philosophy and Maimonidean thought, focusing on intellectual rigor, responsibility, and disciplined action.

Sami’s approach rejects both prosperity hype and poverty romanticism. Drawing on Torah sources, rabbinic philosophy, and lived experience, he presents wealth not as an end in itself, but as a tool that carries obligation — to oneself, to family, and to society.

Through his teaching and writing, he aims to restore a serious, thoughtful conversation about money: one grounded in clarity rather than slogans, and in responsibility rather than guilt.