EVERY SIGNATURE MATTERS - THIS BILL MUST PASS!

EVERY SIGNATURE MATTERS - THIS BILL MUST PASS!
CLICK - GOAL - 100,000 NEW SIGNATURES! 75,000 SIGNATURES HAVE ALREADY BEEN SUBMITTED TO GOVERNOR CUOMO!

CLICK!

Friday, August 25, 2023

TORAH UMESORAH RABBIS - "TEACHING TORAH VALUES TO OUR 260,000 CHILDREN IS OUR ONLY GOAL" "Transmitting Yiddishkeit in a compelling manner to students"

EVERY LOWLIFE

OUR MISSION - WELCOMING AS GUEST SPEAKER AT OUR CONVENTIONS  EVERY RAPIST/FRAUD/CRIMINAL THAT WOULD PUT ON A YARMULKE AT THE KOTEL!

 

"Transmitting Yiddishkeit in a compelling manner to students"  



NOW AVAILABLE AT 760 TORAH UMESORAH YESHIVAS FOR A $100 DONATION PER ITEM! FULLY TAX DEDUCTIBLE UNLESS IT'S MEZUMEN (WINK WINK)!

VAAD ROSHEI YESHIVA:

HaRav Hillel David
HaRav Shmuel Kamenetsky
HaRav Aryeh Malkiel Kotler
HaRav Aaron Schechter
HaRav Dovid Schustal
HaRav Aharon Feldman
HaRav Dovid Harris
HaRav Elya Brudny
HaRav Shlomo Halioua
HaRav Yaakov Bender
HaRav A. Dovid Goldberg
HaRav Chaim Y. Hoberman
HaRav Yosef Eichenstein
 

760 TORAH UMESORAH YESHIVAS ACROSS THE USA:
 
 
Rabbi Shraga Feivel Mendlowitz  founded Torah Umesorah to develop a network of Jewish day schools across North America.[7]

Rabbi Mendlowitz was born in Hungary[8][9] and was then serving as the head of the Yeshiva Torah Vodaas in Brooklyn, New York. He selected Dr. Joseph Kaminetsky in 1945 as the first full-time Director; Kaminetsky was given the mandate to fulfill the vision of the founding rabbis. He served until 1980, overseeing the establishment of Orthodox day schools at hundreds of sites across the country; he is considered the most influential leader of Torah Umesorah. He had a doctorate from Columbia Teachers College.[10]

In 1944 there were few Orthodox Jewish day schools in the United States, let alone authentic yeshivas or Beis Yaakov schools. [11] The afternoon/Talmud Torah system was deemed "failing to transmit Yiddishkeit in a compelling manner to students who arrived tired in the afternoons and were constantly subjected to assimilationist influences in American culture."[2]