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YU News

Kickoff of YU's Sunday Learning Series for Women Draws Large Crowd

Feb 8, 2005
-- With turnout far exceeding expectations, some 170 participants from around the tri-state area helped kick off Midreshet Yom Rishon, Yeshiva University’s Sunday morning learning initiative for women, at YU’s Wilf Campus Feb. 6. The program, under the auspices of YU’s Max Stern Division of Communal Services, parallels the successful Kollel Yom Rishon, a program offering men the opportunity to learn on weekends from YU roshei yeshiva and other prominent scholars. The inaugural Midreshet program, preceded by breakfast courtesy of Revaya, a local eatery, featured a shiur (lecture) by Rabbi Hershel Schachter, Nathan and Vivian Fink Distinguished Professor in Talmud at YU’s affiliated Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary, who spoke on the laws of Shabbat as they pertain to time differences between Israel and the US; and Dr. Michelle Levine, assistant professor of Bible at Stern College for Women, who explored the creation of woman as described in the Book of Genesis. “During a busy workweek, it’s difficult to find time for learning,” said Esther Chaitovsky, a physical therapist and mother of two from Teaneck, NJ. “This initiative meets the needs of active Jewish women, allowing us to learn from the sharp minds of rabbis as well as respected female scholars – all in one venue. As a graduate of Stern College and the mother of a teenage daughter who will enter the university this fall, I found it inspiring to have Dr. Michelle Levine address a crowd that included young women about to discover their own potential to excel in Torah and Judaic studies.” The Midreshet Yom Rishon series takes place at YU’s Schenk Synagogue in Schottenstein Center, 185th Street between Audubon and Amsterdam Avenues in the Washington Heights section of Manhattan. Midreshet Yom Rishon is open to women of all ages, backgrounds and learning levels. Shiurim and parking are free of charge. For more information, call (212) 960-5266 or visit www.midreshetyomrishon.org.