Skip to main content Skip to search

YU News

YU News

Students at Yeshiva University and New York University Raise Funds for Israeli Orphanage

Mar 3, 2009 -- Yeshiva University’s undergraduate student councils partnered with Shalhevet at New York University, an Orthodox student campus group, to raise more than $4,000 for Bet Elazraki’s Children Home, an orphanage in Netanya, Israel, at a concert on February 26. With close to 475 in attendance at the Kimmel Center for University Life at NYU, 210 of which were Yeshiva University undergraduates, the concert included performances by music groups Blue Fringe and Reality Addiction and a break-dancing show by Over the Edge. The strong Yeshiva presence was felt both onstage and off. All four members of Blue Fringe -- Hayyim Danzig, ‘05Y; Danny Zwillenberg, ‘03Y; Avi Hoffman, ‘05Y; and Dov Rosenblatt, ‘05Y -- are Yeshiva alum. In addition, Reality Addiction’s pianist, Noam Green, is a Yeshiva College senior, and all three members of Over the Edge -- Yehuda Neuman, Zev Lapin and Sam Weprin -- are current Yeshiva students. According to Joshua Sladowsky, vice-president of Yeshiva's Sy Syms School of Business student council on the Wilf campus and one of the event organizers, the impetus for the collaborative event was to promote a more unified Jewish student community. “In bringing together two strong Jewish communities, on a night in which we raised thousands of dollars for a mutually valued cause, this event furthers the idea that despite our diversity, we have far more in common than we have that sets us apart,” Sladowsky said. With the success of the concert, Tamar Rohatiner, president of Shalhevet, hopes to plan another event to include the Jewish communities from schools across the east coast. “This is the first step in creating a vibrant and powerful movement that inspires unity and community among Jews across college campuses,” Rohatiner said. For Sladowsky, the monies raised are just part of the story. “This event introduced hundreds of students to a worthwhile organization and hopefully planted the seeds for future support and involvement,” he said.