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YU News

Yeshiva University Rabbis Help Dedicate New Student Center for S. Daniel Abraham Israel Program

Dec 12, 2005 -- A new Student Center has just been opened on Yeshiva University’s Jerusalem campus, designed to serve the needs of the 700 students studying in Israel on the S. Daniel Abraham Israel Program (SDAIP). Yeshiva University’s campus in Israel has recently undergone extensive renovations to update its facilities and make it accessible to wheelchairs. The campus building in Bayit Vegan also houses the YU Gruss Kollel, administrative offices, and a 300-seat auditorium, used primarily for lectures by visiting academics and rabbis from YU. The SDAIP program has seen a steady increase in the number of schools and students choosing to affiliate with YU, and it has responded by expanding its team of Israel advisors who are available to support and counsel American students during their year in Israel. Mark Lehrman, director of the SDAIP, explains: “Our expanded and modernized facilities are designed to provide a more professional yet relaxed environment for all students to interface with YU’s Israel advisers as they seek answers to their various college and academic career related questions. We look forward to greeting all of them here!" The installation of state-of-the-art WiFi internet capabilities is just one of the ways that YU is hoping to better serve its students and alumni in Israel. Coinciding with their move into their new offices, the SDAIP Israel advisers were on hand to help American high school students and their parents who were on a YU Reconnaissance Visit to Israel, looking to choose the best school for their year in Israel. Through their relationships with 40 yeshivot and seminaries, the SDAIP team are well-placed to advise prospective as well as current students. They also run a program of training sessions for yeshiva and seminary counselors in how to deal with various issues that arise among the overseas students. The SDAIP Student Center was dedicated by YU’s Professor of Jewish History and Thought, Rabbi Dr. Jacob J. Schacter, visiting Israel on a week-long lecture tour, who helped to affix some of the mezuzot, along with YU Rabbis, supporters and staff members.