Hebrew Theological College

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Hebrew Theological College

Logo of Hebrew Theological College

Established 1922
School type Private
Location Skokie, Illinois, USA
Rosh Yeshiva Rabbi Shlomo Morgenstern
Chancellor Rabbi Jerold Isenberg
Enrollment 170 high school
40 men's college
200? women's college
Campus Urban
Website www.htc.edu

The Hebrew Theological College, also known as Beis HaMidrash LaTorah, is a private university located in Skokie, Illinois. It was chartered in 1922 as one of the first Modern Orthodox Jewish institutions of higher education in America, and is therefore also one of the oldest Jewish institutions in the United States outside of the New York area.

Hebrew Theological College's primary purposes are to prepare students for the assumption of formal roles as educators, as well as to train eligible students to meet the requirements and demands of rabbinic ordination. As its secondary purpose, Hebrew Theological College endeavors to provide its students with broad cultural perspectives and a strong foundation in the Liberal Arts and Sciences to facilitate a creative synthesis of general and Jewish knowledge. In so doing, the College also provides an excellent background for the pursuit of advanced professional training... [1]

The school was founded in the city of Chicago in 1921 by Rabbi Chaim Tzvi Rubinstein and Rabbi Saul Silber. Rabbi Rubinstein (1872-1944) was an alumnus of Volozhin Yeshiva who arrived in America in 1917. Rabbi Silber (1876-1946) was a pulpit Rabbi in Chicago and served as president of the school for the first twenty-five years. [1]

Rabbi Nissan Yablonsky, an alumnus of Slabodka served as the first Rosh Yeshiva for the first few years. He was followed, after his untimely death, by Rabbi Chaim Korb. [2] Rabbi Chaim Kreiswirth served as Rosh Yeshiva from 1947 to 1953. [3]

The institution moved to Skokie (a northern suburb of Chicago) in the early 1960's.

The current faculty of Hebrew Theological College:

  • Rosh Hayeshiva – Rabbi Shlomo Morgenstern
  • Mashgiach of the Beis Medrash – Rabbi Yirmiyahu Neuman
  • Chancellor – Rabbi Jerold Isenberg
  • Dean (men's division) – Rabbi Michael Meyers
  • Menahel Ruchani (women's division) – Rabbi Binyomin Olstein
  • Principal (high school) – Rabbi Moshe Wender

The yeshiva consists of a Bet Midrash, a Rabbinical School, the Bellows Kollel, and the Fasman Yeshiva High School. The college is composed of the Bressler School of Advanced Hebrew Studies and the Kanter School of Liberal Arts and Sciences. All students complete a Bachelor of Arts in Judaic Studies through the Bressler School, with the option of a second major through the Kanter School.

The men's program leads to a B.A. The focus is in Judaic studies and specifically Talmud, with second degrees offered in Business, Computer Science, and Psychology. The women's program, located on a separate campus at the Blistein Teachers Institute for Women, offers Judaic Studies majors in Bible, Hebrew Language, and Jewish History, with dual majors available in Business, Computer and Information Sciences, Education (including Elementary and Special Education), English and Psychology.

The university is accredited by the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Wein, Berel (1990). Triumph of Survival, 334. ISBN 1-57819-593-4.
  2. ^ Wein, Berel (2001). Faith and Fate, 100. ISBN 1-57819-593-4.
  3. ^ Wein, Berel (1990). Triumph of Survival, 434. ISBN 1-57819-593-4.

[edit] See also

  • Bar-Ilan University – a Tel Aviv based university which aims "to blend tradition with modern technologies and scholarship, and teach the compelling ethics of Jewish heritage to all".
  • Lander College - a New York City based college, combining Torah study with secular, university study, based on an outlook of Torah u-Parnassa ("Torah and livelihood").

[edit] External links