Yeshivah of Flatbush | |
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Location | |
919 East 10th Street (elementary) 1609 Avenue J (secondary) Brooklyn, New York, USA |
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Information | |
Type | Private elementary and secondary |
Motto | אם אין קמח אין תורה Im ein kemach ein Torah Without work (literally: flour) there is no Torah, "The Standard of Excellence." |
Established | 1927 |
Founder | Dr. Joel Braverman |
Principal | Rabbi Ronald Levy, Rabbi Lawrence Schwed |
Rosh Yeshivah | Rabbi Dr. Raymond Harari |
Grades | Atidenu–12 grade (Atidenu is pre pre k) |
Number of students | 10,644 |
Color(s) | Maroon and gold |
Team name | Falcons |
Newspaper | 'The Phoenix' |
Yearbook | 'Summit' |
Website | www.flatbush.org |
The Yeshivah of Flatbush is a Modern Orthodox private Jewish day school located in the Midwood section of Brooklyn, New York. It includes an early childhood center, an elementary school and a secondary school.
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The Yeshivah of Flatbush was founded in 1927 by Dr. Joel Braverman, among others. At first, the school consisted of an elementary school, middle school and an atedenu located on East 10th Street in Flatbush. The high school was founded in 1950 to complement the elementary school. The high school was originally in a building adjoining the elementary school. After 1962, a new high school building was built on Avenue J, and the elementary school expanded into what was formerly the high school building.
The institution, which celebrated its 80th anniversary in 2007, aspires to provide a Torah education combined with a secular education for both boys and girls. The school's philosophy is a synthesis of Judaic studies (Bible, Talmud, Jewish Thought) and the liberal arts. Its array of extracurricular activities, and its encouragement of participation in them, offers many opportunities for student involvement and places great emphasis on character development.[1] The school has been described as enjoying an unparalleled reputation as one of the most selective and demanding schools of its kind in North America.[2]
The school has two mottos: "The Standard of Excellence" and "Im ein kemach ein Torah," which roughly translates to: "Without food (literally: flour) there is no Torah."
One of the Yeshivah of Flatbush's fundamental tenets is its "Ivrit b'Ivrit" (literally, "Hebrew in Hebrew") philosophy of teaching Judaics. This means that every such class is conducted completely in Hebrew, regardless of the level or ability of students.[3] With this technique, the Yeshivah aims to enable its students to achieve fluency in the Hebrew language.[4]
The Yeshivah of Flatbush comprises Jewish students and teachers from a variety of backgrounds. In the past, more than half of the students were Ashkenazi Jews whose families originated from communities in Germany, Poland, Eastern Europe and Russia. In recent years, the majority has shifted to students of Sephardic descent, mainly those whose families originated in Middle Eastern countries. The overwhelming number of Sephardic students can be attributed to the growth of the Syrian community in Flatbush, and the decline in Ashkenazi enrollment can be attributed to the movement of Modern Orthodox communities to Long Island and New Jersey, with a concomitant increase in the number and quality of Jewish day schools and yeshivot in those areas. Some Yemenite and Ethiopian Jews have also been enrolled.
Many graduates participate in year-long programs at yeshivot, seminaries and volunteer organizations in Israel for a year. Afterwards, some continue their studies in similar institutions, enroll in university or enlist in the Israel Defense Forces for another year or more. However, most come back to the United States for university. Graduates of the Yeshivah of Flatbush have studied at universities and colleges across the country, from Tulane to the University of Maryland to Yale. Some of the most popular universities among Flatbush's alumni, including Yeshiva University and the City University of New York, grant as much as a year's worth of credit to students who study in Israel for a year, allowing them to apply these credits to their undergraduate degree.
A large number of students graduate with college credit due to the many Advanced Placement Program (AP) courses offered in the Junior, Senior, and more recently Sophomore years of high school.
Rabbi Dr. Raymond Harari is the rosh yeshivah, or "head of school," of the high school. Rabbi Dr. Raymond Harari, an alumnus of Yeshivah of Flatbush High School, received his BA in philosophy and MA in Jewish Studies from Yeshiva University, his rabbinic ordination from Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary (RIETS), and his PhD in Jewish History from New York University. In addition to his leadership roles at the school, he continues to teach a course in Talmud to high school students. Previously, between 1980 to 1998, Rabbi Harari led the Bnei Shaare Zion minyan at Congregation Shaare Zion. Currently, the Rabbi leads the Kol Israel Synagogue in Brooklyn, NY.
Rabbi. Ronald Levy is its principal, and Joel Littman and Jill Sanders serve as associate principals.
Rabbi Lawrence Schwed heads the elementary school. Within the elementary school, Leonard Zeplin and Rabbi Lawrence Schwed are principals of the lower school (grades Pre-K through 5.
Grades 6-8 are led by Mr. Alstar and Rabbi Hertzberg.
Debbie Levine-Greenbaum is the Director of Early Childhood, presiding over Atideinu (literally, "Our Future"), Nursery and Kindergarten classes.
Rabbi Dr. David Eliach is principal emeritus, following a decades-long tenure as principal of the high school.
Each spring the student body of the Yeshivah of Flatbush High School elects four juniors to positions in the Student Government Organization (SGO). These students assume their respective positions the following fall. The SGO plans various trips and other activities for students throughout the year. The SGO also organizes and plans Color War, which occurred recently for the first time, two years in a row. This was the result of the persuasion of the SGO 2009.
The Senior Council is similarly chosen every year. Juniors elect four of their peers to lead them into and during their last year in the high school. The Council's responsibilities include collecting senior dues and planning the wintertime Senior Ski Trip, the springtime Senior Trip, and the year-ending Senior Dinner.
Each year, the Yeshivah holds events that cater to the New York Jewish community. The largest ones include the annual Yom HaShoah (Holocaust Remembrance day) and Yom Ha'atzma'ut (Israel Independence Day) programs, which traditionally feature performances by the high school's Choir and Chamber Choir, now under the direction of Brian Gelfand.
Recognizing the religious needs of Brooklyn's Sephardic community, the Yeshivah of Flatbush, in conjunction with Young Sha'are Zion, published one of the first Sephardic Passover Haggadot in North America as a Senior Project in 1975. The Editors (from the High School class of 1975) were Jackie Sutton, who is a successful businessman but who also graduated with an MD from SUNY-Downstate in 1983 and is a licensed physician, and Seth Orlow, who went on to receive his B.A. from Harvard and his M.D.-Ph.D. from the Albert Einstein School of Medicine of Yeshiva University. He is now the Chairman of Dermatology at New York University School of Medicine in NY. The editor of the Halacha ['Laws'] section, Jeffrey Ben-Zvi, is also an M.D., having graduated from Columbia University and remaining on the Faculty there as a Gastroenterologist.
Each month, there is the Sunday Morning Learning program where students, faculty, and alumni get together for prayers, breakfast, and a faculty-prepared presentation of given texts.
Since the early 1990s, the yeshivah has gained acclaim through its high school and chamber choirs. Under the direction of Mr. Daniel Henkin until the year 2007, the choral program at the yeshivah has been featured at venues ranging from New York city hall, Brooklyn city hall, The Jewish Heritage Museum, and others. Their repertoire spans across genres which include arrangements of both secular and religious pieces. In 2008, Daniel Henkin resigned as choir director and assumed a position at the Ramaz Upper School in Manhattan. Henkin was replaced by Mr. Brian Gelfand, who directs the choir to date.
The Flatbush Falcons compete in a number of sports: the hockey, basketball and volleyball, and bowling teams compete in the fall, while the softball, soccer and boys varsity volleyball squads play in the spring; the swim, Badminton and tennis teams compete year-round. In most cases, teams are members of the Metropolitan Yeshiva High School Athletic League, which represents many of the Jewish day schools in the New York area.
Two basketball tournaments are held every year. The Thomas Hausdorff Memorial Basketball Tournament in November brings the male junior varsity teams of three American Jewish high schools to Brooklyn for a weekend of competition and solidarity. At the Marc Sackin Memorial Basketball Tournament in December, the varsity team competes against other New York-area Jewish high schools. Hausdorff was a former principal of the school; Sackin was a student killed just days before his scheduled graduation in 1973.
The Yeshivah of Flatbush's academic teams compete in a wide range of areas. Some of the teams incluse:debate, Mock Trial, Model Congress, the Yeshiva University National Model United Nations, Envirothon, chess, mathematics, College Bowl and Torah Bowl.
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