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President's Report 2017-2018

President's Report 2017-2018 Cover

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ADA Version of President’s Report 2017-2018

Dear Friends,

Our beloved leader, colleague, and friend Rabbi Aaron Panken, Ph.D.,聽锄鈥漧, led the 2017-2018 academic year with characteristic vigor 鈥 laser focused on the College-Institute鈥檚 mission of ensuring a vibrant Jewish future. His tragic death on May 5, 2018, came at the culmination of the academic year, rupturing our learning community and depriving the Jewish and larger world of his visionary and compassionate leadership. We take comfort in the knowledge that his legacy endures through the strategic initiatives he championed that have strengthened HUC-JIR鈥檚 academic excellence聽and its broad impact on the Reform Movement and聽the Jewish people in North America, Israel, and around聽the globe.

The legacy of leadership exemplified by Rabbi Panken will be sustained in perpetuity by the naming of the first four聽Rabbi Aaron D. Panken Professorships, one on each of HUC-JIR鈥檚 campuses:聽Jennifer Grayson, Ph.D.,聽Assistant Professor of History at HUC-JIR/Cincinnati聽with a joint appointment at Xavier University;聽Rabbi Dalia Marx 鈥02, Ph.D.,聽Professor of Liturgy and Midrash at the Taube Family Campus in Jerusalem;聽Rabbi Joseph A. Skloot 鈥10, Ph.D.,聽Assistant Professor of Modern Jewish Intellectual History at HUC-JIR/New York; and聽Rabbi Dvora E. Weisberg 鈥11, Ph.D.,聽Professor of Rabbinics and Director of the School of Rabbinical Studies at the Jack H. Skirball Campus in Los Angeles. Over $12 million has been contributed by nearly 1,000 of HUC-JIR鈥檚 lay leaders, alumni, congregations, faculty, staff, students, family, and friends to endow the Panken Professorships in a campaign spearheaded by Rabbi Panken鈥檚 beloved wife, Lisa Messinger, and the Messinger Panken family. The campaign will culminate with a day of learning, led by the four Panken Professors, as we approach Rabbi Panken鈥檚 first听测补丑谤锄别颈迟.

A brief survey of the past year reflects Rabbi Panken鈥檚 hopes and dreams for this institution he so loved:聽We awarded 141 degrees and rabbinical and cantorial ordination聽at our campuses in Cincinnati, Jerusalem, Los Angeles, and New York. The聽Pines School of Graduate聽Studies聽granted a record-breaking nine Ph.D. degrees to students of diverse faiths. All of the graduates of all of our programs have found placement as clergy, educators, nonprofit executives, and scholars and are invigorating Jewish life and Judaic studies worldwide.

The Board of Governors, Boards of Overseers, alumni, and students gathered at our Taube Family Campus in Jerusalem to celebrate聽the ordination of the 100th Israeli Reform rabbi聽to graduate from our Israeli Rabbinical Program. The academic convocation was preceded by an egalitarian service at Robinson鈥檚 Arch and a symbolic Torah processional to the Kotel, where we demonstrated the Reform Movement鈥檚 ardent commitment to religious pluralism in the Jewish State.

We are grateful to the聽Jewish Foundation of Cincinnati聽for their $4 million gift to renew support for the Jewish Foundation of Cincinnati Sacred Service Learning Fellowship Program as well as for recruitment activities and youth engagement on the Cincinnati campus. These dynamic engagement programs and others sponsored by our聽National Office of Recruitment and Admissions聽welcomed prospective students to our campuses or engaged them on their own college campuses, resulting in the largest incoming first-year class in nearly a decade. These 52 first-year rabbinical, cantorial, and full-time education students were guaranteed free tuition as聽Koret Foundation Scholars聽for their required year聽of study in Israel through a $3.75 million multi-year grant from the Koret Foundation.

The Weitzman-JDC Fellowship for Global Jewish Leaders, established by聽Jane and Stuart Weitzman, provided scholarships for students in the Year-In-Israel program and brought 20 students across all programs to the Jewish communities of Azerbaijan and Georgia in a JDC Entwine Mission that reinforced their relationship with world Jewry. Our students also brought the joy of Passover to communities throughout the Former Soviet Union, through the聽Pesach Project聽guided by the World Union for Progressive Judaism.

The $1.4 million multi-year grant from聽Central Synagogue鈥檚 Rabbi Peter J. Rubinstein Fund for the Renaissance of Reform Judaism聽established HUC-JIR鈥檚 partnership with Hillel International in placing Reform Senior Jewish Educators and Hillel Interns at Hillels to enrich Jewish life on campus, a commitment also reflected in the third cohort of our聽Founders鈥 Fellowship, preparing college students as leaders of innovative progressive Jewish programming at undergraduate colleges.

Our faculty and students participated in teaching and leading worship at the聽2017 Union for Reform Judaism Biennial聽in Boston, inspiring over 6,000 Reform Movement leaders with their scholarship, innovative research, and spirituality. We convened leading thinkers in politics, culture, literature, science, and Jewish studies to probe the truths that can repair our nation and our world at our聽Symposium 2: These Truths We Hold 鈥 Judaism in an Age of Truthiness.听College Commons鈥聽adult and teen online courses, interviews, and 鈥淏ully Pulpit鈥 podcasts engaged congregations and learners across North America.

At our聽Taube Family Campus聽in Jerusalem, Jewish, Christian, and Muslim educators gathered in the聽Teachers鈥 Lounge聽to study how to advance tolerance in their Jerusalem schools and we continued to partner with聽Healing Hatred聽to open new paths to healing in the context of political conflict with religious leaders, psychologists, and educators.

The Jim Joseph Foundation鈥檚 grant of $1.3 million supported the continuity of the聽Executive M.A.听Program in Jewish Education, with seven cohorts to date and the enhancement of the program with more engagement with the arts as part of students鈥 leadership development. We partnered with The Jewish Theological Seminary to launch a second Chicago-based cohort of the聽Jewish Early Childhood Education Leadership Institute聽with renewed support from the Crown Family.

The Zelikow School of Jewish Nonprofit Management聽at our Jack H. Skirball Campus in Los Angeles launched the first cohorts of the Master of Science in Organizational Leadership and Certificate in Jewish Organizational Leadership, offering accelerated and summer programs for professionals seeking to fast-track their careers.

The Jacob Rader Marcus Center of the聽American Jewish Archives聽on our Cincinnati Campus celebrated the acquisition of the B鈥檔ai B鈥檙ith International Archives with an exhibition of聽its treasures and supported the research of scholars and educators from around the world.听The Klau Library聽inaugurated online access to digitized聽images of its rare treasures at mss.huc.edu

Our faculty published significant volumes of scholarship and academic articles, presented academic lectures, and were featured among the 100 letters written by scholars of religion to our nation鈥檚 leaders in the volume聽American Values: Religious Voices, dedicated to the memory of Rabbi Panken聽and co-created by Rabbi Andrea L. Weiss 鈥93, Ph.D.,聽our new Jack, Joseph, and Morton Mandel Provost.

A $1.68 million gift from the Dr. Bernard Heller Foundation supported the naming of the聽Dr. Bernard Heller Museum in New York, which presented 70 international artists exploring personal experience, historical and contemporary events, and the universal human condition in the exhibition 鈥淗ome(less).鈥澛The Skirball Museum in Cincinnati聽welcomed visitors of all ages and faiths to view 鈥淒reams: Baseball & Becoming American,鈥 鈥淭reasures from the B鈥檔ai B鈥檙ith聽Klutznick Collection,鈥 鈥淩e-Art: The Many Faces of Israel,鈥 and 鈥淚srael at 70: A History in Art and Artifacts.鈥 鈥淭he Jerusalem Biennale鈥 was presented at the聽Skirball Museum in Jerusalem, and contemporary art installations were on view at the聽Jack H. Skirball Campus in Los Angeles.

Over $1 million was raised for student and faculty support at the tribute dinners in Cincinnati, honoring聽Jacqueline Mack and Edward Silberstein, M.D.; in Los Angeles, celebrating the 50th anniversary of the Zelikow School of Jewish Nonprofit Management and honoring聽Dianne and Tad Taube and Taube Philanthropies聽and聽Arthur Greenberg聽with special commendation to聽Lee Wunsch; and in New York, honoring聽Rabbi Lawrence A. Hoffman, Ph.D.

We are thankful for the sacred work and principled leadership demonstrated by our alumni and students each and every day, and particularly during the most challenging moments of the past year 鈥 in Charlottesville, in the aftermath of the devastating hurricanes and wildfires, during the asylum-seeker crisis in Israel, and, most recently, as we continue to heal from the horrific murders at Pittsburgh鈥檚 Eitz Chaim Congregation.

You are our indispensable partners in preparing聽the next generations of Jewish leaders to sustain the Jewish and larger world. Thank you for your vital support as we work together toward the blessings聽of justice and peace.

With sincere gratitude and in friendship,

Rabbi David Ellenson 鈥77, Ph.D.,聽Interim President and Chancellor Emeritus
December 1, 2018 / 23 Kislev 5779

51黑料网-Jewish Institute of Religion instills leadership, fosters scholarship, and nurtures spiritual growth in an inclusive, pluralistic learning environment where tradition and innovation are聽the catalysts for leading and creating聽vibrant Jewish communities throughout聽North America, Israel, and around the world.

Your Support Sustains Excellence

  • Philanthropy provides聽40%听of HUC-JIR鈥檚 income, supporting students, faculty, and research resources.
  • 89聽continuing education programs engage alumni throughout the world.
  • 93%聽of students receive聽scholarship support.
  • 100%聽of new graduates have聽jobs within one year.
  • Our alumni and students have an impact on聽50听肠辞耻苍迟谤颈别蝉,听1,400听synagogues and organizations, and聽7,000听Jewish campers.

In Memoriam

Rabbi Aaron D. Panken, Ph.D.,聽President

Rabbi Isaac Jerusalmi, Ph.D.,聽Professor Emeritus of Bible and Semitic Languages, HUC-JIR/Cincinnati

Jay I. Kislak,聽Former Treasurer of the Board of Governors and Chair of its Jerusalem School Committee

S.L. Kopald, Jr.,聽Chairman Emeritus and Governor Emeritus

Rabbi David M. Posner,聽Former Governor

Theodore L. Schwartz,聽Governor Emeritus

Richard Siegel,聽Director Emeritus,聽Zelikow School of Jewish Nonprofit Management

Rabbi Isaiah Zeldin 鈥46,聽Founding Dean,聽Jack H. Skirball Campus, Los Angeles

Fall 2018 Year-In-Israel Class

  • 52听蝉迟耻诲别苍迟蝉
  • Average age:聽28
  • 35%聽received a聽graduate degree聽or certificate
  • 3.8/3.5聽average graduate/undergraduate聽GPA
  • 27%聽have/had affiliations聽outside the聽Reform Movement
  • 63%聽female |聽31%聽male |聽4%聽gender nonconforming |听2%听迟谤补苍蝉驳别苍诲别谤
  • Selected Undergraduate and Graduate Schools Where They Studied:聽Bates | Brandeis | Brown | Bryn Mawr | Clark | Columbia | Cornell |聽George Washington | Harvard | Hebrew University | Indiana |聽Jewish Theological Seminary | Miami | Michigan | Middlebury | Muhlenberg Northwestern | Princeton | Skidmore | Syracuse | Washington & Lee | Wellesley