Feb 14, 2018 By: yunews
Tenth Anniversary Dinner Honors Rabbi Reuven and Dr. Nechama Brand for Their Steadfast Leadership
A dinner on February 25 will celebrate the 10th anniversary of of Chicago. The dinner, one of two annual fundraising events the Kollel hosts, will honor the work that Rabbi Reuven Brand â02YC, â05R, â06A, the founding Rosh Kollel, and his wife, Dr. Nechama Brand â03SB, have done over the past decade to put what is known as the âBeit Midrash Without Wallsâ on a sound financial footing and extend its outreach into the Jewish communities of Chicago.
The Kollel began in 2008 as a collaboration between Chicagoâs Jewish community and ¶¶Òőapp University to create a YU âsatelliteâ in the Midwest to serve the religious and educational needs of the community, according to Rabbi Ari Sytner, director of community initiatives at ¶¶Òőapp Universityâs (CJF). Rabbi Brand serves as the liaison between CJF and the Kollel. While the Kollel uses ⶶÒőapp Universityâ in its name, it is a separate non-profit organization.
At the heart of the Kollel, described as âan open community of learning,â are the Fellows, eight full-time American and Israeli Torah scholars who engage in an intensive study of Talmud, Jewish law and Jewish thought. âThe Kollel,â explained Rabbi Brand, âis a continuation of the rabbinic training for students from the (RIETS). They get credit from RIETS for their work in the Kollel towards their ordination requirements, and the department of community services at CJF provides the Kollel with a lot of support through in-kind services and in-service training.â
As part of their work in the Kollel, the Fellows also teach in the many community education programs the Kollel offers. These programs are designed, according to the Kollelâs mission, to âenrich and engage the greater Chicago community with inspired Torah living and learningâ as well as to promote âthe importance of positive interaction with general society and culture and the religious significance of the State of Israel.â
The reach and frequency of these programs are extensive, as Laurie Hasten, a current Kollel board member, pointed out. âEvery week,â she said, âthere are multiple opportunities to delve into text with a community of learners, whether itâs for adults in Jewish Learning Together, the kids with Parsha and Pizza, Girls Night Out for Learning (for high school girls) as well as a junior version for middle schoolers: there are so many niches within the community that the Kollel is able to fill.â
Daniella Schwartz, described by Rabbi Brand as the Kollelâs âPR czar,â documented just how busy the Kollel is on any given week. âI make sure that all events and programs are known to the communityâI send out emails, I post in local newspapers, such as the Chicago Jewish Home, where we post biweekly articles with pictures to show the community what weâre doing. Weâre on Facebook and Instagram and we post flyers in all the shuls. Our programming is jam-packed because we try to have something for everybody, so this means we have to keep everybody informed.â
The Kollel is âwithout wallsâ because it brings its programs into different venues rather requiring participants to come to a central location. âWe have the ability,â said Rabbi Brand, âto provide classes and one-on-one learning that adds value to community institutions. Instead of telling people, âLeave your shul and go to another brick-and-mortar location,â weâre going to bring the class to the shul. Weâre augmenting and strengthening the existing institutions and bringing them together through this web of programs.â
Because of this approach, âpeople have become more engaged in the Kollelâan increasing number of donors, an increase in funding year after yearâbecause people see the value added to their community and their institutions. Everything we do is done somewhere where the people areâin the schools, in the classrooms, in different shuls and in peoplesâ homes. It creates a model where weâre bringing the Torah and its values to people.â
Brian Levinson â91YC, a current board member, agrees with Rabbi Brand. âThere were some organizations doing some of that prior to the Kollel, but the Kollel does this at every levelâage-wise, from grammar school kids to senior citizens; settings, whether itâs a structured synagogue, beit midrash, public library, coffee shop; and catering equally to men and women at very high levels of scholarship. This combination is very, very unique.
âThe other thing the Kollel does remarkably well,â he added, âis its ability, willingness and desire to partner with other organizations, which is very critical to me. We partner with the day schools, with other outreach organizations, other kollelim, very openly, very proudly, to achieve our simple mission, which is to spread Torah to the Jews of Chicago.â
However, despite 10 years of vigorous and vibrant Torah learning brought to hundreds of people and venues, âthere are 300,000 Jews in Chicago, and we havenât touched all of them yet,â said Rabbi Brand.
So, to extend the programâs outreach, the Kollel began two initiatives, NILI (Nashim Lomdot Yachad, or Women Learning Together), the Chicago Institute of Womenâs Learning, and the Midwest Center for Jewish Learning (MCJL).
Under the direction of Lynn Kraft, NILI describes itself as âa community of learning offering engaging, challenging and inspirational Torah-based classes and programs tailored to the specific needs and interests of women.â NILI does this by using the Kollel resources and partnering with local and visiting scholars to offer a study of Torah that âenables women to develop and enhance their Jewish lives, celebrating a commitment to halacha [Jewish law] and tradition that includes an appreciation of general society and religious significance of the State of Israel.â
One of the crucial services NILI offers is the NILI Hotline. Women can contact the hotline by phone, email or a web-based form, and trained kallah [bridal] teachers will connect them to confidential and anonymous halachic guidance from rabbis in all areas of Taharat Hamishpacha [Jewish family purity/Mikvah]. Hasten is especially impressed by what the hotline offers women âfrom all over the country who call in for advice and counsel; it impacts so many lives in a positive way, and by their own count, Iâm told the number of contacts each month is growing.â
MCJLâs mission is to bring âinspired Jewish living and learning to the greater Chicagoland Jewish community through a variety of learning opportunities, programs and resources for individuals and families of all backgrounds.â One example is Jewish Learning Together (JLT), led by Rabbi Yakov Danishefsky â14YC, â15BR, â16R and a graduate of the Wexner Graduate Fellowship. JLT pairs men and women with differing Jewish backgrounds with lessons from Torah and Talmudic passages in a chavruta [learning partner] setting. The goal is to stimulate friendly thought and discussion, and for the pairs to end the evening knowing a little more about Torah, themselves and their partners than they knew at the beginning.
Gary Hoberman, who had been president of the Kollel board for six years and who continues to serve as a board member as well as a mentor to Rabbi Yaakov Frankiel, the new executive director, sees the MCJL as an excellent effort not only âto reach out beyond the usual giving circlesâ but also to complement the Kollelâs goal of âputting Chicago on the Modern Orthodox map, as a destination where one can go and have a strong belief in God, a commitment to Torah and community, and do it under the auspices of a Modern Orthodox philosophy.â
In these and so many other ways, the Kollel is slowly fulfilling Rabbi Brandâs vision of transforming the Jewish community in Chicago. He measures the transformation already brought by the Kollel in part by the way people have said to him that,âthe community is not the same as it was 10 years agoâ and by the way âpeople have become engaged in the world of learning based upon a centrist religious Zionist philosophy that is now a proud and celebrated vision in our community, strong and thriving.â
Hoberman would agree. âA primary goal of the Kollel is to attract young Modern Orthodox rabbis to Chicago to develop their teaching skills as fellows and then have them stay in Chicago with their families, grow in Chicago and take positions in the community, particularly in our institutions, and become role models for our children. And thatâs exactly whatâs been happening over the past 10 years.â
Levinson added that âthe accessibility of Torah and Torah scholarship in classes and informal and formal opportunities to connect with Judaism has absolutely changed the community. Itâs made us a better community, a stronger community, and I think itâs given us a stronger footing for our kids for when they go off to Israel and to college.â Lennie Weiss, who has served on the board for the last eight years and was co-president for three years, concurred, saying that the Kollel has âa tremendous impact on all aspects of the Chicago community, especially a tremendous impact on our kids with its positive approach to learning and halacha.â
And the next 10 years? âWe have a lot of things to do,â Brand said. âWeâre looking to grow organically, weâre looking to grow NILI and MCJL, and we want to strengthen the local programming that we have. Strengthening, improving and innovating: thatâs our work for the next decade.â
Levinson has every faith that Rabbi Brandâs vision will come to pass. âWhile there are many outstanding lay leaders who have contributed time and money to support the Kollel,â he noted, âthis dinner honors the Brands for who for 10 years have been the absolute force on the ground making YU Kollel the positive influence it is today.â