Another forum for Orthodox Jewish thought on Halacha, Hashkafa, and sociological issues of our time
Tuesday, December 24, 2019
Wednesday, November 6, 2019
Political Correctness at its Worst
Rabbi Avraham Elimelech Firer (JNS) |
The brouhaha surrounding a benefit concert whose proceeds
were earmarked for the health-care NGO, Ezra Lemarpe—founded
and directed by genius medical autodidact Rabbi Avraham Elimelech Firer—is a
perfect example.
The concert, a tribute to the 50-year career of Israeli
singer Shlomo Artzi ahead of his 70th birthday, was supposed to take place on
Nov. 20. It was canceled on Monday by Firer, who was fed up and clearly hurt by
the commotion that his religious beliefs were causing.
The carry-on began when it emerged that certain female
singers would be on the program, along with the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra
and other prominent performers. But the rabbi is a haredi (ultra-Orthodox)
Jew who adheres to the modesty directive that men may not hear women singing,
as their voices can be seductive.
This tenet of kol b’isha erva (“a woman’s voice is
nakedness”) has been the subject of much controversy among Israelis who
consider it a sexist affront. Two recent gender-segregated music festivals that
were held in public spaces catapulted this issue back into the headlines. A
nationwide argument erupted over the limits of religious freedom and practice
in the public sphere, particularly when involving state-funded or municipal venues.
One slogan that was slung around during the battle against those events was:
“We’re not Saudi Arabia.”
It is thus that when the organizers of the gala honoring
Artzi discovered and revealed that no female vocalists would be able to
perform, incensed women artists made a stink, and their male counterparts began
to announce that they couldn’t possibly appear on stage under such
circumstances. You know, out of “solidarity” and in “principle.”
Which actually meant that they feared being accused of
chauvinism.
Thankfully, a handful of stars, including women, came out on
Firer’s side. They argued that fulfilling the rabbi’s wish would be a
negligible price to pay for the millions of people, including women, whom he
has served and whose lives he has saved.
The iconic Artzi, dubbed by some as “Israel’s Bruce
Springsteen,” was not one of them. Instead, he said that he would “do
everything he could” to persuade the rabbi to suspend kol isha just
this once. It was both silly and an expression of utter ignorance. Indeed, he
might as well have suggested that Firer dine on pork during the concert in
order to smooth ruffled feathers.
If anything illustrates the danger of viewing individual
issues through an inflexible ideological prism, this is it. Firer has proven
himself to be a selfless and heroic figure, who has done nothing but use his
eerie gift to help comfort and heal millions of people, without regard to their
ethnic, religious or gender identities.
His almost mystical talent is a self-taught encyclopedic
knowledge of diseases and cures; the ability to read and swiftly decipher
complicated medical charts and scans; and the skill to diagnose rare conditions.
He uses the above to refer each of the dozens of patients he sees daily—at no
charge—to the appropriate doctors.
For his tireless efforts and the running of Ezra Lemarpe, he
was awarded the Israel Prize in 1997, as well as honorary doctorates from the Weizmann
Institute of Science and the University of Haifa in 2002 and 2008,
respectively. Israelis from all walks of life have sought and received his
advice and expertise. So well-known has his miraculous medical “matchmaking”
become that he is as big a star as Artzi, but for a far more important reason.
The sanctity of life is but one of Firer’s religious
principles. Another is refraining from listening to women sing. Allowing the
latter to cancel out the former not only is intolerant and unjust, but exposes
the kind of narrow-mindedness that feminists and fanatical secularists accuse
the haredim of possessing. In this case, it also turned what would
have been a blessed happening into an empty auditorium.
Thursday, October 24, 2019
Trump 1999
Someone sent me this unbelievable 60 Minutes story about Donald Trump - who was interviewed by Dan Rather at the time. Trump's personality has not changed.
He considered running for President back then. Most of the people that saw that 60 Minutes segment probably laughed at the idea. One so called expert said it would never happen. One of the few things that are indeed actually impossible. And that Trump knows that. Kind of makes us all look foolish now.
He considered running for President back then. Most of the people that saw that 60 Minutes segment probably laughed at the idea. One so called expert said it would never happen. One of the few things that are indeed actually impossible. And that Trump knows that. Kind of makes us all look foolish now.
Wednesday, August 7, 2019
Centrists, Charedim, and Open Orthodoxy
Rabbi Jonathan Muskat (Facebook) |
Last week I authored a blog post where I suggested
parameters for preventing a schism within Orthodoxy in general, and between the
Modern Orthodox and Open Orthodox communities in particular. I received much
feedback from this post, and one central question that intrigued me was why I,
and for that matter other modern orthodox Rabbis, feel compelled to call out
practices we disagree with on the left (for example, partnership minyanim) and
not on the right (such as the erasure of women from publications). I
can’t speak for other modern orthodox Rabbis, but I can share with you my
perspective on this matter.
I believe that both the Charedi and open orthodox
leadership, like the modern orthodox leadership, are sincerely motivated to
engage Jews to connect with God in a meaningful way. Nonetheless, as I
noted last week, there are circumstances that I believe compel me as an
Orthodox Rabbi to speak out. Despite my greatest wishes for unity, there are
issues that put the integrity of Orthodoxy at stake and it is insufficient to
remain silent or even “agree to disagree.” The question is, of course,
what are those issues? When must we draw a line in the sand and say, “this is
not Orthodox Judaism?”
Regarding my relationship with the Charedi community, much
of the Torah that the Charedi world produces has nothing to do with
controversial hashkafic issues and I want to benefit from their Torah.
The Charedi or more insular world is hundreds of years old, if not more, from
Ashkenazi Jews in the Middle Ages to the Eastern European communities, and
there is a tremendous amount that we can learn from them. Even in
areas where I disagree with them, I am often able to understand the sources
they rely upon for their approach.
I recall reading an article by Rav
Aharon Lichtenstein where he pointed out that whereas he supported the Hesder
Yeshiva movement, nevertheless, the “non-Hesder/Torah-only” movement is backed
by Torah leaders, also has a religious tradition, and is also legitimate.
He wrote that “hesder is at least as legitimate a path as any other. It
is to my mind, a good deal more; but surely not less.” His disagreement
with other Torah leaders about the Hesder Yeshiva movement essentially became a
classic debate similar to the debates between Beit Shammai and Beit Hillel.
On this issue and others, I have no problem expressing to my community
where my approach differs from the Charedi approach, while recognizing that
they have Gedolim who support their positions as well.
That being said, I do not identify with many hashkafic
positions held widely within the Charedi community. In addition to their
reluctance to send their boys in Israel to serve in the Israeli defense forces,
I disagree with their approach regarding the Kollel movement as well as their
lack of higher Jewish education in the area of Torah She’ba’al Peh for women,
just to name a few issues.
What do I do about all this? For the most part, as a
Rabbi in the modern orthodox community, I address issues facing my community
and not issues facing the Charedi community. Just as I would not want the
Charedi community to impose their view on my community, I allow them to deal
with their issues to the extent that those issues generally only affect their
community. However, I will speak out if I feel that their position may
impact the modern orthodox community. And of course, I espouse the modern
orthodox approach in my shul, from advocating for high level of Torah She’ba’al
Peh study for women, to celebrating Israeli soldiers in our community, to
clearly stating, when necessary, that I believe in the “learner-earner” model
for the vast majority of our community.
Recently, a new issue has emerged where the Charedi and
modern orthodox communities diverge. That is, the elimination of pictures
of women from Charedi publications, some of which are purchased by modern
orthodox Jews. In the past, I have expressed my opposition to this
practice. This practice does not reflect our Jewish value of modesty, and
I have noted that in modern orthodox publications and websites (like the OU and
RCA), pictures of women are featured. Rav Hershel Schachter himself
called this practice silly. However, the publications that have removed
women’s pictures are Charedi publications run by Charedi leadership. The
fact that many modern orthodox Jews purchase those publications perhaps
suggests that our community should respond by producing our own quality weekly
Torah publications where pictures of women are featured, as they always have
been.
Regarding the open orthodox movement today, the issues at
hand are often of a different nature. By definition, some are schismatic
issues that are more challenging to simply “agree to disagree.” The last
Mishnah in the first chapter of Yevamot describes two schismatic
issues: different standards of permitted food and different standards of whom
one may marry. If I can’t eat at your home or I can’t marry your child,
then that is considered schismatic according to the Mishna, for obvious
reasons. Additionally, more recently, another schismatic issue came up –
can I daven in your shul? Once Rav Moshe Feinstein and Rav Soloveitchik
forbade orthodox Jews from praying in a non-mechitza minyan, that effectively
severed the orthodox community from the conservative community. A central
component of a religious community is communal prayer and if I can’t pray in
your synagogue then I cannot be part of your community.
Some of the divergent issues between the modern and open
orthodox communities today relate to standards of freeing agunot, standards of
conversion, and partnership minyanim. Each of these issues alone has the
potential to be schismatic. If our divergent practices mean that a modern
orthodox Jew cannot marry an open orthodox convert or an agunah freed according
to open orthodox practice, or if he cannot pray in an open orthodox minyan, a schism
will likely occur.
Other issues that divide the modern orthodox and open
orthodox communities may be less certain to lead to schism. Both the
modern orthodox and open orthodox communities are struggling with issues that
relate to LGBTQ Jews in our communities, and time will tell how each community
responds to this very theologically-challenging issue. Any response that
essentially states that a prohibition of “arayot,” a sin whose punishment is
“karet” mentioned in the Torah, no longer applies, may further alienate the two
communities. Were our two communities to differ in our interpretation or
reinterpretation of such a strong Torah verse, I do fear that the gap between
us would grow significantly.
Additionally, aside from the particular issues upon which we
disagree, I think that there is a foundational methodological difference in the
way that the open orthodox and modern orthodox communities approach
innovation. That is, our deference to the opinions of the prominent Torah
scholars of our generation on issues of major import.
In the modern orthodox world, Poskim who are well-versed and
are clearly recognized Torah leaders of our community in all areas of halacha,
not just the “hot button topics,” are the ones who collectively provide
guidance on both new and challenging issues. It doesn’t mean that
they are experts in medicine or politics or psychology or that they have powers
of prophecy, but it means that in significant areas that affect the future of
our community, we look to them for guidance. And after they have
adequately reviewed the critical facts in each case, often with the guidance of
experts, such as doctors, politicians, or psychologists, as the case may be, we
trust them to determine what the practice of our community should be. Sometimes,
they will tell us that we are in a position to make these determinations for
ourselves. In fact, often community Rabbis are told that they know the issues
involved and are best suited to decide for themselves and their
communities. However, our deference to our Gedolim means that we consult
with the acknowledged Poskim for critical contemporary issues. Sometimes
they will say “yes,” sometimes they will say “no,” and sometimes they will say,
“you decide.”
I don’t think that this approach is shared by the open
orthodox community. Within the open orthodox community, it is my
understanding that Rabbis feel more empowered to innovate even when there is no
prominent Torah scholar described in the previous paragraph who supports a new
practice. In fact, I believe that many of the differences between our two
communities regarding the “hot button issues” of our day reflect this different
methodological approach; where open orthodox leaders are more eager to respond
to challenges with innovation, modern orthodox leaders will not accept a new
practice without the approval of our greatest halachic decisors.
To be fair, within the modern orthodox community, the
deferential approach I described is often met with resistance. Indeed, I
believe that many in the modern orthodox community have difficulty with this
approach, as they believe that some decisions by the modern orthodox Poskim
seem arbitrary and illogical.
I think the reason for this is
twofold. First, maybe the modern orthodox Rabbinic leadership needs to
spend more time addressing challenging issues and clarifying why they opt to
innovate in some circumstances and not others. This problem can be fixed
with better communication and more access to the modern orthodox Rabbinic
leadership. The second problem is harder to solve. That is, we live
in a world today that has far less respect for institutions and experts than we
did years ago.
Contemporary culture tells us that we know better, and
this philosophy has unfortunately crept into our Jewish communities. As
such, if a religious expert has weighed many different considerations in
arriving at a conclusion to a “hot-button” issue, especially if that conclusion
is counter-cultural, some in our community would argue that even though
they may not have the same halachic knowledge as the religious expert, they
understand the issue and are in a position to offer a different ruling.
This presents a challenge for modern orthodox Rabbinic leadership, as
deference to authority and respect for expertise is foundational to our
practice.
In sum, though there is a divide between the modern and
Charedi communities with respect to certain issues, those issues tend to be
less foundational to our practice of halachic Judaism and less necessarily
schismatic. Still, we in the modern orthodox world should clearly
advocate our position, especially when it affects our community, such as the
issue of eliminating women’s pictures in publications or service in the Israeli
army.
When it comes to the possibility of schism between the
modern and open orthodox communities, I am more concerned. With regard to
the open orthodox community, some of our disagreements are on issues that by
definition may be schismatic. Issues that affect Jewish status and
differences in communal prayer are two prime examples. Additionally, our
different approaches to innovation and leadership may, in the long run, simply
push our communities farther apart. I worry that in time, as each side becomes
less comfortable with the other’s religious worldview, less interaction between
the two communities will ultimately cause a schism that wholly separates the
two. It is my hope that we do retain the goal of living amongst each
other and avoiding schism whenever possible. Our community is stronger
when we are unified, and I still do believe that there is much that currently
unites us.
Sunday, August 4, 2019
Not Your Father's Lakewood
BMG Founder, R' Aharon Kotler |
The following letter by Yosef Shidler, appeared in Greater Lakewood, a publication geared for the Charedi world in Lakewood, New Jersey.
As most Orhtodox Jews know, Lakewood is the home of BMG, the flagship
institution of the Charedi world in America. The letter speaks for itself. If
it is anywhere near an accurate description of what goes on in this town, it is
a devastating indictment of how this community has evolved. Without any further comment, I present it in full.
So here we go again.
It’s another year and another story about Lakewood, New
Jersey, also occurring right around the Nine Days, a period when we mourn the
loss of our Batei Mikdash, one of which was destroyed because of the sin of
sinas chinam – baseless hatred, or thinking that you are better than everyone
else. As we reflect upon the lessons of the Nine Days and try to improve
our ways, it is also appropriate to consider our responsibilities as the chosen
people to be a light unto the nations in this world.
Clearly in the past few weeks the Jewish community has done
exactly that. Dozens of people dropped everything to aid in the search
for Rabbi Reuven Bauman when he went missing in Norfolk, Virginia. $2
million dollars was raised to pay the only medicine that could save the life of
a small child. Hundreds of people who turned out to mourn a young boy who died
in a tragic water park accident. All of these events are proof positive
that we are united in so many ways, with so much good in our community and so
many chesed organizations stepping up to help others in need. On the surface it
looks like we are doing everything right and that we have done what we needed
to bring Moshiach.
But he’s still not here. And from where I sit, we
still have a long way to go.
Lakewood itself has so much that is right about it. A
2014 New York Times article discussed the unprecedented giving that goes on on
a daily basis and the number of educational institutions here is
staggering. And yet, there are things going on in this town that nobody
wants to talk about and that in some instances seem to be deliberately done
behind the scenes.
Let’s step back for a moment in time and consider Rav Aaron
Kotler zt’l and how Lakewood came to be. Rav Aaron had a dream of building a
small yeshiva for the top bochurim, that maybe one day might draw 100
students. He built Beis Medrash Govoha to bring his vision to life,
choosing the small resort town of Lakewood, New Jersey. He imagined that
bochurim and avreichim would come and learn in Lakewood and when they left the
yeshiva’s hallowed halls, they would move elsewhere, leaving Lakewood as a
haven for top-tier learners.
Little did Rav Aaron realize that his yeshiva would be so
successful that it would undermine what he had set about to do. Rav Aaron was succeeded by his son Rav Shneur zt’l, with his grandsons Rav
Malkiel and Rabbi Aaron Kotler currently at the helm of BMG. As time went
by, a shift in our culture meant that suddenly any “quality” boy would, of
course, be learning full time, a major change from the days when only the best
of the best stayed on in yeshiva. And a construction boom created a stock
of reasonably priced housing all over Lakewood, with a solid infrastructure
built to provide for the needs of the many families who flocked to the town in
search of a Torah community with modern conveniences. Hoping to head
those problems off at the pass, the Lakewood Vaad was created to ensure that
BMG remained the focal point of the town and that its residents fit the
yeshiva’s cookie cutter mold.
Baruch Hashem, Lakewood is home today to dozens of wonderful
yeshivos, but when it comes to getting our little ones into school, things can
be exceptionally difficult, especially for those who don’t fit into the BMG
box. Me? My family and I moved here from Crown Heights where housing was
unaffordable. We soon found ourselves very much at home in Lakewood and while
we were warned that getting your kids into school was “not easy but not
impossible,” we weren’t really worried about running into an serious
roadblocks. .
If you know me, you already know about the letter I wrote
last year on Tisha B’Av when I still didn’t have a single school willing to
accept my daughter. And you probably know how after that letter, she was
welcomed into a wonderful school called Ateres Tziporah, which was saved from
last minute financial problems by the generosity of Shlomo Yehuda
Rechnitz. What you don’t know is what an amazing year my daughter had in
Ateres Tziporah, a school that helps every girl maximize her potential, makes
each one feel special and has strong programs in both limudei kodesh and
secular studies. It is an institution that educates the next generation
of wives and mothers to have bright futures – one that equips them for the
important roles that they will play both inside and outside of the house,
should they choose to do so, instead of assuming that they aren’t capable of
anything more than just sitting home and raising the kiddies.
And last weekend, the other shoe dropped. Unbelievably and
without any warning at all, Ateres Tziporah was closed, supposedly because of
financial issues. It took a while to dig down deep enough to find out
what had really happened and the truth was almost too crazy to believe. The
school’s downfall had been orchestrated by those who were tasked with making
sure that Lakewood remained aligned with Rav Aaron’s vision, which didn’t
include a place like Ateres Tziporah which warmly welcomed every girl who
wanted to learn. I guess in their minds, it made sense. If there are no
schools for the kids of non-BMG-type families, then they will have to pick up
and move elsewhere, leaving Lakewood pristine and pure. For students of
history, that concept is eerily disturbing, but let’s not go there.
Ironically, while Ateres Tziporah was supposedly closed for
lack of funding, those who were running the school turned down donations that
would have covered the shortfalls, with previous funding commitments
deliberately sabotaged. What terrible sin was it that Ateres Tziporah had committed
to find itself in the crosshairs of the Vaad? You better sit down for
this one. It had made the apparently fatal error of welcoming every girl who
wanted to learn and grow and succeed, and worse yet, it had done so without
forcing parents to grovel or to hand over $40k checks as “admission gifts.”
The funny thing is that while BMG’s original class of
talmidim may have included elite learners, they didn’t all come from BMG-type
families. Rabbi Shlomo Carlebach was considered to be one of Rav Aaron’s
top students and yet his ability to learn like no one else wouldn’t have been
enough to get him into some of the schools we have in Lakewood today. It
takes yichus. It takes money. It takes big checks and lots of them. How have we
gotten to the point where the Torah, G-d’s gift to all of the Jewish nations,
is considered to be something that is only for our society’s chosen
ones?
The fact is that whether the Vaad likes it or not, Lakewood
is changing, the sea of black and white dotted is with color. Is this a
community that only welcomes one type of Jew and tells the rest to find
somewhere else to live? I know what you’re thinking – that doesn’t really
happen. But I can tell you it does. Because I received a phone call last year
from a member of the Vaad telling me in no uncertain terms to “go back to Crown
Heights,” a pretty misplaced comment considering that I am from Denver, my wife
is from Florida and my family has been proud U.S. citizens for the past 100
years so we are the furthest thing in the world from Brooklynites. Are
the powers that be in Lakewood actually taking their cues from the people of
Sodom who prided themselves on denying outsiders entrance? As Americans, do we
not have the right to live freely anywhere on the soil of this great country?
And yet, five weeks before the start of the new school year,
170 girls suddenly have no place to go in September. Their parents will
be forced to beg and pull any string they can so that their daughter can be
squeezed into an already too full classroom. Ateres Tziporah’s parent
body is angry and rightfully so – it’s not just that they have to find another
placement for their girls. It is because their daughters were in a school that
loved them, nurtured them and helped them grow in their yiddishkeit and
outsiders decided that that approach to chinuch simply wasn’t the way things go
in this town. Parents are frustrated, angry and literally at wits end
because of the powers that be who are denying them the opportunity to educate
their girls as they see fit. And its not just Ateres Tziporah – other schools
that have suffered a similar fate, with a local girls’ high school with 60
students also being shuttered by the same forces.
Let me reiterate again that I am in no way looking to
detract from Rav Aaron’s kavod. He was one of the luminaries of the Torah world
and his method of chinuch yielded wonderful results. Coming from
Lubavitch I can tell you that the Lubavitcher Rebbe had a different approach –
he believed in welcoming every person, treating everyone with respect and
making sure that unity was priority number one. But the Lakewood Rav
Aaron envisioned is not the Lakewood that exists today and life in contemporary
Lakewood is not what it was in 1950 or even in 1980 or 2010. Even one of Rav Aaron’s
own grandchildren was heard to say that if he were alive today, “he would move
Lakewood out of Lakewood.”
At issue here is not just a single school but an entire way
of life. Sure we have conveniences galore but is it possible that our
community is breeding a divisive mentality, one that allows us to forget just
how powerful we can be what we all stand united? In any other community,
a yeshiva being forced to close down would result in a huge outcry and
campaigns to save the school that would likely be picked up by Jewish
communities all across the United States. But in Lakewood, Ateres
Tziporah was closed down and not a single community leader has uttered even one
word about the situation.
Does their silence imply that they stand with the
Vaad? That a school that welcomes every girl who wants to learn has no place in
Lakewood Ir Hakodesh? I’m sorry to say that we are living in a sick
world, where we can find ourselves in the midst of the Nine Days and there are
rabbis and community leaders who seem to have no problem seeing kids out of
school, stuffed like human sardines into an overcrowded school and torn away
from their friends.
When my daughter was about to enter Ateres Tziporah last
year, I was called to a meeting in the school where I was asked to sign a paper
from the Lakewood Vaad committing to keeping quiet and not speaking out on any
issue. The implication was clear – if I didn’t sign the paper my daughter
would not be going to school. Is that the kind of town we live in? Where people
are bullied into silence? It was clear at that moment that I was definitely not
welcome here, a message that seemed to come straight from the town’s
leadership.
I find myself asking the question. Is there not one
voice of leadership who will step up and say what we can do to rebuild Ateres
Tziporah?
I should mention that aside from this craziness, I love
living in Lakewood and we have been so happy here that my parents have moved to
town as well. Should I just move to a place that has true Torah values
and respects the potential in each child instead of throwing them under the
bus? I have no intention of going back to Brooklyn, as that lovely rabbi from
the Vaad suggested, and if I can’t find a suitable school for my daughter in
Lakewood because of the elitist mentality that seems to be everywhere, then I
will just have to drive farther to find a place that understands what the Torah
is all about and what achdus really means. It is laughable that Lakewood
prides itself on being an Ir HaTorah because there is literally nothing
Torahdik about leaving 170 girls out in the cold.
Having been raised on the teachings of the Lubavitcher
Rebbe, I know that each of us is here to bring light into places of darkness
and right now, Lakewood is sadly, very, very dark. It is unfathomable
that so many precious neshamas have been cast aside like last night’s garbage
and left to flounder on their own and that an institution that teaches Torah
could be closed so that the Vaad could turn back the hands of time and pretend
that it is 1950 all over again. The leadership of Lakewood needs to open
their eyes and see what our town really looks like. The people of Lakewood need
to stand up and call out those who closed down a school that was home to 170
girls. We are a people who stop everything the minute there is a tragedy to
help someone else – how can we just stand in silence when our daughters are
denied their chance to be taught the beauty of Torah and the love of
yiddishkeit?
Let me end with a story told by Rabbi Yechiel Spero that was
recently printed by Artscroll that took place right here in Lakewood in
BMG. The entire yeshiva was downtrodden after Rav Aaron’s passing,
wondering what would become of the yeshiva. The mashgiach, Rav Nosson
Wacthfogel, stood up and relayed a dream that had been shared with him by a
great Torah scholar.
In the dream Moshiach was sleeping on a couch. The Chasom
Soffer approached Moshiach and tried to wake him up with no success. Then Rav
Aaron walked into the room and attempted the rouse Moshaich, again with no
success. Finally a young American boy in a baseball cap walked into the
room and tapped Moshiach on the shoulder, waking him up.
Addressing the room, Rav Nosson explained that Moshiach
didn’t come in the generation of the Chasam Sofer or Rav Aaron Kotler. He
told the talmidim “he is coming here, for you guys, right now and he is coming
for the American kid in the baseball cap.”
Let that lesson sink in. Those kids in the baseball
caps? They have value. They are important. They were created in G-d’s
image. And the mashgiach of BMG made it abundantly clear to the yeshiva’s
talmidim that even those who don’t dress in black and white also have have the
ability to bring Moshiach – we just have to empower them.
Are we ready to accept them? Open our arms to embrace them?
Create Torah institutions for them?
Or is Moshiach going to continue slumbering because even
after all these years, we still haven’t learned what ahavas chinam and achdus
are all about?
Wednesday, July 24, 2019
Bais Yaakov Graduate to Head America’s NSA Cybersecurity Directorate
Anne Neuberger, head of NSA Cybersecurity Directorate (Jewish Press) |
A Sabbath-observant graduate of the Bais Yaakov school
system has just become one of the highest-ranking women in the U.S. Department
of Defense.
Anne Neuberger has just been appointed to head the new
Cybersecurity Directorate being created at the U.S. National Security Agency,
it was announced Tuesday. Neuberger helped establish the U.S. Cyber Command,
having been with the NSA for nearly a decade.
The Cybersecurity Directorate is described on the NSA
website as “a major organization that unifies NSA’s foreign intelligence and
cyber defense missions and is charged with preventing and eradicating threats
to National Security Systems and the Defense Industrial Base.”
Neuberger, the website says, reports “directly to General
[Paul M.] Nakasone” — a four-star general who commands the U.S. Cyber Command,
the National Security Agency and is the chief of the Central Security Service.
Her previous positions were described as “NSA’s first Chief Risk Officer,
Deputy Director of Operations, and Lead of NSA’s Russia Small Group.“
She is currently the Senior Adviser to the Director of the
NSA.
Neuberger has led the NSA’s Election Security effort and
served as Deputy Director of NSA’s Operations Directorate, leading NSA’s
foreign intelligence and cybersecurity operations.
In addition to her other positions, Neuberger previously served as the Director of NSA’s Commercial Solutions Center, responsible for NSA’s partnerships with the private sector, as the Navy’s Deputy Chief Management Officer and as a White House Fellow, working for Secretary of Defense Robert Gates.
Prior to joining government service, Neuberger was Senior
Vice President of Operations at American Stock Transfer & Trust Company
(AST), where she directed operations, including dividend distributions and
complex M&A processing for approximately 2,000 publicly traded companies.
Academically, she earned an MBA, Beta Gamma Sigma, and a Masters of International Affairs from Columbia University, and also graduated from Touro College, summa cum laude.
Neuberger has lectured on cybersecurity, risk,
surveillance/civil liberties and national security as a guest lecturer at
Harvard University, Stanford University and Columbia University.
The new NSA cybersecurity chief told The Wall Street Journal in an interview that her unit “will more actively use signals intelligence gleaned from expanded operations against adversaries.”
Anne (Chani) Neuberger was raised in the Borough Park section of Brooklyn and attended Bais Yaakov of Boro Park. She lives in Baltimore.
As she takes up her new position, Neuberger is about to
become one of the highest-ranking women in the department since 1980.
Trivia fact: Neuberger’s parents, Rivki and Mendel
Yitzhak (George), were on the Air France flight that was hijacked to Entebbe in
1976. Despite their American citizenship, they were kept with the Israeli
hostages because of her father’s kipa. They were rescued by the IDF and brought
to Israel.
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