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Jewish Theological Seminary of America

The Jewish Theological Seminary (JTS) is a Conservative Jewish education organization in New York City, New York. It is one of the academic and spiritual centers of Conservative Judaism and a center for academic scholarship in Jewish studies. The Jewish Theological Seminary Library is one of the most significant collections of Judaica in the world.[2]

Jewish Theological Seminary
Mottoוְהַסְּנֶה אֵינֶנּוּ אֻכָּל
Motto in English
And the bush was not consumed – Exodus 3:2
TypePrivate nonprofit[1]
Established1886
AffiliationConservative Judaism
ChancellorShuly Rubin Schwartz
Vice-ChancellorMarc Gary
ProvostJeffrey Kress
Location, ,
United States

40°48′43″N 73°57′37″W / 40.81194°N 73.96028°W / 40.81194; -73.96028
CampusUrban
FacebookJewish Theological Seminary on Facebook
Websitewww.jtsa.edu

History Edit

Possible antecedents: Jewish Theological Seminary of Breslau Edit

 
JTS building at 3080 Broadway in Manhattan

Rabbi Zecharias Frankel (1801–1875) was a leading figure in mid-19th Century German Jewry. Known both for his traditionalist views and the esteem he held for scientific study of Judaism, Frankel was at first considered a moderate figure within the nascent Reform movement. He severely criticized the 1844 first Reform rabbinic conference of Braunschweig, yet eventually agreed to participate in the next, in spite of warnings from conservative friends such as Solomon Judah Loeb Rapoport. He withdrew from the assembly, held in Frankfurt am Main in 1845, making a final break with the Reform camp after coming to believe their positions were excessively radical. In 1854 he became the director of a new rabbinical school, the Jewish Theological Seminary of Breslau.[3]

Rabbi Bernard Drachman, a key Frankel student and one of the founders of the American JTS, was himself Orthodox, and claims that the Breslau seminary was completely Orthodox.[4] Others disagree, citing the published viewpoint of Frankel. In his magnum opus Darkhei HaMishnah (Ways of the Mishnah), Frankel amassed scholarly support which showed that Jewish law was not static, but rather had always developed in response to changing conditions. He called his approach towards Judaism 'Positive-Historical', which meant that one should accept Jewish law and tradition as normative, yet one must be open to changing and developing the law in the same historical fashion that Judaism has always historically developed.

Seminary's founding: Morais era (1886–1897) Edit

The Jewish Theological Seminary (JTS) was founded in 1886 through the efforts of two distinguished rabbis, Sabato Morais and Henry Pereira Mendes, along with a group of prominent lay leaders from Sephardic congregations in Philadelphia and New York. Its mission was to preserve the knowledge and practice of historical Judaism. In 1887, JTS held its first class of ten students in the vestry of the Spanish-Portuguese Synagogue, New York City's oldest congregation.

About this time in North America, the Reform movement was growing at a rapid pace, alarming more traditional (halakhic) Jews. Sabato Morais, rabbi of Philadelphia's Mikveh Israel, championed the reaction to American Reform. At one time Morais had been a voice for moderation and bridge-building within the Reformers. He had opposed the more radical changes, but was open to moderate changes that would not break with significant traditional. After the Reform movement published the Pittsburgh Platform in late 1885, Morais recognized the futility of his efforts and began to work with like-minded rabbis to strengthen the Orthodox institutions.

One of the tools his group used was the creation of a new rabbinical school in New York City. The "Jewish Theological Seminary Association" was founded with Morais as its President in 1886 as an Orthodox institution to combat the hegemony of the Reform movement.[5] The school was hosted by Rabbi Henry Pereira Mendes' Congregation Shearith Israel, a sister synagogue to Mikveh Israel.

Morais and Mendes were soon joined by Alexander Kohut and Bernard Drachman, both of whom had received semicha (rabbinic ordination) at Rabbi Frankel's Breslau seminary. They shaped the curriculum and philosophy of the new school after Rabbi Frankel's seminary. The first graduate to be ordained, in 1894, was Joseph Hertz, who would go on to become the Chief Rabbi of the United Kingdom and Commonwealth.[6]

Morais served as the president of the Jewish Theological Seminary of America until his death in 1897.

Schechter era (1902–1915) Edit

After Morais's death, Mendes led the school, but the financial position of the association became precarious, and Mendes did not have the resources to turn it around. In October 1901, a new organization was projected entitled the "Jewish Theological Seminary of America," with which the association was invited to incorporate. This arrangement was carried into effect April 14, 1902. The new organization was endowed with a fund of over $500,000, and was presented with a suitable building on University Heights by Jacob H. Schiff. It obtained a charter from the state of New York (approved Feb. 20, 1902), "for the perpetuation of the tenets of the Jewish religion, the cultivation of Hebrew literature, the pursuit of Biblical and archeological research, the advancement of Jewish scholarship, the establishment of a library, and the education and training of Jewish rabbis and teachers. It is empowered to grant and confer the degrees of Rabbi, Ḥazan, Master and Doctor of Hebrew Literature, and Doctor of Divinity, and also to award certificates of proficiency to persons qualified to teach in Hebrew schools." The reorganized seminary was opened on Sept. 15, 1902, in the old building of the Theological Seminary Association at 736 Lexington Avenue.[5] A search was executed for a new president.

Solomon Schechter was recruited from Great Britain. His religious approach seemed compatible with JTS's, and he assumed the presidency, as well as serving as Professor of Jewish theology.[5] In a series of papers he articulated an ideology for the nascent movement of Conservative Judaism. Many of the Orthodox rabbis associated with JTS vehemently disagreed with him, and left the institution. About 100 days after Schechter's appointment, the Agudath Harabbonim formed, principally in protest, and declared that they would not accept any new ordinations from JTS, though previous recipients were still welcome.[7] The more moderate Orthodox Union (OU), however, still maintained some ties to JTS for decades to come, and some of its rabbis, including Drachman, continued to teach there. In practice, it was often still difficult to tell the difference between many of the less strict Orthodox congregations and the early Conservative synagogues, especially as many of them were once Orthodox-affiliated. (See Adler era discussion of merger with Yeshiva University.)

In 1913, Schechter directed the creation of the United Synagogue of America, as a formal group for member synagogues who subscribed to his philosophy. (The name was changed in 1991 to the United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism.) The group was strongly aligned with JTS from its creation to the present day.

Along with Schechter and Bernard Drachman, professors at the seminary at the time included: Louis Ginzberg, professor of Talmud; Alexander Marx, professor of history and rabbinical literature and librarian; Israel Friedländer, professor of Bible; Joseph Mayor Asher, professor of homiletics; and Joshua A. Joffe, instructor in Talmud.[5] In 1905, Israel Davidson joined the faculty, teaching Hebrew and Rabbinics.[8] According to David Ellenson and Lee Bycel, "each of these men was a distinguished scholar, and the academic reputation of the Seminary soared with the addition of these men to the faculty. ... Schechter was determined to carve out the highest academic reputation for the Seminary."[8]

The rabbinical school had very high academic standards.[9] The curriculum focused especially on Talmud, legal codes, and classical rabbinic literature, but aside from a little time for a Homiletics class, very little time was spent on practical training for serving in a rabbinical position.[9]

As of 1904 there were 37 students in the theological department, and 120 students took a set of courses designed for teachers (which later evolved into the Teachers Institute).[5]

Mordechai Kaplan also joined the faculty during this period and became professor of homiletics (upon Joseph Mayor Asher's death)[8] and also the first principal of a new school within JTS known as The Teachers Institute (TI), which opened in 1909. A majority of TI students were women, both because teaching was seen as a women's profession and because the Teachers Institute was one of the only institutions where women could obtain an advanced education in Jewish studies.[10] The Teachers Institute offered both undergraduate and graduate degrees. The undergraduate division is now the Albert A. List College of Jewish Studies, and the graduate division is the William Davidson Graduate School of Jewish Education.

Adler era (1915–1940) Edit

In 1915, Schechter was succeeded by Cyrus Adler, the President of Dropsie College. A member of the board with impressive academic qualifications, he was initially seen as an interim replacement for Schechter.[11] But no better chancellor was found, and Adler went on to serve as President until 1940.

During the 1920s, Adler explored the possibility of a merger with Yeshiva University, but Orthodox leaders of Yeshiva University viewed JTS as insufficiently Orthodox.[12]

New faculty appointed during the early part of Adler's tenure included the Biblical scholar Jacob Hoschander.[13] In the 1920s, Boaz Cohen and Louis Finkelstein, both of whom were ordained at JTS and completed their doctoral degrees at Columbia University, joined the Talmud faculty.[14] In the 1930s, Adler appointed H.L. Ginsberg, Robert Gordis, and Alexander Sperber as professors of Bible. He also gave appointments to Israel Efros, Simon Greenberg, Milton Steinberg, and Ismar Elbogen.[15]

During his tenure, Adler groomed Louis Finkelstein as his chosen successor. In 1931, he appointed Finkelstein to a full professorship. Finkelstein became the Solomon Schechter Professor of Theology. In 1937 Adler appointed Finkelstein as Provost.[16]

In 1930 the organization commissioned a new headquarters for 122nd Street and Broadway in a neo-colonial style, with a tower at the corner. The architects were Gehron, Ross and Alley.

In 1931, the Seminary College of Jewish Studies was established for students who wanted college-level courses in Jewish studies but who were not preparing for teaching careers. This branch is now part of the Albert A. List College of Jewish Studies.

Finkelstein era (1940–72) Edit

Louis Finkelstein became chancellor of the Jewish Theological Seminary in 1940. During his chancellorship, JTS made significant efforts to engage the American public. One of its signature programs was a radio and television show called The Eternal Light. The show aired on Sunday afternoons, featuring well-known Jewish personalities like Chaim Potok and Elie Wiesel. Broadcasts did not involve preaching or prayer, but drew on history, literature and social issues to explore Judaism and Jewish holidays in a manner that was accessible to persons of any faith. The show continued to run until 1985.

During the 1940s, the Jewish Theological Seminary established Camp Ramah as a tool for furthering Jewish education. The founders envisioned an informal camp setting where Jewish youth would reconnect with the synagogue and Jewish tradition, and a new cadre of American-born Jewish leadership could be cultivated.[17] The first camp opened in Conover, Wisconsin in 1947. The program was drawn up by Moshe Davis and Sylvia Ettenberg of the JTS Teachers' Institute.

In 1945, JTS established a new institution, the Leadership Training Fellowship, designed to educate young people within Conservative synagogues and guide them into Jewish public service.[18]

In 1952, the Jewish Theological Seminary opened a new school known as the Cantors Institute. (The school was later renamed the H. L. Miller Cantorial School and College of Jewish Music.) This was at roughly the same time that the other established American Jewish seminaries, Hebrew Union College and Yeshiva University, opened cantorial schools. Prior to this time, American cantors were often trained in Europe.[19]

In 1950, Finkelstein created the Universal Brotherhood program, which "brought together laymen interested in interpreting the ethical dimensions of Judaism to the wider society."[20] JTS expanded its public outreach in the 1950s with Finkelstein's development of JTS's Institute for Religious Studies and the establishment of its Herbert H. Lehman Institute of Ethics.

During the Finkelstein era, the Institute for Religious and Social Studies brought together Protestant, Roman Catholic and Jewish scholars for theological discussions. (In 1986, the name of the institute was changed to the Finkelstein Institute for Religious and Social Studies in Finkelstein's honor.)

In 1957, JTS announced plans to build a satellite campus in Jerusalem for JTS rabbinical students studying in Israel. A building was completed in 1962.[21] (The campus eventually evolved into the home of the Schechter Institute of Jewish Studies.) In 1962, the seminary also acquired the Schocken Institute for Jewish Research and its library in Jerusalem.

In 1968, JTS received a charter from the State of New York to create an Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities, which conferred bachelor's, master's, and doctoral degrees. The Institute was designed as a non-sectarian academic institute which would train future college and university professors. Its first students enrolled in 1970. The Institute later evolved into the Graduate School of the Jewish Theological Seminary.[22]

Faculty during the Finkelstein era Edit

When Finkelstein took office, prominent faculty members included Louis Ginzberg, Alexander Marx, Mordecai Kaplan, H.L. Ginsberg, Robert Gordis, and Boaz Cohen.

In 1940, Finkelstein made his most significant academic appointment,[23] hiring the prominent Talmud scholar Saul Lieberman as Professor of Palestinian Literature and Institutions. In 1948, Lieberman became dean of the Rabbinical School. In 1958, he was named rector of the Seminary.[23]

In 1945, Finkelstein hired the theologian Abraham Joshua Heschel, who had been teaching for a brief period at Hebrew Union College.[23] During the course of his chancellorship, Finkelstein also gave academic appointments to other prominent scholars including Moshe Davis (1942), Shalom Spiegel (1943), Yochanan Muffs (1954), Max Kadushin (1960), Gerson Cohen, David Weiss Halivni, Judah Goldin, Chaim Dimitrovsky, and Seymour Siegel.

Finkelstein appointed Max Arzt to serve as Vice-Chancellor of JTS in 1951, and he appointed Arzt as Israel Goldstein Professor of Practical Theology in 1962.[24]

The Jewish Theological Seminary, JTS, is the primary educational and religious center of Conservative Judaism. The single largest physical addition to JTS came in the form of seventeen-foot wrought iron gates. The beautifully constructed gates led to the main entrance through a large vaulted passageway to the entire group of buildings. In a 1930s guidebook, it is written about the Seminary, "Be sure to notice the main gate to the seminary as you go in. It is hand-wrought iron and the whole design is symbolic." These gates were presented on September 26, 1934, by Mrs. Frieda and Mr. Felix M. Warburg in memory of her parents, Jacob H. and Therese Schiff.

Library fire Edit

In April 1966 JTS's library caught fire. 70,000 books were destroyed, and many others were damaged.[25]

The Cohen era (1972–1986) Edit

Gerson D. Cohen became Chancellor of the Jewish Theological Seminary in 1972.

Prominent faculty during Cohen's chancellorship included David Weiss Halivni of the Talmud Department and José Faur. Both of these scholars resigned when the JTS faculty voted to ordain women as rabbis and as cantors in 1983.

Yochanan Muffs, who had joined the JTS faculty in 1954, was a prominent professor of Bible. Max Kadushin, who had joined the JTS faculty in 1960, taught ethics and rabbinic thought until his death in 1980.

In 1972, Cohen appointed Avraham Holtz as the dean of academic development. Neil Gillman served as Dean of the JTS Rabbinical School for much of the Cohen chancellorship.[when?] Morton Leifman served as Dean of the Cantors Institute.[when?]

Cohen oversaw the appointment of Judith Hauptman as the first female professor of Talmud at JTS. Hauptman began teaching at JTS in 1973.[26]

Joel Roth, who had begun teaching at JTS in 1968, was appointed Associate Professor of Talmud upon completing his Ph.D. at JTS in 1973. Roth went on to serve as the dean of the Rabbinical School from 1981 to 1984. He was succeeded by Gordon Tucker, who became dean of the Rabbinical School in 1984.

In June 1973, the Seminary's Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities was granted permission to grant Ph.D. degrees in Jewish History, Bible, Talmud, Jewish philosophy, and Hebrew. In 1975, the Seminary replaced the Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities with the Graduate School of the Jewish Theological Seminary, which brought together JTS's non-theological academic training programs. Cohen appointed historian Ismar Schorsch as the first dean of the Graduate School.[27]

Admission of female students Edit

Beginning in the 1970s, the topic of women's ordination was regularly discussed at JTS.[28] Women who unsuccessfully sought admission to the rabbinical school during the 1970s included Susannah Heschel, daughter of JTS faculty member Abraham Joshua Heschel.[29] There was a special commission appointed by the chancellor of the Jewish Theological Seminary of America (Gerson D. Cohen) to study the issue of ordaining women as rabbis, which met between 1977 and 1978, and consisted of 11 men and three women; the women were Marian Siner Gordon, an attorney, Rivkah Harris, an Assyriologist, and Francine Klagsbrun, a writer.[30] After years of discussion, the JTS faculty voted to ordain women as rabbis and as cantors in 1983.[31] The first female rabbi to graduate from the school (and the first female Conservative Jewish rabbi in the world) was Amy Eilberg, who graduated and was ordained as a rabbi in 1985.[32] The first class of female rabbis that was admitted to JTS in 1984 included Rabbi Naomi Levy, who later became a best-selling author[33] and Nina Beth Cardin, who became an author and environmental activist.[34] Erica Lippitz and Marla Rosenfeld Barugel were the first women ordained as cantors by JTS (and the first female Conservative Jewish cantors in the world.) They were both ordained in 1987.[35]

Schorsch era (1986–2006) Edit

Ismar Schorsch became Chancellor of JTS in 1986.

Among his accomplishments was creating the William Davidson Graduate School of Jewish Education, which was established through an endowment by William Davidson of Detroit in 1994.

Michael Greenbaum served as Vice Chancellor of The Jewish Theological Seminary.

Prominent faculty in the Talmud and Rabbinics department during Schorsch's chancellorship included Joel Roth, Mayer Rabinowitz, David C. Kraemer and Judith Hauptman. Hauptman was the first woman appointed to teach Talmud at JTS. The Bible department included David Marcus and Stephen A. Geller. The Jewish literature Department included David G. Roskies. The Jewish history department included Jack Wertheimer and Shuly Rubin Schwartz. The Jewish Philosophy department included Neil Gillman and Shaul Magid. In 2004, Alan Mittleman joined the Jewish Philosophy department and became head of JTS's Louis Finkelstein Institute for Religious and Social Studies.

The number of advanced programs in the Graduate School grew over the course of Schorsch's tenure. The Graduate School came to describe itself as being "the most extensive academic program in advanced Judaica in North America."[36]

Gordon Tucker's tenure as dean of the Rabbinical School ended in 1992. His predecessor, Joel Roth, again became dean, serving in 1992–1993. Roth was succeeded by William Lebeau, who served as dean from 1993–1999. Lebeau was succeeded by Alan Kensky, and then Lebeau became dean of the Rabbinical School again in June 2002.[37]

In 1998, Henry Rosenblum was appointed Dean of the H.L. Miller Cantorial School and College of Jewish Music at the Jewish Theological Seminary in 1998, becoming the first Hazzan to hold that position. Rosenblum remained in this position until 2010.

Eisen era (2007–2020) Edit

Arnold Eisen, Koshland Professor of Jewish Culture and Religion and Chair of the Department of Religious Studies at Stanford University, took office as Chancellor-elect on July 1, 2006, the day after Schorsch stepped down. Eisen assumed the position full-time on July 1, 2007.

Eisen is the second non-rabbi, after Cyrus Adler, to hold this post. He is also the first person with a social science background to serve as Chancellor; previous chancellors had backgrounds in Jewish history or Talmud.

In January 2007, at the start of Eisen's chancellorship, Daniel S. Nevins was named the Dean of the Rabbinical School of the Jewish Theological Seminary of America, succeeding Rabbi William Lebeau.[38] Biblical scholar Alan Cooper was named Provost.[39] In 2010, Henry Rosenblum left the H.L. Miller Cantorial School as part of JTS's restructuring efforts, and Nevins also became responsible for oversight of the H.L. Miller Cantorial School.[40]

In June 2009, Goldman Sachs executive Abby Joseph Cohen was named Chairman of the Board of JTS, the first woman to hold the position.[41]

Also in 2009, with funding from the Charles H. Revson Foundation and the Booth Ferris Foundation, JTS established The Center for Pastoral Education with the goal of teaching the art of pastoral care to seminary students and ordained clergy of all faiths.[42] The Center was developed by Rabbi Mychal Springer, formerly an Associate Dean of the Rabbinical School. Springer became the Center's first director.[43]

In 2010, the Tikvah Fund endowed a new institute at JTS, the Tikvah Institute for Jewish Thought, which is "devoted to the intellectual encounter between the best sources of Jewish and broader Western reflection on the deepest problems of human life." According to the Seminary, "JTS was selected by the Tikvah Fund based on its academic excellence and its mission to advance Jewish life in the modern world."[44] Alan Mittleman, Chair of the Department of Jewish Thought, was appointed as its director.

Burton L. Visotzky was appointed to replace Mittleman as director of the Louis Finkelstein Institute for Religious and Social Studies.[45] His early work as director of the Finkelstein Institute focused on Muslim-Jewish dialogue. In October 2010, a group of prominent Muslim and Jewish scholars and leaders, joined by the heads of several Christian seminaries, met at JTS for two days to discuss and compare the situations of Islam and Judaism in America.[46][47]

In May 2011, Eisen launched "Conservative Judaism: A Community Conversation," an interactive website featuring original essays on Conservative Judaism, with responses from Movement and Lay leaders and scholars.

Admission of LGBT students Edit

Since March 2007, JTS has accepted openly gay, lesbian, and bisexual students into their rabbinical and cantorial programs (the seminary's other three schools upheld such non-discrimination policies prior to this date). A survey conducted prior to the decision indicated that 58% of the rabbinical student body supported this change.[48] The school issued a press release[49] announcing the new admission policy, without taking a stance on same-sex unions. JTS marked the first anniversary of the change with a special program. Some students who opposed the change in admission policy said they felt excluded from the day's program because it did not sufficiently recognize the pluralism in the student body. In April 2011, JTS held a Yom Iyyun, or day of learning, about LGBTQ issues, and their intersection with Judaism. Joy Ladin, a transgender woman who teaches English at Yeshiva University, gave a talk about her life. Other programs included creating welcoming communities, and inclusive prayer, among others. It was sponsored in part by Keshet, a Jewish LGBTQ social action group.

JTS and the Conservative movement Edit

JTS was the founding institution of Conservative Judaism in America. The United Synagogue of America, the organization of Conservative synagogues, was founded by Solomon Schechter while he served as President of JTS. In the context of the pre-Finkelstein era, Orthodox Rabbi Nosson Scherman stated that "in its early years the JTS was what today might be called Modern Orthodox."[50]

During the chancellorship of Louis Finkelstein, however, there were many tensions between JTS and the Conservative Judaism movement which it led. JTS was often more traditional in matters of religious practice than the denomination as a whole. When Jacob Neusner applied to JTS during the Finkelstein era, in 1954, he like other applicants "had to sign a pledge saying they would abide by traditional Jewish law."[51] Finkelstein was also perceived as focusing on American and world Jewry as a whole while paying little attention to the Conservative movement.

According to scholar Michael Panitz, the situation changed under Finkelstein's successors. Under Chancellor Gerson Cohen (chancellor from 1972–86), JTS "decisively embraced its identity as a Conservative Jewish institution, it thereby abandoned its earlier hopes to provide a non-denominational unifier for traditional and moderate American Jews." The next chancellor, Ismar Schorsch (1986–2006), "emerged as an outspoken advocate for Conservative Judaism."[52] With the new mission statement introduced by Chancellor Arnold Eisen (2007-), the school has positioned itself as serving both "Conservative Judaism" and "the vital religious center."[53]

As of 2010, JTS's website describes JTS as "the academic and spiritual center of Conservative Judaism worldwide."[54] Others describe it as "the academic and spiritual centre of Conservative Judaism in the United States."[55] A second important center for Conservative Judaism in the United States is the Ziegler School of Rabbinic Studies in California, founded by graduates of JTS in 1996.

Current educational programs Edit

Rabbinical School Edit

The Rabbinical School describes itself as offering "an intensive program of study, personal growth, and spiritual development that leads to rabbinic ordination and a career of service to the Jewish community."[56]

As of 2010, the rabbinical school requires five or six years of study. Its curriculum requires extensive study of Talmud, midrash, Bible, Jewish history, Hebrew language, and various professional skills. Students are required to spend the second year of the program at the Schechter Institute of Jewish Studies in Jerusalem.

Students must choose a field of concentration during their studies. Concentrations include:

Cantorial school Edit

The cantorial school describes itself as training "select advanced students as hazzanim (cantors) for congregational service or as teachers of Jewish music, choral directors, composers, or research scholars."[57]

The school is technically divided into two parts: the entity formally known as the H. L. Miller Cantorial School invests students as hazzanim, while the entity known as the College of Jewish Music awards the master's degree in Sacred Music. All students in the Cantorial School are enrolled in both programs simultaneously.[57]

At present, the first year of cantorial school at JTS is generally spent in Israel. The curriculum during the five years focuses on three main areas: general music, Jewish music and Jewish text study.

Graduate school Edit

The graduate school of the Jewish Theological Seminary offers academic programs in advanced Jewish studies. It describes itself as offering "the most extensive academic program in advanced Judaic Studies in North America".[58] The school grants MA, DHL, and PhD degrees in the areas of:

William Davidson Graduate School of Jewish Education Edit

In 1994, William Davidson of Detroit, Michigan established a $15 million endowment at JTS to fund the William Davidson Graduate School of Jewish Education, which trains educators who can serve in Jewish institutions and elsewhere, in both formal and informal settings. The Davidson School offers both master's and doctoral degrees.

List College Edit

Albert A. List College of Jewish Studies (List College) is the undergraduate school of JTSA. It is closely affiliated with Columbia University; almost all List College students are enrolled in dual-degree programs with either Columbia University’s School of General Studies or Barnard College.

Additional institutes at JTS Edit

  • Tikvah Institute for Jewish Thought – devoted to the intellectual encounter between the best sources of Jewish and broader Western reflection on the deepest problems of human life.
  • Melton Research Center for Jewish Education – focuses on improving the quality of Jewish education in North America.
  • Louis Finkelstein Institute for Religious and Social Studies – focuses on interfaith relations and public affairs.
  • Saul Lieberman Institute for Talmudic Research – develops modern and rigorous computer tools for Talmud study.
  • Institute for Jewish Learning – focuses on advanced adult education.
  • Center for Pastoral Education – focuses on the art of pastoral care.

Notable alumni Edit

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ "Jewish Theological Seminary of America 2018-11-18 at the Wayback Machine". Exempt Organization Select Check. Internal Revenue Service. Accessed on April 25, 2016.
  2. ^ "A Jewish library's treasure surfaced at auction. How did it get there?". The Jerusalem Post. from the original on 2021-07-27. Retrieved 2021-07-28 – via JPost.com.
  3. ^ Michael A. Meyer, Response to Modernity: A History of the Reform Movement in Judaism. Wayne State University Press (1995). p. 84–89, 135–138.
  4. ^ Gurock, Jeffrey S. (1996). American Jewish Orthodoxy in Historical Perspective. New Jersey: KTAV Publishing House. pp. 4, 207, 356–357. ISBN 978-0-88125-567-6. Drachman remained at Frankel's institution, which he defined as 'in fundamental harmony on the basic concepts of traditional Judaism and its adjustments to modern conditions.' The Jewish Theological Seminary of America linked Historical School men like Jastrow, Kohut, and Szold, with the Orthodox Drachman, H. P. Mendes, Henry Schneeberger, and Sabato Morais, the Seminary's first president. For [Drachman], Breslau, which advocated 'the bindingness of Jewish law,' and Berlin, which advocated 'the harmopnious union of Orthodox faith and modern culture,' were both Orthodox institutions.
  5. ^ a b c d e Jewish Theological Seminary of America 2005-12-03 at the Wayback Machine Jewish Encyclopedia.
  6. ^ Hasia Diner, "Like the Antelope and the Badger: The founding and early years of the Jewish Theological Seminary" in Tradition Renewed, v. 1, p. 27
  7. ^ Gurock, Jeffrey S. American Jewish History: The history of Judaism in America, Volume 5: Resisters and Accommodators. KTAV. p. 63.
  8. ^ a b c David Ellenson and Lee Bycel, "The JTS Rabbinical Curriculum" in Tradition Renewed, v. 2, p. 541
  9. ^ a b David Ellenson and Lee Bycel, "The JTS Rabbinical Curriculum" in Tradition Renewed, v. 2, p. 544
  10. ^ The Jewish Theological Seminary – The Teachers Institute 100th Anniversary 2010-08-23 at the Wayback Machine
  11. ^ Ira Robinson, "Cyrus Adler: President of the Jewish Theological Seminary, 1915–1940," in Tradition Renewed, ed. Wertheimer, v.1, p. 108–110
  12. ^ Robinson, p. 123–125
  13. ^ Robinson, p. 128–130
  14. ^ "Boaz Cohen (1899–1968)," by Elias J. Bickerman and Edward M. Gershfield, Proceedings of the American Academy for Jewish Research, Vol. 37, (1969), pp. xxix–xxxi
  15. ^ Robinson, p. 138–139
  16. ^ Robinson, p. 140–141
  17. ^ The Jewish Theological Seminary – Record Group 28: Camp Ramah 2010-05-28 at the Wayback Machine
  18. ^ Tradition Renewed, v. 1, 197
  19. ^ Discovering Jewish Music, by Marsha Bryan Edelman, p. 134–35
  20. ^ Tradition Renewed, v.1, p.199
  21. ^ Tradition Renewed, v. 1, p. 200
  22. ^ Tradition Renewed, v. 1, p. 240
  23. ^ a b c David Ellenson and Lee Bycel, "The JTS Rabbinical Curriculum" in Tradition Renewed, v. 2, p. 556
  24. ^ Conservative Judaism in America: a biographical dictionary and sourcebook by Pamela Susan Nadell, p. 37
  25. ^ LOST MEMORY – LIBRARIES AND ARCHIVES DESTROYED IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY ( December 13, 2011, at the Wayback Machine)
  26. ^ "Judith Hauptman". from the original on 2015-11-17. Retrieved 2015-11-15.
  27. ^ Tradition Renewed, v. 1, p. 240-1
  28. ^ Women Who Would Be Rabbis: A History of Women's Ordination 1889–1985 by Pamela S. Nadell, p. 214
  29. ^ Women Who Would Be Rabbis: A History of Women's Ordination 1889–1985 by Pamela S. Nadell, p. 198
  30. ^ "Francine Klagsbrun | Jewish Women's Archive". Jwa.org. from the original on 2015-09-19. Retrieved 2015-09-07.
  31. ^ Keller, Rosemary Skinner; Rosemary Radford Ruether; Marie Cantlon (2006). Encyclopedia of women and religion in North America, Volume 2. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press. p. 551. ISBN 0-253-34687-8. from the original on 2020-08-12. Retrieved 2015-11-15.
  32. ^ myBrandeis (my.brandeis.edu) | Brandeis University 2007-08-19 at the Wayback Machine. my.brandeis.edu. Retrieved on 2013-09-04.
  33. ^ "A rabbi's journey, a mother's anxious path - Cover Story". 15 September 2010. from the original on 2 October 2022. Retrieved 18 December 2016.
  34. ^ Susan Josephs, [www.jwi.org/Page.aspx?pid=2034 Rabbi Nina Beth Cardin: Making the Environment a Jewish Priority]
  35. ^ "Cantors: American Jewish Women - Jewish Women's Archive". from the original on 24 November 2010. Retrieved 18 December 2016.
  36. ^ , 1/2006 (from archive.org)
  37. ^ "Rabbi William Lebeau to Retire on July 1, 2007" June 10, 2007, at the Wayback Machine, Jewish Theological Seminary of America press release dated June 30, 2006. Accessed May 29, 2007.
  38. ^ "Rabbi Daniel Nevins Named New Dean of The Rabbinical School of The Jewish Theological Seminary" 2007-06-10 at the Wayback Machine, Jewish Theological Seminary of America press release dated January 29, 2007. Accessed May 29, 2007.
  39. ^ Chicago Tribune, Mar 23, 2007, Metro Section, p. 13
  40. ^ "Endnote - Tablet Magazine – Jewish News and Politics, Jewish Arts and Culture, Jewish Life and Religion". from the original on 15 June 2010. Retrieved 18 December 2016.
  41. ^ JTS to get first woman chair, as Kekst steps down. Accessed 10-26-10 2012-03-13 at the Wayback Machine
  42. ^ The Jewish Theological Seminary – Center for Pastoral Education 2011-01-01 at the Wayback Machine
  43. ^ The Jewish Theological Seminary – Center for Pastoral Education 2010-05-27 at the Wayback Machine
  44. ^ (Press release). JTS. April 27, 2009. Archived from the original on March 3, 2012.
  45. ^ The Jewish Theological Seminary – JTS Appoints New Director of the Louis Finkelstein Institute 2014-02-04 at the Wayback Machine
  46. ^ At Conservative Seminary, Getting Beyond Park51 2010-11-01 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 10-26-10
  47. ^ Arnold Eisen, Why a Jewish Seminary Must Find Common Ground With Islam
  48. ^ shamir, Shlomo (2007-03-28). "NY Jewish seminary to accept gay students". Haaretz.com. from the original on 2008-09-07. Retrieved 2009-01-06. A Conservative Jewish seminary in New York has agreed to admit gays and lesbians who want to become rabbis and cantors, but declined to take a stand on whether rabbis should officiate at same-sex unions.
  49. ^ . JTSA. 2007-03-26. Archived from the original on 2007-04-18. Note: The original page has been removed from school's web site
  50. ^ Scherman in an interview with Rabbi Yitzchok Frankfurter published in A Conversation with Rabbi Nosson Scherman On Chinuch (p. 66-73 in Ami Magazine, June 21, 2017), in which Scherman stated that despite Rabbi Hertz's affiliation with the Jewish Theological Seminary, "in its early years the JTS was what today might be called Modern Orthodox" and Hertz "was Orthodox, without any question" (p. 70).
  51. ^ Aaron W. Hughes, Jacob Neusner: An American Jewish Iconoclast, 2020-07-26 at the Wayback Machine New York University Press ISBN 978-1-479-88585-5 2016 p. 40.
  52. ^ "Encyclopaedia Judaica". from the original on 2015-09-10. Retrieved 2015-11-15.
  53. ^ . Archived from the original on 5 July 2010. Retrieved 18 December 2016.
  54. ^ Jewish Theological Seminary. . Archived from the original on 2010-11-24. Retrieved 2010-10-05.
  55. ^ "Jewish Theological Seminary of America". The Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 2010-10-05.
  56. ^ The Jewish Theological Seminary – The Rabbinical School 2010-10-09 at the Wayback Machine
  57. ^ a b The Jewish Theological Seminary - H. L. Miller Cantorial School and College of Jewish Music 2010-07-27 at the Wayback Machine
  58. ^ "JTS Graduate School Sends Notable Cohort to the Association for Jewish Studies' Annual Conference," 2011-01-01 at the Wayback Machine accessed 11-23-2010.

  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainSinger, Isidore; et al., eds. (1901–1906). "Jewish Theological Seminary of America". The Jewish Encyclopedia. New York: Funk & Wagnalls.

External links Edit

  • Official website  

jewish, theological, seminary, america, jewish, theological, seminary, conservative, jewish, education, organization, york, city, york, academic, spiritual, centers, conservative, judaism, center, academic, scholarship, jewish, studies, jewish, theological, se. The Jewish Theological Seminary JTS is a Conservative Jewish education organization in New York City New York It is one of the academic and spiritual centers of Conservative Judaism and a center for academic scholarship in Jewish studies The Jewish Theological Seminary Library is one of the most significant collections of Judaica in the world 2 Jewish Theological SeminaryMottoו ה ס נ ה א ינ נ ו א כ לMotto in EnglishAnd the bush was not consumed Exodus 3 2TypePrivate nonprofit 1 Established1886AffiliationConservative JudaismChancellorShuly Rubin SchwartzVice ChancellorMarc GaryProvostJeffrey KressLocationNew York City New York United States40 48 43 N 73 57 37 W 40 81194 N 73 96028 W 40 81194 73 96028CampusUrbanFacebookJewish Theological Seminary on FacebookWebsitewww wbr jtsa wbr eduContents 1 History 1 1 Possible antecedents Jewish Theological Seminary of Breslau 1 2 Seminary s founding Morais era 1886 1897 1 3 Schechter era 1902 1915 1 4 Adler era 1915 1940 1 5 Finkelstein era 1940 72 1 5 1 Faculty during the Finkelstein era 1 5 2 Library fire 1 6 The Cohen era 1972 1986 1 6 1 Admission of female students 1 7 Schorsch era 1986 2006 1 8 Eisen era 2007 2020 1 8 1 Admission of LGBT students 2 JTS and the Conservative movement 3 Current educational programs 3 1 Rabbinical School 3 2 Cantorial school 3 3 Graduate school 3 4 William Davidson Graduate School of Jewish Education 3 5 List College 4 Additional institutes at JTS 5 Notable alumni 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory EditPossible antecedents Jewish Theological Seminary of Breslau Edit Main article Jewish Theological Seminary of Breslau nbsp JTS building at 3080 Broadway in ManhattanRabbi Zecharias Frankel 1801 1875 was a leading figure in mid 19th Century German Jewry Known both for his traditionalist views and the esteem he held for scientific study of Judaism Frankel was at first considered a moderate figure within the nascent Reform movement He severely criticized the 1844 first Reform rabbinic conference of Braunschweig yet eventually agreed to participate in the next in spite of warnings from conservative friends such as Solomon Judah Loeb Rapoport He withdrew from the assembly held in Frankfurt am Main in 1845 making a final break with the Reform camp after coming to believe their positions were excessively radical In 1854 he became the director of a new rabbinical school the Jewish Theological Seminary of Breslau 3 Rabbi Bernard Drachman a key Frankel student and one of the founders of the American JTS was himself Orthodox and claims that the Breslau seminary was completely Orthodox 4 Others disagree citing the published viewpoint of Frankel In his magnum opus Darkhei HaMishnah Ways of the Mishnah Frankel amassed scholarly support which showed that Jewish law was not static but rather had always developed in response to changing conditions He called his approach towards Judaism Positive Historical which meant that one should accept Jewish law and tradition as normative yet one must be open to changing and developing the law in the same historical fashion that Judaism has always historically developed Seminary s founding Morais era 1886 1897 Edit The Jewish Theological Seminary JTS was founded in 1886 through the efforts of two distinguished rabbis Sabato Morais and Henry Pereira Mendes along with a group of prominent lay leaders from Sephardic congregations in Philadelphia and New York Its mission was to preserve the knowledge and practice of historical Judaism In 1887 JTS held its first class of ten students in the vestry of the Spanish Portuguese Synagogue New York City s oldest congregation About this time in North America the Reform movement was growing at a rapid pace alarming more traditional halakhic Jews Sabato Morais rabbi of Philadelphia s Mikveh Israel championed the reaction to American Reform At one time Morais had been a voice for moderation and bridge building within the Reformers He had opposed the more radical changes but was open to moderate changes that would not break with significant traditional After the Reform movement published the Pittsburgh Platform in late 1885 Morais recognized the futility of his efforts and began to work with like minded rabbis to strengthen the Orthodox institutions One of the tools his group used was the creation of a new rabbinical school in New York City The Jewish Theological Seminary Association was founded with Morais as its President in 1886 as an Orthodox institution to combat the hegemony of the Reform movement 5 The school was hosted by Rabbi Henry Pereira Mendes Congregation Shearith Israel a sister synagogue to Mikveh Israel Morais and Mendes were soon joined by Alexander Kohut and Bernard Drachman both of whom had received semicha rabbinic ordination at Rabbi Frankel s Breslau seminary They shaped the curriculum and philosophy of the new school after Rabbi Frankel s seminary The first graduate to be ordained in 1894 was Joseph Hertz who would go on to become the Chief Rabbi of the United Kingdom and Commonwealth 6 Morais served as the president of the Jewish Theological Seminary of America until his death in 1897 Schechter era 1902 1915 Edit After Morais s death Mendes led the school but the financial position of the association became precarious and Mendes did not have the resources to turn it around In October 1901 a new organization was projected entitled the Jewish Theological Seminary of America with which the association was invited to incorporate This arrangement was carried into effect April 14 1902 The new organization was endowed with a fund of over 500 000 and was presented with a suitable building on University Heights by Jacob H Schiff It obtained a charter from the state of New York approved Feb 20 1902 for the perpetuation of the tenets of the Jewish religion the cultivation of Hebrew literature the pursuit of Biblical and archeological research the advancement of Jewish scholarship the establishment of a library and the education and training of Jewish rabbis and teachers It is empowered to grant and confer the degrees of Rabbi Ḥazan Master and Doctor of Hebrew Literature and Doctor of Divinity and also to award certificates of proficiency to persons qualified to teach in Hebrew schools The reorganized seminary was opened on Sept 15 1902 in the old building of the Theological Seminary Association at 736 Lexington Avenue 5 A search was executed for a new president Solomon Schechter was recruited from Great Britain His religious approach seemed compatible with JTS s and he assumed the presidency as well as serving as Professor of Jewish theology 5 In a series of papers he articulated an ideology for the nascent movement of Conservative Judaism Many of the Orthodox rabbis associated with JTS vehemently disagreed with him and left the institution About 100 days after Schechter s appointment the Agudath Harabbonim formed principally in protest and declared that they would not accept any new ordinations from JTS though previous recipients were still welcome 7 The more moderate Orthodox Union OU however still maintained some ties to JTS for decades to come and some of its rabbis including Drachman continued to teach there In practice it was often still difficult to tell the difference between many of the less strict Orthodox congregations and the early Conservative synagogues especially as many of them were once Orthodox affiliated See Adler era discussion of merger with Yeshiva University In 1913 Schechter directed the creation of the United Synagogue of America as a formal group for member synagogues who subscribed to his philosophy The name was changed in 1991 to the United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism The group was strongly aligned with JTS from its creation to the present day Along with Schechter and Bernard Drachman professors at the seminary at the time included Louis Ginzberg professor of Talmud Alexander Marx professor of history and rabbinical literature and librarian Israel Friedlander professor of Bible Joseph Mayor Asher professor of homiletics and Joshua A Joffe instructor in Talmud 5 In 1905 Israel Davidson joined the faculty teaching Hebrew and Rabbinics 8 According to David Ellenson and Lee Bycel each of these men was a distinguished scholar and the academic reputation of the Seminary soared with the addition of these men to the faculty Schechter was determined to carve out the highest academic reputation for the Seminary 8 The rabbinical school had very high academic standards 9 The curriculum focused especially on Talmud legal codes and classical rabbinic literature but aside from a little time for a Homiletics class very little time was spent on practical training for serving in a rabbinical position 9 As of 1904 there were 37 students in the theological department and 120 students took a set of courses designed for teachers which later evolved into the Teachers Institute 5 Mordechai Kaplan also joined the faculty during this period and became professor of homiletics upon Joseph Mayor Asher s death 8 and also the first principal of a new school within JTS known as The Teachers Institute TI which opened in 1909 A majority of TI students were women both because teaching was seen as a women s profession and because the Teachers Institute was one of the only institutions where women could obtain an advanced education in Jewish studies 10 The Teachers Institute offered both undergraduate and graduate degrees The undergraduate division is now the Albert A List College of Jewish Studies and the graduate division is the William Davidson Graduate School of Jewish Education Adler era 1915 1940 Edit In 1915 Schechter was succeeded by Cyrus Adler the President of Dropsie College A member of the board with impressive academic qualifications he was initially seen as an interim replacement for Schechter 11 But no better chancellor was found and Adler went on to serve as President until 1940 During the 1920s Adler explored the possibility of a merger with Yeshiva University but Orthodox leaders of Yeshiva University viewed JTS as insufficiently Orthodox 12 New faculty appointed during the early part of Adler s tenure included the Biblical scholar Jacob Hoschander 13 In the 1920s Boaz Cohen and Louis Finkelstein both of whom were ordained at JTS and completed their doctoral degrees at Columbia University joined the Talmud faculty 14 In the 1930s Adler appointed H L Ginsberg Robert Gordis and Alexander Sperber as professors of Bible He also gave appointments to Israel Efros Simon Greenberg Milton Steinberg and Ismar Elbogen 15 During his tenure Adler groomed Louis Finkelstein as his chosen successor In 1931 he appointed Finkelstein to a full professorship Finkelstein became the Solomon Schechter Professor of Theology In 1937 Adler appointed Finkelstein as Provost 16 In 1930 the organization commissioned a new headquarters for 122nd Street and Broadway in a neo colonial style with a tower at the corner The architects were Gehron Ross and Alley In 1931 the Seminary College of Jewish Studies was established for students who wanted college level courses in Jewish studies but who were not preparing for teaching careers This branch is now part of the Albert A List College of Jewish Studies Finkelstein era 1940 72 Edit Louis Finkelstein became chancellor of the Jewish Theological Seminary in 1940 During his chancellorship JTS made significant efforts to engage the American public One of its signature programs was a radio and television show called The Eternal Light The show aired on Sunday afternoons featuring well known Jewish personalities like Chaim Potok and Elie Wiesel Broadcasts did not involve preaching or prayer but drew on history literature and social issues to explore Judaism and Jewish holidays in a manner that was accessible to persons of any faith The show continued to run until 1985 During the 1940s the Jewish Theological Seminary established Camp Ramah as a tool for furthering Jewish education The founders envisioned an informal camp setting where Jewish youth would reconnect with the synagogue and Jewish tradition and a new cadre of American born Jewish leadership could be cultivated 17 The first camp opened in Conover Wisconsin in 1947 The program was drawn up by Moshe Davis and Sylvia Ettenberg of the JTS Teachers Institute In 1945 JTS established a new institution the Leadership Training Fellowship designed to educate young people within Conservative synagogues and guide them into Jewish public service 18 In 1952 the Jewish Theological Seminary opened a new school known as the Cantors Institute The school was later renamed the H L Miller Cantorial School and College of Jewish Music This was at roughly the same time that the other established American Jewish seminaries Hebrew Union College and Yeshiva University opened cantorial schools Prior to this time American cantors were often trained in Europe 19 In 1950 Finkelstein created the Universal Brotherhood program which brought together laymen interested in interpreting the ethical dimensions of Judaism to the wider society 20 JTS expanded its public outreach in the 1950s with Finkelstein s development of JTS s Institute for Religious Studies and the establishment of its Herbert H Lehman Institute of Ethics During the Finkelstein era the Institute for Religious and Social Studies brought together Protestant Roman Catholic and Jewish scholars for theological discussions In 1986 the name of the institute was changed to the Finkelstein Institute for Religious and Social Studies in Finkelstein s honor In 1957 JTS announced plans to build a satellite campus in Jerusalem for JTS rabbinical students studying in Israel A building was completed in 1962 21 The campus eventually evolved into the home of the Schechter Institute of Jewish Studies In 1962 the seminary also acquired the Schocken Institute for Jewish Research and its library in Jerusalem In 1968 JTS received a charter from the State of New York to create an Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities which conferred bachelor s master s and doctoral degrees The Institute was designed as a non sectarian academic institute which would train future college and university professors Its first students enrolled in 1970 The Institute later evolved into the Graduate School of the Jewish Theological Seminary 22 Faculty during the Finkelstein era Edit When Finkelstein took office prominent faculty members included Louis Ginzberg Alexander Marx Mordecai Kaplan H L Ginsberg Robert Gordis and Boaz Cohen In 1940 Finkelstein made his most significant academic appointment 23 hiring the prominent Talmud scholar Saul Lieberman as Professor of Palestinian Literature and Institutions In 1948 Lieberman became dean of the Rabbinical School In 1958 he was named rector of the Seminary 23 In 1945 Finkelstein hired the theologian Abraham Joshua Heschel who had been teaching for a brief period at Hebrew Union College 23 During the course of his chancellorship Finkelstein also gave academic appointments to other prominent scholars including Moshe Davis 1942 Shalom Spiegel 1943 Yochanan Muffs 1954 Max Kadushin 1960 Gerson Cohen David Weiss Halivni Judah Goldin Chaim Dimitrovsky and Seymour Siegel Finkelstein appointed Max Arzt to serve as Vice Chancellor of JTS in 1951 and he appointed Arzt as Israel Goldstein Professor of Practical Theology in 1962 24 The Jewish Theological Seminary JTS is the primary educational and religious center of Conservative Judaism The single largest physical addition to JTS came in the form of seventeen foot wrought iron gates The beautifully constructed gates led to the main entrance through a large vaulted passageway to the entire group of buildings In a 1930s guidebook it is written about the Seminary Be sure to notice the main gate to the seminary as you go in It is hand wrought iron and the whole design is symbolic These gates were presented on September 26 1934 by Mrs Frieda and Mr Felix M Warburg in memory of her parents Jacob H and Therese Schiff Library fire Edit Main article Jewish Theological Seminary library fire In April 1966 JTS s library caught fire 70 000 books were destroyed and many others were damaged 25 The Cohen era 1972 1986 Edit Gerson D Cohen became Chancellor of the Jewish Theological Seminary in 1972 Prominent faculty during Cohen s chancellorship included David Weiss Halivni of the Talmud Department and Jose Faur Both of these scholars resigned when the JTS faculty voted to ordain women as rabbis and as cantors in 1983 Yochanan Muffs who had joined the JTS faculty in 1954 was a prominent professor of Bible Max Kadushin who had joined the JTS faculty in 1960 taught ethics and rabbinic thought until his death in 1980 In 1972 Cohen appointed Avraham Holtz as the dean of academic development Neil Gillman served as Dean of the JTS Rabbinical School for much of the Cohen chancellorship when Morton Leifman served as Dean of the Cantors Institute when Cohen oversaw the appointment of Judith Hauptman as the first female professor of Talmud at JTS Hauptman began teaching at JTS in 1973 26 Joel Roth who had begun teaching at JTS in 1968 was appointed Associate Professor of Talmud upon completing his Ph D at JTS in 1973 Roth went on to serve as the dean of the Rabbinical School from 1981 to 1984 He was succeeded by Gordon Tucker who became dean of the Rabbinical School in 1984 In June 1973 the Seminary s Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities was granted permission to grant Ph D degrees in Jewish History Bible Talmud Jewish philosophy and Hebrew In 1975 the Seminary replaced the Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities with the Graduate School of the Jewish Theological Seminary which brought together JTS s non theological academic training programs Cohen appointed historian Ismar Schorsch as the first dean of the Graduate School 27 Admission of female students Edit Beginning in the 1970s the topic of women s ordination was regularly discussed at JTS 28 Women who unsuccessfully sought admission to the rabbinical school during the 1970s included Susannah Heschel daughter of JTS faculty member Abraham Joshua Heschel 29 There was a special commission appointed by the chancellor of the Jewish Theological Seminary of America Gerson D Cohen to study the issue of ordaining women as rabbis which met between 1977 and 1978 and consisted of 11 men and three women the women were Marian Siner Gordon an attorney Rivkah Harris an Assyriologist and Francine Klagsbrun a writer 30 After years of discussion the JTS faculty voted to ordain women as rabbis and as cantors in 1983 31 The first female rabbi to graduate from the school and the first female Conservative Jewish rabbi in the world was Amy Eilberg who graduated and was ordained as a rabbi in 1985 32 The first class of female rabbis that was admitted to JTS in 1984 included Rabbi Naomi Levy who later became a best selling author 33 and Nina Beth Cardin who became an author and environmental activist 34 Erica Lippitz and Marla Rosenfeld Barugel were the first women ordained as cantors by JTS and the first female Conservative Jewish cantors in the world They were both ordained in 1987 35 Schorsch era 1986 2006 Edit Ismar Schorsch became Chancellor of JTS in 1986 Among his accomplishments was creating the William Davidson Graduate School of Jewish Education which was established through an endowment by William Davidson of Detroit in 1994 Michael Greenbaum served as Vice Chancellor of The Jewish Theological Seminary Prominent faculty in the Talmud and Rabbinics department during Schorsch s chancellorship included Joel Roth Mayer Rabinowitz David C Kraemer and Judith Hauptman Hauptman was the first woman appointed to teach Talmud at JTS The Bible department included David Marcus and Stephen A Geller The Jewish literature Department included David G Roskies The Jewish history department included Jack Wertheimer and Shuly Rubin Schwartz The Jewish Philosophy department included Neil Gillman and Shaul Magid In 2004 Alan Mittleman joined the Jewish Philosophy department and became head of JTS s Louis Finkelstein Institute for Religious and Social Studies The number of advanced programs in the Graduate School grew over the course of Schorsch s tenure The Graduate School came to describe itself as being the most extensive academic program in advanced Judaica in North America 36 Gordon Tucker s tenure as dean of the Rabbinical School ended in 1992 His predecessor Joel Roth again became dean serving in 1992 1993 Roth was succeeded by William Lebeau who served as dean from 1993 1999 Lebeau was succeeded by Alan Kensky and then Lebeau became dean of the Rabbinical School again in June 2002 37 In 1998 Henry Rosenblum was appointed Dean of the H L Miller Cantorial School and College of Jewish Music at the Jewish Theological Seminary in 1998 becoming the first Hazzan to hold that position Rosenblum remained in this position until 2010 Eisen era 2007 2020 Edit Arnold Eisen Koshland Professor of Jewish Culture and Religion and Chair of the Department of Religious Studies at Stanford University took office as Chancellor elect on July 1 2006 the day after Schorsch stepped down Eisen assumed the position full time on July 1 2007 Eisen is the second non rabbi after Cyrus Adler to hold this post He is also the first person with a social science background to serve as Chancellor previous chancellors had backgrounds in Jewish history or Talmud In January 2007 at the start of Eisen s chancellorship Daniel S Nevins was named the Dean of the Rabbinical School of the Jewish Theological Seminary of America succeeding Rabbi William Lebeau 38 Biblical scholar Alan Cooper was named Provost 39 In 2010 Henry Rosenblum left the H L Miller Cantorial School as part of JTS s restructuring efforts and Nevins also became responsible for oversight of the H L Miller Cantorial School 40 In June 2009 Goldman Sachs executive Abby Joseph Cohen was named Chairman of the Board of JTS the first woman to hold the position 41 Also in 2009 with funding from the Charles H Revson Foundation and the Booth Ferris Foundation JTS established The Center for Pastoral Education with the goal of teaching the art of pastoral care to seminary students and ordained clergy of all faiths 42 The Center was developed by Rabbi Mychal Springer formerly an Associate Dean of the Rabbinical School Springer became the Center s first director 43 In 2010 the Tikvah Fund endowed a new institute at JTS the Tikvah Institute for Jewish Thought which is devoted to the intellectual encounter between the best sources of Jewish and broader Western reflection on the deepest problems of human life According to the Seminary JTS was selected by the Tikvah Fund based on its academic excellence and its mission to advance Jewish life in the modern world 44 Alan Mittleman Chair of the Department of Jewish Thought was appointed as its director Burton L Visotzky was appointed to replace Mittleman as director of the Louis Finkelstein Institute for Religious and Social Studies 45 His early work as director of the Finkelstein Institute focused on Muslim Jewish dialogue In October 2010 a group of prominent Muslim and Jewish scholars and leaders joined by the heads of several Christian seminaries met at JTS for two days to discuss and compare the situations of Islam and Judaism in America 46 47 In May 2011 Eisen launched Conservative Judaism A Community Conversation an interactive website featuring original essays on Conservative Judaism with responses from Movement and Lay leaders and scholars Admission of LGBT students Edit Since March 2007 JTS has accepted openly gay lesbian and bisexual students into their rabbinical and cantorial programs the seminary s other three schools upheld such non discrimination policies prior to this date A survey conducted prior to the decision indicated that 58 of the rabbinical student body supported this change 48 The school issued a press release 49 announcing the new admission policy without taking a stance on same sex unions JTS marked the first anniversary of the change with a special program Some students who opposed the change in admission policy said they felt excluded from the day s program because it did not sufficiently recognize the pluralism in the student body In April 2011 JTS held a Yom Iyyun or day of learning about LGBTQ issues and their intersection with Judaism Joy Ladin a transgender woman who teaches English at Yeshiva University gave a talk about her life Other programs included creating welcoming communities and inclusive prayer among others It was sponsored in part by Keshet a Jewish LGBTQ social action group JTS and the Conservative movement EditJTS was the founding institution of Conservative Judaism in America The United Synagogue of America the organization of Conservative synagogues was founded by Solomon Schechter while he served as President of JTS In the context of the pre Finkelstein era Orthodox Rabbi Nosson Scherman stated that in its early years the JTS was what today might be called Modern Orthodox 50 During the chancellorship of Louis Finkelstein however there were many tensions between JTS and the Conservative Judaism movement which it led JTS was often more traditional in matters of religious practice than the denomination as a whole When Jacob Neusner applied to JTS during the Finkelstein era in 1954 he like other applicants had to sign a pledge saying they would abide by traditional Jewish law 51 Finkelstein was also perceived as focusing on American and world Jewry as a whole while paying little attention to the Conservative movement According to scholar Michael Panitz the situation changed under Finkelstein s successors Under Chancellor Gerson Cohen chancellor from 1972 86 JTS decisively embraced its identity as a Conservative Jewish institution it thereby abandoned its earlier hopes to provide a non denominational unifier for traditional and moderate American Jews The next chancellor Ismar Schorsch 1986 2006 emerged as an outspoken advocate for Conservative Judaism 52 With the new mission statement introduced by Chancellor Arnold Eisen 2007 the school has positioned itself as serving both Conservative Judaism and the vital religious center 53 As of 2010 JTS s website describes JTS as the academic and spiritual center of Conservative Judaism worldwide 54 Others describe it as the academic and spiritual centre of Conservative Judaism in the United States 55 A second important center for Conservative Judaism in the United States is the Ziegler School of Rabbinic Studies in California founded by graduates of JTS in 1996 Current educational programs EditRabbinical School Edit The Rabbinical School describes itself as offering an intensive program of study personal growth and spiritual development that leads to rabbinic ordination and a career of service to the Jewish community 56 As of 2010 the rabbinical school requires five or six years of study Its curriculum requires extensive study of Talmud midrash Bible Jewish history Hebrew language and various professional skills Students are required to spend the second year of the program at the Schechter Institute of Jewish Studies in Jerusalem Students must choose a field of concentration during their studies Concentrations include Bible Rabbinics Midrash Jewish history Jewish literature Jewish liturgy Jewish education Jewish philosophy Jewish women s studies Pastoral care Cantorial school Edit The cantorial school describes itself as training select advanced students as hazzanim cantors for congregational service or as teachers of Jewish music choral directors composers or research scholars 57 The school is technically divided into two parts the entity formally known as the H L Miller Cantorial School invests students as hazzanim while the entity known as the College of Jewish Music awards the master s degree in Sacred Music All students in the Cantorial School are enrolled in both programs simultaneously 57 At present the first year of cantorial school at JTS is generally spent in Israel The curriculum during the five years focuses on three main areas general music Jewish music and Jewish text study Graduate school Edit The graduate school of the Jewish Theological Seminary offers academic programs in advanced Jewish studies It describes itself as offering the most extensive academic program in advanced Judaic Studies in North America 58 The school grants MA DHL and PhD degrees in the areas of Ancient Judaism Bible and Ancient Semitic Languages Interdepartmental Studies MA only Jewish Art and Visual Culture MA only Jewish History Jewish Literature Jewish philosophy Jewish Studies and Public Administration MA only Jewish Studies and Social Work MA only Jewish Women s Studies MA only Liturgy Medieval Jewish Studies Midrash Modern Jewish Studies Talmud and Rabbinics William Davidson Graduate School of Jewish Education Edit In 1994 William Davidson of Detroit Michigan established a 15 million endowment at JTS to fund the William Davidson Graduate School of Jewish Education which trains educators who can serve in Jewish institutions and elsewhere in both formal and informal settings The Davidson School offers both master s and doctoral degrees List College Edit Main article List College Albert A List College of Jewish Studies List College is the undergraduate school of JTSA It is closely affiliated with Columbia University almost all List College students are enrolled in dual degree programs with either Columbia University s School of General Studies or Barnard College Additional institutes at JTS EditTikvah Institute for Jewish Thought devoted to the intellectual encounter between the best sources of Jewish and broader Western reflection on the deepest problems of human life Melton Research Center for Jewish Education focuses on improving the quality of Jewish education in North America Louis Finkelstein Institute for Religious and Social Studies focuses on interfaith relations and public affairs Saul Lieberman Institute for Talmudic Research develops modern and rigorous computer tools for Talmud study Institute for Jewish Learning focuses on advanced adult education Center for Pastoral Education focuses on the art of pastoral care Notable alumni EditBella Abzug lawyer Congresswoman social activist feminist leader Philip R Alstat rabbi counselor and chaplain Bradley Shavit Artson dean of Ziegler School of Rabbinic Studies Lia Bass one of the world s first Latin American female rabbis Michael Berenbaum Holocaust scholar Marla Berkowitz ASL interpreter Herman Berlinski composer organist musicologist and choir conductor Joshua Bloch rabbi and librarian Ben Zion Bokser rabbi and scholar Jacob Bosniak rabbi Daniel Boyarin Talmud scholar at University of California at Berkeley Sharon Brous founding rabbi of IKAR Geoffrey Claussen scholar of ethics and theology Boaz Cohen JTS professor chairman of the Law Committee of the Rabbinical Assembly Gerson Cohen Jewish historian and JTS chancellor Mark R Cohen scholar of Jewish history in the Muslim world Menachem Creditor Scholar in Residence of UJA Federation NY New York NY founder of Rabbis Against Gun Violence David G Dalin historian Moshe Davis scholar of American Jewish history Elliot N Dorff scholar of Jewish ethics and theology rector of American Jewish University Matthew Eisenfeld student killed in the Jaffa Road bus bombings in Jerusalem Amy Eilberg first female rabbi ordained in Conservative Judaism Ira Eisenstein Reconstructionist leader Sylvia Ettenberg Jewish educator Louis Finkelstein longtime chancellor of JTS Abraham Foxman lawyer activist director of Anti Defamation League Everett Gendler father of Jewish environmentalism Neil Gillman JTS professor theologian Miriam Glazer Ta asa Israeli politician Ben Zion Gold rabbi of Harvard Hillel Avraham Goldberg Talmud professor at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem Israel Prize laureate Jonathan A Goldstein Bible scholar David Golinkin professor of Jewish Law and President Emeritus of the Schechter Institute of Jewish Studies Robert Gordis JTS professor and president of the Rabbinical Assembly Daniel Gordis senior vice president of Shalem Center Arthur Green professor at Brandeis University and rector of Hebrew College rabbinical school Michael Greenbaum vice chancellor emeritus and senior advisor to the chancellor of The Jewish Theological Seminary Moshe Greenberg Bible scholar Hebrew University of Jerusalem professor Israel Prize laureate Judith Hauptman JTS professor and feminist Talmud scholar Shai Held co founder of Yeshivat Hadar Joseph H Hertz British Chief Rabbi and author first graduate of JTS Arthur Hertzberg rabbi and historian Gertrude Himmelfarb historian Sherre Hirsch rabbi Brad Hirschfield president of National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership Rachel Isaacs first openly lesbian rabbi ordained by JTS Max Kadushin rabbi and philosopher Ian Kagedan Canadian public servant Mordechai Kaplan philosopher JTS professor founder of Reconstructionist Judaism William E Kaufman Conservative rabbi and Jewish theologian Elie Kaunfer co founder of Yeshivat Hadar Dorothy K Kripke Jewish educator Myer S Kripke rabbi and philanthropist Irwin Kula president of CLAL National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership Harold Kushner rabbi and author of When Bad Things Happen to Good People Aaron Landes rabbi rear admiral in the United States Naval Reserve Lee I Levine historian Alan Lew rabbi and meditation teacher Albert L Lewis rabbi David Lieber former president of the University of Judaism Abraham Lubin cantor Julius B Maller educator and sociologist Hershel Matt rabbi and Reconstructionist Rabbinical College professor Liati Mayk Hai singer songwriter visual artist poet athlete Jackie McCullough gospel musician Marshall Meyer rabbi and human rights activist Jacob Milgrom Biblical scholar professor at University of California Berkeley Yochanan Muffs professor of the Bible and religion at the Jewish Theological Seminary Abraham A Neuman rabbi historian president of Dropsie College Jacob Neusner rabbinics scholar professor at Bard College Daniel S Nevins rabbi and rabbinical school dean David Novak scholar of Jewish philosophy law and ethics Peter W Ochs philosopher and theologian Norman Podhoretz Editor Commentary magazine Chaim Potok author and rabbi Jacob Pressman rabbi and co founder of American Jewish University Einat Ramon first Israeli born woman ordained as a rabbi Paula Reimers rabbi and activist Arnold E Resnicoff military chaplain and consultant to military and civilian leaders Joel Roth scholar of Talmud and Jewish law and former dean of the JTS rabbinical school Simchah Roth Israeli rabbi and scholar Steven Rubenstein anthropologist Samuel Schafler president of Hebrew College superintendent of the Chicago Board of Jewish Education Ismar Schorsch Jewish historian and JTS chancellor Michael Schudrich Chief Rabbi of Poland Harold M Schulweis rabbi and theologian Shalom H Schwartz Professor of Psychology at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem Israel Prize laureate Shuly Rubin Schwartz American Jewish historian Seymour Siegel scholar of ethics and theology Abraham Skorka Argentine biophysicist rabbi and author Mychal Springer rabbi Ira F Stone rabbi scholar of the Musar movement professor at Reconstructionist Rabbinical College Henrietta Szold founder of Hadassah Jeffrey H Tigay Bible scholar University of Pennsylvania professor Ethan Tucker co founder of Yeshivat Hadar Gordon Tucker philosopher legal scholar and former dean of the JTS rabbinical school Henrietta Szold founder of Hadassah Burton Visotzky rabbi and scholar of midrash Max Vorspan rabbi and historian Mordecai Waxman rabbi Temple Israel of Great Neck Raysh Weiss rabbi David Weiss Halivni Talmud scholar recipient of the Bialik Prize for Jewish Thought Israel Prize laureate David Wolpe rabbi of Sinai Temple Los Angeles Esther Zweig composerSee also Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jewish Theological Seminary of America List of Jewish universities and colleges in the United States Rabbinical Assembly Cantors Assembly Conservative Judaism Rabbinic cabinet Gladstein Fellowship Masorti on CampusReferences Edit Jewish Theological Seminary of America Archived 2018 11 18 at the Wayback Machine Exempt Organization Select Check Internal Revenue Service Accessed on April 25 2016 A Jewish library s treasure surfaced at auction How did it get there The Jerusalem Post Archived from the original on 2021 07 27 Retrieved 2021 07 28 via JPost com Michael A Meyer Response to Modernity A History of the Reform Movement in Judaism Wayne State University Press 1995 p 84 89 135 138 Gurock Jeffrey S 1996 American Jewish Orthodoxy in Historical Perspective New Jersey KTAV Publishing House pp 4 207 356 357 ISBN 978 0 88125 567 6 Drachman remained at Frankel s institution which he defined as in fundamental harmony on the basic concepts of traditional Judaism and its adjustments to modern conditions The Jewish Theological Seminary of America linked Historical School men like Jastrow Kohut and Szold with the Orthodox Drachman H P Mendes Henry Schneeberger and Sabato Morais the Seminary s first president For Drachman Breslau which advocated the bindingness of Jewish law and Berlin which advocated the harmopnious union of Orthodox faith and modern culture were both Orthodox institutions a b c d e Jewish Theological Seminary of America Archived 2005 12 03 at the Wayback Machine Jewish Encyclopedia Hasia Diner Like the Antelope and the Badger The founding and early years of the Jewish Theological Seminary in Tradition Renewed v 1 p 27 Gurock Jeffrey S American Jewish History The history of Judaism in America Volume 5 Resisters and Accommodators KTAV p 63 a b c David Ellenson and Lee Bycel The JTS Rabbinical Curriculum in Tradition Renewed v 2 p 541 a b David Ellenson and Lee Bycel The JTS Rabbinical Curriculum in Tradition Renewed v 2 p 544 The Jewish Theological Seminary The Teachers Institute 100th Anniversary Archived 2010 08 23 at the Wayback Machine Ira Robinson Cyrus Adler President of the Jewish Theological Seminary 1915 1940 in Tradition Renewed ed Wertheimer v 1 p 108 110 Robinson p 123 125 Robinson p 128 130 Boaz Cohen 1899 1968 by Elias J Bickerman and Edward M Gershfield Proceedings of the American Academy for Jewish Research Vol 37 1969 pp xxix xxxi Robinson p 138 139 Robinson p 140 141 The Jewish Theological Seminary Record Group 28 Camp Ramah Archived 2010 05 28 at the Wayback Machine Tradition Renewed v 1 197 Discovering Jewish Music by Marsha Bryan Edelman p 134 35 Tradition Renewed v 1 p 199 Tradition Renewed v 1 p 200 Tradition Renewed v 1 p 240 a b c David Ellenson and Lee Bycel The JTS Rabbinical Curriculum in Tradition Renewed v 2 p 556 Conservative Judaism in America a biographical dictionary and sourcebook by Pamela Susan Nadell p 37 LOST MEMORY LIBRARIES AND ARCHIVES DESTROYED IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY Archived December 13 2011 at the Wayback Machine Judith Hauptman Archived from the original on 2015 11 17 Retrieved 2015 11 15 Tradition Renewed v 1 p 240 1 Women Who Would Be Rabbis A History of Women s Ordination 1889 1985 by Pamela S Nadell p 214 Women Who Would Be Rabbis A History of Women s Ordination 1889 1985 by Pamela S Nadell p 198 Francine Klagsbrun Jewish Women s Archive Jwa org Archived from the original on 2015 09 19 Retrieved 2015 09 07 Keller Rosemary Skinner Rosemary Radford Ruether Marie Cantlon 2006 Encyclopedia of women and religion in North America Volume 2 Bloomington IN Indiana University Press p 551 ISBN 0 253 34687 8 Archived from the original on 2020 08 12 Retrieved 2015 11 15 myBrandeis my brandeis edu Brandeis University Archived 2007 08 19 at the Wayback Machine my brandeis edu Retrieved on 2013 09 04 A rabbi s journey a mother s anxious path Cover Story 15 September 2010 Archived from the original on 2 October 2022 Retrieved 18 December 2016 Susan Josephs www jwi org Page aspx pid 2034 Rabbi Nina Beth Cardin Making the Environment a Jewish Priority Cantors American Jewish Women Jewish Women s Archive Archived from the original on 24 November 2010 Retrieved 18 December 2016 The Graduate School of the Jewish Theological Seminary 1 2006 from archive org Rabbi William Lebeau to Retire on July 1 2007 Archived June 10 2007 at the Wayback Machine Jewish Theological Seminary of America press release dated June 30 2006 Accessed May 29 2007 Rabbi Daniel Nevins Named New Dean of The Rabbinical School of The Jewish Theological Seminary Archived 2007 06 10 at the Wayback Machine Jewish Theological Seminary of America press release dated January 29 2007 Accessed May 29 2007 Chicago Tribune Mar 23 2007 Metro Section p 13 Endnote Tablet Magazine Jewish News and Politics Jewish Arts and Culture Jewish Life and Religion Archived from the original on 15 June 2010 Retrieved 18 December 2016 JTS to get first woman chair as Kekst steps down Accessed 10 26 10 Archived 2012 03 13 at the Wayback Machine The Jewish Theological Seminary Center for Pastoral Education Archived 2011 01 01 at the Wayback Machine The Jewish Theological Seminary Center for Pastoral Education Archived 2010 05 27 at the Wayback Machine JTS Receives Tikvah Fund Grant to Create Tikvah Institute for Jewish Thought Press release JTS April 27 2009 Archived from the original on March 3 2012 The Jewish Theological Seminary JTS Appoints New Director of the Louis Finkelstein Institute Archived 2014 02 04 at the Wayback Machine At Conservative Seminary Getting Beyond Park51 Archived 2010 11 01 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 10 26 10 Arnold Eisen Why a Jewish Seminary Must Find Common Ground With Islam shamir Shlomo 2007 03 28 NY Jewish seminary to accept gay students Haaretz com Archived from the original on 2008 09 07 Retrieved 2009 01 06 A Conservative Jewish seminary in New York has agreed to admit gays and lesbians who want to become rabbis and cantors but declined to take a stand on whether rabbis should officiate at same sex unions JTS to Accept Qualified Gay and Lesbian Rabbinical And Cantorial School Students JTSA 2007 03 26 Archived from the original on 2007 04 18 Note The original page has been removed from school s web site Scherman in an interview with Rabbi Yitzchok Frankfurter published in A Conversation with Rabbi Nosson Scherman On Chinuch p 66 73 in Ami Magazine June 21 2017 in which Scherman stated that despite Rabbi Hertz s affiliation with the Jewish Theological Seminary in its early years the JTS was what today might be called Modern Orthodox and Hertz was Orthodox without any question p 70 Aaron W Hughes Jacob Neusner An American Jewish Iconoclast Archived 2020 07 26 at the Wayback Machine New York University Press ISBN 978 1 479 88585 5 2016 p 40 Encyclopaedia Judaica Archived from the original on 2015 09 10 Retrieved 2015 11 15 New Vision of The Jewish Theological Seminary Archived from the original on 5 July 2010 Retrieved 18 December 2016 Jewish Theological Seminary Conservative Movement Affiliates Archived from the original on 2010 11 24 Retrieved 2010 10 05 Jewish Theological Seminary of America The Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 2010 10 05 The Jewish Theological Seminary The Rabbinical School Archived 2010 10 09 at the Wayback Machine a b The Jewish Theological Seminary H L Miller Cantorial School and College of Jewish Music Archived 2010 07 27 at the Wayback Machine JTS Graduate School Sends Notable Cohort to the Association for Jewish Studies Annual Conference Archived 2011 01 01 at the Wayback Machine accessed 11 23 2010 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Singer Isidore et al eds 1901 1906 Jewish Theological Seminary of America The Jewish Encyclopedia New York Funk amp Wagnalls External links EditOfficial website nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jewish Theological Seminary of America amp oldid 1172877414, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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