Hebrew Academy of Cleveland

Hebrew Academy of Cleveland

The Hebrew Academy of Cleveland is a private day school offering nearly 800 students a Judaic and secular education from pre-school through high school. It is located in Cleveland, Ohio.

The Hebrew Academy was established in 1943 by the Telz Yeshiva. It was the first Jewish day school founded off the east coast. In 1947, Yavne - a girl's division - was added.

The mission as stated by the Hebrew Academy of Cleveland is to imbue all students with a love of God, Torah and Eretz Yisroel and to prepare them to achieve excellence in Torah as well as general knowledge.

Divisions

Early Childhood Division
Girls Elementary Division

Yeshiva Ketana / Boys Elementary Division

Yeshiva High School / The Sapirstein Campus
Beatrice J. Stone Yavne High School

The Living Memorial Project

The Living Memorial Project, is a project to develop curriculum to teach day school students nationally about the Jewish world in Europe before the Holocaust. The project is headed by various faculty in the school. To date, the curriculum has included the the "Learning For Letters" Mishnayos Program, dedicating a [Sefer Torah] in memory of the one million martyred children, a family genealogy project and four published textbooks which delve into the pre-war life.

Living Memorial Books

The World That Was: Poland
The World That Was: Hungary And Romania
The World That Was: Lithuania
The World That Was: America 1900-1945

External links

[http://www.hac1.org/mission.asp| Official Hebrew Academy website]
[http://z.artscroll.com/search?requiredfields=producttype%3AB&q=%22the+world+that+was%22&btnG=Search+ArtScroll.com&filter=0&submit222.x=0&getfields=*&sort=date%3AD%3AL%3Ad1&output=xml_no_dtd&client=mayers_frontend&submit222.y=0&oe=UTF-8&ie=UTF-8&proxystylesheet=mayers_frontend&site=default_collection| List of Living Memorial Books]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать курсовую

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Cleveland Heights, Ohio —   City   Location of Cleveland Heights in Ohio …   Wikipedia

  • CLEVELAND — CLEVELAND, city situated in Northeast Ohio on Lake Erie. Its metropolitan area has the largest Jewish population in the state (81,500 in 1996). Jewish settlement began in the 1830s, when Daniel Maduro Peixotto (1800–43) joined the faculty of… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Cleveland Institute of Electronics — Motto A School of thousands. A class of one. Since 1934. Established 1934 Type Private President …   Wikipedia

  • Art Academy of Cincinnati — Motto Make Art, Make a Difference Established 1869 Type Private college of art, design and art h …   Wikipedia

  • Nachum Zev Dessler — Rabbi Nachum Zev Dessler Position Dean Organisation Hebrew Academy of Cleveland Began 1943 Personal details Bo …   Wikipedia

  • Chaim Mordechai Katz — Position Rosh Yeshiva Yeshiva Telz Yeshiva Began 1954 Ended November 17, 1964 Predecessor Eliyahu Meir Bloch …   Wikipedia

  • Meir Stern — Rabbi Meir Stern is the Rosh yeshiva (dean) of the Yeshiva Gedola of Passaic, a large Yeshiva and Kollel in the United States. He is known for having close relationships with his students,[1] and for the revival of the Orthodox communities of… …   Wikipedia

  • SAPIRSTEIN-STONE-WEISS FAMILY — SAPIRSTEIN STONE WEISS FAMILY, Cleveland, Ohio, business and philanthropic family. JACOB J. SAPIRSTEIN (1884–1987) emigrated from Poland to Cleveland, Ohio, in 1906 and began what would become the second largest greeting card company in the world …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Élie Munk — (Paris, 15 septembre 1900, Paris – 5 juin 1981, New York) est un rabbin orthodoxe français non consistorial du XXe siècle, et un auteur prolifique de réputation internationale, d origine allemande. Il fut le rabbin de la synagogue Adas… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Bus stop — For other uses, see Bus stop (disambiguation). Bus shelter for the RIT system in Curitiba, Brasil A bus stop is a designated place where buses stop for passengers to board or leave a bus. These are normally positioned on the highway and are… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”