- Sarah Schenirer
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Sarah Schenirer (also Soroh Shenirer) (July 13, 1883 - March 1, 1935) was a pioneer of Jewish education for girls. In 1917, she established the Beis Yaakov (lit. "house of Jacob") school network in Poland.
Contents
Biography
Sarah Schenirer was born in Krakow, Poland. In her memoirs, she describes herself as the unassuming and withdrawn daughter of Hasidic parents. She attended school until the age of thirteen, but could not continue because her family was poor. She became a seamstress.[1] When one client was unusually particular about the measurements of her dress, Schenirer wrote in her diary: "People are such perfectionists when it comes to clothing their bodies. Are they so particular when they address themselves to the needs of their soul?" [2]
After the outbreak of World War I in 1914 she moved to Vienna, but returned to Kraków early the next year, where she organized a group of girls and taught them Jewish studies.[1] She succeeded in overcoming initial resistance against this new type of school and saw rapid development of about 300 schools in pre Holocaust Europe. Her initiative was approved by the leading rabbis of the times, such as the Gerrer Rebbe, Rabbi Avraham Mordechai Alter and Rabbi Yisrael Meir Kagan (known as "the Chofetz Chaim").
In 1923 Schenirer set up a teachers' seminary to train staff for her rapidly expanding network of schools. The main goal of the schools was "to train Jewish daughters so that they will serve the Lord with all their might and with all their hearts; so that they will fulfill the commandments of the Torah with sincere enthusiasm and will know that they are the children of a people whose existence does not depend upon a territory of its own, as do other nations of the world whose existence is predicated upon a territory and similar racial background." [3]
Legacy
When she died in 1935, more than 200 Beis Yaakov schools were teaching approximately 35,000 girls. One of her students was Rebbitzen Vichna Kaplan, founder of the Beis Yaakov schools in America. In her will, she wrote: "My dear girls, you are going out into the great world. Your task is to plant the holy seed in the souls of pure children. In a sense, the destiny of Israel of old is in your hands."[4]
Literary references
In her novel Peleh Laylah, Israeli author Esther Ettinger, who studied at a Beis Yaakov school as a girl, weaves in passages from Sara Schenirer's writings.[5]
Her student Pearl Benisch wrote a book about Sarah Schenirer called "Carry Me in Your Heart[6]."
The book "Rebbetzin Grunfeld" - The Life of Judith Grunfeld Courageous Pioneer of the Bais Yaakov Movement and Jewish Rebirth Artscroll Series, was written by Miriam Dansky about Sarah Schenirer's colleague.
See also
- Gender and Judaism
- Haredi Judaism
- History of the Jews in Poland
- Rebbetzin
- Role of women in Judaism
- Tzniut
References
- ^ a b Yivo Encyclopedia: Sarah Schenirer
- ^ Sarah Schenirer: The Mother of Generations
- ^ Beth Jacob chronology
- ^ Martin Gilbert, The Jews in the Twentieth Century (New York: Schocken Books, 2001), 118-19.
- ^ Journal Summer 06
- ^ http://books.google.com/books?id=QkzLv9bsYXoC&printsec=frontcover&dq=carry+me+in+your+heart&source=bl&ots=NJ5PwB3n_z&sig=X9zULJDVkgz71rg4wkqIHlhqx4M&hl=en&ei=w1xuTfKLKYObtweepsD-Dg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=4&sqi=2&ved=0CDUQ6AEwAw#v=onepage&q&f=false
External links
- "Sarah Schenirer: The Mother of Generations", article in "Jewish Observer"
- The Contribution of German Chareidim to the New Yishuv article from Yated Ne'eman
- Remembering Soroh Schenirer — Her Seventieth Yahrtzeit article from Yated Ne'eman
- What Do We Know About The Establishment of Beit Ya’akov? by Dr. Yoel Finkelman
Orthodox Judaism Branches People Orthodox Jews · Rabbis · Hasidic dynasties
Education Torah study · Shiur · Chavruta · Chavurah · Yeshiva · Mesivta · Beis Yaakov · Kollel · Torah Umesorah · Chinuch Atzmai
Politics Agudath Israel · Shas · United Torah Judaism (UTJ) · National Union (NU) · The Jewish Home
Rabbinates Organizations Orthodox Union (OU) · Young Israel · Aguda · Mizrachi
Laws Philosophies Category:Orthodox Judaism Categories:- 1883 births
- 1935 deaths
- Haredi Judaism in Europe
- Jewish education
- Jewish women
- Polish Orthodox Jews
- Orthodox Jewish schools for women
- Haredi writers
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