Meor Hatalmud

Last updated
Yeshiva Meor Hatalmud
מאור התלמוד
Address
Meor Hatalmud
1368 39th St


United States
Coordinates 40°38′22″N73°59′05″W / 40.639434°N 73.984782°W / 40.639434; -73.984782 Coordinates: 40°38′22″N73°59′05″W / 40.639434°N 73.984782°W / 40.639434; -73.984782
Information
Type Yeshiva
Religious affiliation(s) Orthodox
Grades9th grade - 12th grade
Gender Male
Number of students200
   Grade 9 30
   Grade 10 28
   Grade 11 36
   Grade 12 34
Student to teacher ratio14:1
Nickname Moshe Weiss Yeshiva

Yeshiva Meor Hatalmud is a Yeshiva in New York City headed by Moshe Weiss.

Contents

Overview

Meor Hatalmud was founded in 2005 by Rabbi Moshe Weiss.

It was originally only a Yeshiva Ketana, but as the Yeshiva grew and a demand for a Yeshiva Gedolah increased, he began working on a Yeshiva Gedolah. In 2017 the rosh yeshiva opened his Yeshiva Gedolah in Flatbush as a temporary solution, meanwhile working on fundraising and planning a lasting and final destination for the Yeshiva. In winter of 2018 the yeshiva was to be temporarily located in the Borough Park neighborhood of Brooklyn.

In spring of 2018 he opened his Yeshiva Gedolah in Bayswater, New York.

The Yeshiva Ketana serves students from the age of 14 to 17 and has an enrollment of 128 boys, grades 9–12. [1] The Yeshiva Gedolah serves students from the age of 17 to 22.

Studies

They study the Talmud, praying, Jewish Law, Musar, Chasidus, and all the Jewish Studies.

Students

Most of the students are from New York and around, but there are a few students from outside the United States.

After Graduation

The students typically go to Israel where they continue to study, until they get married. There are also students that go to a local Yeshiva.

Related Research Articles

Yeshiva Rabbi Chaim Berlin Yeshiva school in the United States

Yeshiva Rabbi Chaim Berlin or Yeshivas Rabbeinu Chaim Berlin is an American Haredi Lithuanian-type boys' and men's yeshiva in Brooklyn, New York.

Pupa (Hasidic dynasty) Hungarian Hasidic dynasty

Kehillas Yaakov Pupa is a Hasidic dynasty named after the town of its origin, also known in Hungarian as Pápa. Before World War II, Pupa had an important yeshiva which produced many well-known ultra-Orthodox rabbis in Hungary. The whole community was deported to the Auschwitz concentration camp, and only a few people came back. Currently, there are no Jews in Pápa. The group is based in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn, New York, with branches in the Boro Park section of Brooklyn, Monsey, New York, Los Angeles, and Ossining, New York. It is headed by the Pupa Rebbe, who has several thousand followers.

Yeshiva Torah Vodaas American Haredi yeshiva in Brooklyn, New York

Yeshiva Torah Vodaath is a yeshiva in the Kensington neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York.

Tomchei Tmimim Chabad Lubavitch yeshiva network

Tomchei Tmimim is the central Yeshiva of the Chabad-Lubavitch Hasidic movement. Founded in 1897 in the town of Lubavitch by Rabbi Sholom Dovber Schneersohn, it is now an international network of institutions of advanced Torah study, the United Lubavitcher Yeshivoth.

Yeshiva gedolah Type of yeshiva

Yeshiva gedolah, known in the United States as bais medrash, is a type of yeshiva, a Jewish educational institution, which is aimed at students in their later teens or younger twenties. This contrasts with a Yeshiva Ketana/Mesivta where students are typically in the early teens.

Mens colleges in the United States College in United States

Men's colleges in the United States are primarily those categorized as being undergraduate, bachelor's degree-granting single-sex institutions that admit only men. Through much of United States history, male-only undergraduate higher education was the norm until the 1960s. The few remaining well-known men's colleges are traditional independent liberal arts colleges, though at present the majority are institutions of learning for those preparing for religious vocations.

Mir Yeshiva (Belarus) Former yeshiva in Belarus

The Mir Yeshiva, commonly known as the Mirrer Yeshiva or The Mir, was a Lithuanian yeshiva located in the town of Mir, Russian Empire. After relocating a number of times during World War II, it has evolved into three yeshivas, one in Jerusalem, with a subsidiary campus in Brachfeld, Modi'in Illit, and the other two in Brooklyn, New York: the Mir Yeshiva, and Bais Hatalmud.

Beth Hatalmud Rabbinical College, or in short known as Bais Hatalmud, is a small and selective Rabbinical college located in the Bensonhurst section of Brooklyn, New York.

Moshe Meiselman is an American-born Orthodox rabbi and rosh yeshiva (dean) of Yeshiva Toras Moshe in Jerusalem, which he established in 1982. He also founded and served as principal of Yeshiva University of Los Angeles (YULA) from 1977 to 1982. He is a descendant of the Lithuanian Jewish Soloveitchik rabbinic dynasty.

Yeshiva Gedolah Zichron Moshe, also known as Yeshiva of South Fallsburg, is a private yeshiva in South Fallsburg, New York. It is considered one of the leading beit midrash (undergraduate-level) programs in the United States, maintaining a "steady" enrollment of approximately 200 students. As an Orthodox rabbinical college, all students are male.

<i>Mesivta</i> Orthodox Jewish yeshiva secondary school for boys

Mesivta is an Orthodox Jewish yeshiva secondary school for boys. The term is commonly used in the United States to describe a yeshiva that emphasizes Talmudic studies for boys in grades 9 through 11 or 12; alternately, it refers to the religious studies track in a yeshiva high school that offers both religious and secular studies.

Erlau, is a Haredi dynasty of Hungarian origin, which follows the teachings of the Chasam Sofer and is often considered Hasidic.

Yeshivas Itri Yeshiva school

Yeshivas Itri is an Orthodox yeshiva in southeast Jerusalem. Founded in 1968 by Rabbi Mordechai Elefant, the yeshiva has several branches in Israel and the United States, and spawned several educational programs for Diaspora Jews.

Yeshiva Ohr Elchonon (Jerusalem) Yeshiva ketana, yeshiva gedola school

Yeshiva Ohr Elchonon is a Lithuanian-style Orthodox yeshiva in Jerusalem. The yeshiva was initially established in 1953 in Los Angeles, California, by Rabbi Simcha Wasserman, who named it in memory of his father, Rabbi Elchonon Wasserman, rosh yeshiva in Baranowicz, who was murdered in the Holocaust in Lithuania. The yeshiva operated in Los Angeles from 1953 to 1977, when it was sold to the Chabad movement. After Wasserman immigrated to Jerusalem, he established another Yeshiva Ohr Elchonon in the Ezrat Torah neighborhood in 1979. A second branch was opened in the Romema neighborhood in 1993. Ohr Elchonon enrolls hundreds of boys in yeshiva ketana and yeshiva gedolah, and close to 100 married men in its kollel. Additional yeshiva ketana branches have been established in the Israeli cities of Modiin Illit, Rishon Letzion, and Tiberias.

Nesivos Hatalmud Yeshiva school in the United States

Mesivta Nesivos Hatalmud, is a Yeshiva based in the Borough Park area in Brooklyn, N.Y. Nesivos Hatalmud was founded in 2005 by Rabbi Shmuel Mordechai Wolner and assumed his current post as Rosh Yeshiva. In winter 2014 he founded Yeshiva Gedolah Nesivos Hatalmud.

Grodno Yeshiva School in Belarus

Yeshiva Shaar HaTorah – Grodna, often referred to as the Grodna Yeshiva or simply as Grodna, was an Orthodox Jewish yeshiva in the Belarusian city of Grodno, then under Russian rule. Founded during World War I, Shimon Shkop became rosh yeshiva (dean) in 1920.

Yisroel Moshe Friedman American-Israeli religious leader

Yisrael Moshe Friedman was the sixth Rebbe of the Sadigura Hasidic dynasty. He led his court from Bnei Brak, Israel.

Meir Ashkenazi (rabbi) Former Chief Rabbi of Shanghai

Rabbi Meir Ashkenazi was a Chabad rabbi who served as chief Rabbi of Shanghai from 1926-1949.

Binyamin Zeilberger Orthodox rabbi from New York City

Rabbi Binyamin Zeilberger was the rosh yeshiva of Beth Hatalmud Rabbinical College in the second half of the twentieth century. An alumnus of the Mir Yeshiva in Europe, he was one of the early leaders of Beth Hatalmud in Bensonhurst, Brooklyn together with other alumni from the Mir.

References

  1. "Yeshiva Meor Hatalmud - 1368 39th Street, Brooklyn, NY". Trulia .