Machon Chana
Machon Chana is a private religious college for Jewish women affiliated with the Chabad Hasidic movement and geared toward Baalot Teshuva – women from secular backgrounds who become more observant. The school is located in the Crown Heights neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York.[1]
History
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The school was founded in 1972 as an institution educating women from non-Orthodox backgrounds in an orthodox Jewish environment. The school is open to women of any age, and focuses on Torah study.[2]
The Lubavitcher Rebbe, Menachem M. Schneerson saw this institution as a way to introduce young Jewish women from non-orthodox backgrounds to orthodox Judaism through academic means.[3]
Leadership and goals
Sara Labkowski is the founder and executive director of Machon Chana.[4]
The goals of Machon Chana as described in its mission statement are:
- ...Provide comprehensive Torah education with high academic standards for women of all ages and backgrounds... and imbue them with an appreciation and understanding of Torah and Judaism through the study of Chassidic thought and lifestyle... tools for lifelong personal growth and fulfillment as Jewish women in the family and in society at large.[5]
Student body
Hundreds of women from all over the world study at the school annually. The backgrounds of the women attending the school vary with some arriving not knowing the Hebrew alphabet.[4]
See also
Sources
- Morris, Bonnie. "Female education in the Lubavitcher community: The Beth Rivkah and Machon Chana schools" in Women in spiritual and communitarian societies in the United States Wendy Chmielewski, et al., eds. Syracuse, NY, 1993
- Srinivasan, Gita. "Women and Personal Empowerment in Lubavitcher Hasidism" in Encounters with American Ethnic Cultures: Interpretation of Gender and Ethnicity: The Lubavitcher Experience: Strategies for Strength: Kilbride, et al., eds. Tuscaloosa, Alabama, 1990.
References
- ^ Kilbride, Philip Leroy; Jane Carter Goodale; Elizabeth R. Ameisen (October 30, 1990). "Interpretations of Gender and Ethnicity. The Lubavitcher Experience". Encounters with American Ethnic Cultures. University of Alabama Press. p. 194. ISBN 0-8173-0471-1.
- ^ Machon Chana: Academic Programs Archived 2008-07-05 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Lubavitcher Women in America: Identity and Activism in the Postwar Era, Bonnie J. Morris. (State University of New York) 1998, p. 49.
- ^ a b Shelby, Joyce (April 15, 2008). "Whole religion in one matzoh". New York Daily News. Retrieved February 22, 2010.
- ^ Volunteer Match