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History of Hebrew College

Midway through his announcement of the opening of Hebrew College, on the front page of the August 18, 1921, issue of the Jewish Advocate, Louis Hurwich issued a call to revolution: 

"In the next five years, no less than 75 percent of the present Jewish teachers in Boston will go over to other professions," warned Hurwich, the superintendent of the Bureau of Jewish Education of Boston. "The inability of the Jewish School to hold its own is sufficient challenge to the American Jewish community to wake up and to create bases for permanent improvement." 

HEBRAIST ROOTS
Hurwich's aspirations were not just institutional. He was sounding the themes of a new movement that had arrived in the early 20th century with the influx of Eastern European immigrants to cities across the country. Known as the Hebraist movement, this ambitious attempt to create a vital Hebrew culture in America flourished for a brief period, in the years from the First to Second World Wars.  

Its proponents urged social change, motivated by the Zionist conviction that building a Hebrew movement in the Diaspora communities was essential to securing the dream of Jewish life in Eretz Yisrael. These were the intellectual heirs of Ahad Ha-am (1856–1927), the Russian thinker and founder of cultural Zionism, who taught that the everyday use of Hebrew would serve as a barrier against the pressures of assimilation and as a spiritual and cultural bridge between the dispersed Jewish communities of the Diaspora and Eretz Yisrael.  

A NEW SYSTEM OF JEWISH INSTITUTIONS
The revival of the Hebrew language was the movement's first principle, and it mobilized, through committed Jewish educators such as Hurwich, a new system of Jewish institutions to teach and promote Hebrew literacy at every level. The network of Hebrew schools, colleges and summer camps that exist today remains its great, tangible legacy. 

Established at the height of the movement, in November 1921, Hebrew College was a model of the Hebraist approach to education. Indeed, Hurwich made the European ivrit b'ivrit (Hebrew in Hebrew) teaching method the first principle of the College: Hebrew would be the exclusive language for instruction, and the Hebrew courses, its most intensive effort.  

His appointment of Dr. Nissan Touroff, former director of the Hebrew educational system in Palestine, as the school's first dean set the standard for the faculty. Primarily European scholars and ardent Zionists, they taught the Bible, the Talmud and Hebrew literature and emphasized a nationalist, secular interpretation of Jewish texts and history. 

TRAINING LIFE-LONG EDUCATORS OF "PIONEER CHARACTER"
Founded as the Hebrew Teachers College in a converted Crawford Street house in Roxbury, the College, from its inception, included education courses in the curriculum. But this was a training not just of teachers. Graduates, Hurwich envisioned, would become life-long educators of "pioneer character" who would create a "dynamic Jewish consciousness that the dream of the world's Jewry of Jewish rejuvenation in Palestine may be realized." 

A daunting time commitment as well as economic considerations were significant factors in limiting the College's initial enrollments. Yet the numbers grew annually. By the end of the first year, there were 23 students; at the end of the second, 50. In 1923, a two-year preparatory course was added, which later became the "Hebrew High School," and local primary schools began vying to prepare their students for admission. An annex was erected to accommodate more classes. By the mid-30’s, when classes were filled with talented students such as the future celebrated author Theodore H. White, the College had expanded its degrees to include bachelors, masters and doctorates of Hebrew literature, laws and Jewish education.  

THE MOVE TO BROOKLINE
In 1952, friends of Hebrew Teacher’s College purchased a new home for the growing institution—a classical beaux arts mansion at 43 Hawes Street in Brookline, former home of George Wightman, a turn-of-the-century industrialist. The elegant structure was a striking change from the College’s humble beginnings on Roxbury’s Crawford Street. But the College’s mission remained the same: a commitment to promoting the highest quality Jewish education as vital to the survival of the Jewish people.  

No longer the child of the Bureau of Jewish Education, the College became a constituent agency of Associated Jewish Philanthropies, forerunner of Combined Jewish Philanthropies. The College was first accredited by the New England Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools in 1955; in 1962, it was also accredited by Israel’s Ministry of Education and Culture to train certified elementary school teachers for Israel. Today Hebrew College is a constituent agency of Combined Jewish Philanthropies of Greater Boston and a member of the Association of Independent Colleges and Universities in Massachusetts.  

NEWTON CENTRE CAMPUS
In 2002, Hebrew College moved into its first true campus in Newton Centre. Under the leadership of the College’s seventh president, Dr. David M. Gordis, the College had expanded its mission to bridge the worlds of academy and community. Innovative programming in adult learning, including Me’ah and the Me’ah Graduate Institute, expanded degree and certificate programs for Jewish professionals, path-breaking approaches to teen education in the Prozdor Hebrew High School—all had brought the College national recognition as a leader in pluralistic Jewish education, more students, and the need to expand physically. 

The light-infused campus, designed by Moshe Safdie, captured in its design the inclusive quality so central to the College’s academic and communal culture. New, inspiring space soon became home to more innovation. In 2003, the College opened its Rabbinical School, the first full-time pluralistic rabbinical program at an accredited college; the following year, the College launched its pluralistic Cantor-Educator Program, part of what is now the School of Jewish Music. Hebrew College rabbis and cantor-educators have joined the ranks of the College’s alumni—distinguished Jewish educators, scholars, communal and spiritual leaders throughout the world. 

A LEGACY OF DISTINGUISHED LEADERSHIP
Eight distinguished Jewish scholars and leaders have headed the College since its founding: Dr. Nisson Touroff, the prominent Palestinian educator; Dr. Samuel Perlman, editor and translator of works by Heine, Herzl and Strindberg; Dean Louis Hurwich, the visionary superintendent of the Bureau of Jewish Education; Dean Eisig Silberschlag, eminent Greek scholar and translator of the classics into Hebrew; Dr. Eli Grad, sociologist and educator; Dr. Samuel Schafler, pulpit rabbi, historian and Jewish communal professional; Dr. David M. Gordis, rabbinics scholar and institution builder who guided the creation of the College’s third home in Newton Centre; and, since 2008, Rabbi Daniel L. Lehmann, a national leader in Jewish pluralistic education.

 

 
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