

Joseph
K. Miller Torah Center
Kharkov, Ukraine
Kharkov is the third largest town in the
Ukraine. It is home to 40,000 Jews, most of whom have minimal, if any, knowledge
of their Jewish legacy, not because they do not want it, but because they never
had a chance to gain it.
Joseph
K. Miller Torah Center: Because of the
Orthodox Union, 500 children and adults participate yearly in the Joseph K.
Miller Torah Center, which serves Kharkov and eighteen other communities in the
Ukraine. It provides an environment that revitalizes Jewish commitment and
reinforces Zionist values. Junior high and high school students, and summer and
winter campers, begin to observe Shabbat and Yom Tov. They learn Torah and
Hebrew. They become bar and bat mitzvah. They experience a seder and
begin to explore their Jewish identity. Monthly Shabbatonim bring
together over 100 high school youngsters to celebrate the beauty of Shabbat.
Staff:
Three families of Rabbanim, who each live in Kharkov for two year terms,
run the Kharkov program. Currently they are Rav Eran Pletzki, Rav Avraham Seadya
and Rav Yishay Tachvilyan. They are supervised by Rabbi Shlomo Assraf, founding
dean of the Kharkov Orthodox Union organizations. We also have two shelichot
and two Hesder Yeshiva shelichim, as well as Chagim volunteers:
approximately ten during Tishri and as many as twenty during Pesach.
Central Events for the Chagim:
This past Rosh Hashanah, we celebrated with a festive concert in the presence of
a huge audience of around 500 people. On Sukkot, as usual, we put up a central
sukkah in the yard of Sumskayia, supplying meals for Jewish youth from
Kharkov and many other parts of the Ukraine. The heart of our Chanukkah event,
which attracted around 600 people, was the lighting of the menorah and a
children’s performance. On Purim we made a huge Purim market.
We spent Shabbat Hagadol in
Medziboz with the American boys from Yeshivat Sha’alvim (100 participants). At
each of the sedarim (for the community separately and for the youth and
university students separately) we had around 550 participants. Around twenty
teenagers came especially from America in order to participate in the Pesach
events, in addition to the regular Israeli shlichim.
Sunday School: Forty students who
learn in non-Jewish schools and public schools participate.
The Jewish University Students
Organization “Achim”: Around 200 students are connected under the umbrella
of the community.
Students’ Yeshiva: Classes have
been added and significant progress has been made with the students. Around
forty students attend three times a week to study Torah, Jewish history and
Jewish philosophy. These students also enjoy an extensive variety of activities
such as Shabbatonim, summer and winter camps, etc.
Kabbalat Shabbat in Susmayaka:
On a Shabbat three weeks ago there were 140 children, youth and students and
also others from the community (there’s a late Kabbalat Shabbat minyan
just for the students). Those who keep Shabbat come to us for all the
Shabbatot and Chagim. Board and lodging are free. Unfortunately,
there’s not enough room for every one.
Torani Yeshiva: B”H we
established and opened this year a Yeshiva inside the school under the
leadership of Rav Tachvilyan. Twenty students are currently learning in this
yeshiva.
Aliyah to Israel: In the last
few years, close to 600 young pepole have made aliyah to Israel through
our efforts. Most of these children are religious and currently learn in a
variety of religious institutions in Israel.
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Boy's School
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Girl's School
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Pictured above is Zvi Kasspi, of
Sha'alvim, who visited Kharkov's Joseph K. Miller summer camps, part of the NCSY JOLT II program, where children,
teenagers, and university students, receive their first taste of yiddishkeit.

Orthodox Union Sha’alvim Yeshiva High School:
A School Which is a Home
Litsi Orthodox Union Sha’alavim
School: We now have 200 students, classes 1-11, open five days a week.
There are three hours of Jewish studies every day which are given by the staff
of rabbinical families and shelichim from Israel. From the data of the
Education Ministry and Lishkat Hakesher, the percentage of aliyah
from the school is amongst the highest in the world. The school receives partial
support from the Israeli Education Ministry, whose studies indicate that olim
from Kharkov programs arrive with a high level of Hebrew, leading to a swifter
and easier acculturation process.
Boarding School for External Children:
The dormitory currently accommodates forty students. The boy’s school is located
on Susmayka Street (in a community building) and the girl’s school is on Gogol
Street. The students receive three meals a day, clothing, scholarships,
additional classes in the evenings and more.
www.ou.org |