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Richard Joel

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Richard M. Joel (born 1950) is the fourth president of Yeshiva University (YU), a Modern Orthodox Jewish university with some 7,000 students at its undergraduate and graduate divisions in New York City. YU is the oldest and most comprehensive institution in the United States combining Jewish scholarship with academic excellence. In addition, President Joel has traveled the globe giving talks on topics of Jewish leadership and identity at numerous universities and Jewish Federations.

Academic and Professional Credentials

Richard Joel received his BA and JD from New York University where he was a Root-Tilden law scholar, and has received honorary doctorates from Boston Hebrew College and Gratz College. He was an assistant district attorney in New York, and Deputy Chief of Appeals in Bronx, NY. His career continued as associate dean and professor of law at YU’s Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law. President Joel is an at-large member of the Commission on Independent Colleges and Universities (CICU) Board of Trustees.[1]

At Hillel

From 1989 to 2003, Joel served as President and International director of Hillel: The Foundation for Jewish Campus Life, an organization which supports Jewish life for college and university students throughout the world. In 1994, Joel orchestrated Hillel's independence from B'nai B'rith, its parent organization since 1925. Joel also increased the organization's financial stability and prestige by bringing on board major philanthropists such as Michael Steinhardt, Edgar Bronfman, and Lynn and the late Charles Schusterman. During his tenure, Hillel partnered with Birthright Israel, the free trip to Israel for 18 to 26-year-olds who had never been on an organized trip, and launched the Steinhardt Jewish Campus Service Corps, a group of recent college graduates tasked with engaging unaffiliated Jews and drawing them to Judaism and Jewish events. Hillel also expanded to the former Soviet Union and South America.[2] While a minority think that Hillel provided stylish instead of substantive Judaism,[3] Hillel became “less building-centered, even as more and newer buildings opened each year, to connect with Jewish students in multiple campus[es] and communit[ies]” under Joel’s management. [4] Some critics also claim that Joel's tenure was marked by a domineering approach to the Jewish campus scene.[5] (More on criticism of Hillel.) However, most feel that he made Judaism on campus more approachable with his “skilled management, magnetism, personal warmth” and “clarity of vision” that helped craft Hillel as a flourishing international organization that inspires Jews on college campuses around the world.[6] In spite of the limited criticism of Joel's tenure at Hillel, Joel is credited as having "transformed this movement (Hillel) and put Jewish renaissance at the forefront of the community's agenda," and his contributions to Hillel have been defined as "immeasurable" by its past and present leadership.[7]

Investigating Abuse

During his tenure at Hillel, Joel served as the head of the special commission empaneled by the Orthodox Union (OU) to investigate allegations that community leaders had ignored charges against the abusive outreach rabbi Baruch Lanner, an executive with the OU's National Conference of Synagogue Youth (NCSY). The commission concluded that many OU and NCSY leaders had made serious errors in judgment.

At Yeshiva University

President Joel at YU Commencement

Joel became president of YU in 2003, succeeding Rabbi Dr. Norman Lamm, who had been president since 1976 and continues to work as the university's chancellor. Since assuming the presidency, President Joel has catalyzed a renewed focus on academic excellence, enriched student life and broadened service to the Jewish and wider communities. President Joel has also appointed new deans for Yeshiva College, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Sy Syms School of Business, and the Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary (RIETS), added faculty positions throughout the university, and spurred wide-ranging improvements to campus life, including the construction of YU's newest building, the Jacob and Dreizel Glueck Center for Jewish Study, which opened in August 2009.

President Joel preaches Yeshiva University's mission of "torah u'maada l'chatchilah" through excelling at liberal arts, business and the sciences while developing depth and breadth in Jewish learning.

As president of RIETS, he has spearheaded efforts to reinvigorate professional education for rabbis, continuing education and rabbinic placement.

President Joel firmly believes in modeling education based on the notion of an integrated life, and speaks of a Yeshiva University education as ennobling and enabling a generation of leadership. Additionally, President Joel has established various centers and programs including the university's centers for Ethics, Israel Studies, Public Health and the Jewish Future.

He has also established a Presidential Fellowship program that provides training and professional development to recent graduates to further their path toward communal leadership.

Personal life

Joel and his wife Esther (nee Ribner), who holds a PhD from YU's Ferkauf Graduate School of Psychology, have six children all of whom have attended Yeshiva University schools. They currently reside in Riverdale, NY.[8] He is the first cousin of musician Billy Joel[9]

The Maccabeats

Joel's son, Nachum is a member of Yeshiva University's a capella group, The Maccabeats, the group that is famous for their viral Hanukkah hit Candlelight. Ironically, while Nachum only joined the Maccabeats in late 2010, Richard was featured in the song "Shaleshudis Medley" on the Maccabeats CD, "Voices from the Heights", which debuted in March 2010.


References

  1. ^ http://www.yu.edu/president/index.aspx?id=614
  2. ^ http://www.ujc.org/page.aspx?id=36746
  3. ^ Tikkun: "Hillel Incorporated: The Franchising of Modern American Jewry"
  4. ^ Encyclopaedia Judaica. Ed. Michael Berenbaum and Fred Skolnik. Vol. 11. 2nd ed. Detroit: Macmillan Reference USA, 2007. p364-365.
  5. ^ New Voices: Lights Inactive - The death of a Jewish student organization
  6. ^ http://www.ujc.org/page.aspx?id=36746
  7. ^ http://www.hillel.org/about/news/2002/20021205_richard.htm
  8. ^ McNeil, Kate. 'For Yeshiva's president, life can imitate television", The Riverdale Press, January 3, 2008. Accessed May 3, 2008. "Riverdale resident Richard Joel compares his job - president of Yeshiva University - to the presidency of the United States."
  9. ^ Weinstein, Fred. 'Trying Tribulations: The Road Home for Billy Joel", New York Post, January 27, 2011. Accessed February, 2011. "Trying Tribulations: The Road Home for Billy Joel"

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