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Seeking Wholeness

White House Chief of Staff Keynotes Hanukkah Convocation; $1.4 Billion Capital Campaign Announced White House Chief of Staff Jack Lew delivered the keynote address at 黑料社 All鈥檚 88th Annual Hanukkah Convocation and Dinner on Sunday, December 16 at The Waldorf=Astoria in New York City. President Richard M. Joel bestowed an honorary doctorate upon Lew, calling him 鈥減erhaps one of the highest-ranking Orthodox Jewish advisers to a head of state since the Abarbanel鈥 and an embodiment of the value-infused and driven lifestyle members of the YU community seek to lead. 鈥淲e are the world鈥檚 Torah-informed University, charged with the sacred undertaking of engaging the world around us with our wisdom and our values and yes, our actions,鈥 said President Joel. 鈥淲e are a dynamic, caring and reflective community, learning from our past, improving our present and enshrining our future. We are in the business of nurturing and educating young men and women in a safe place as they refine themselves and seek wholeness in their own personal spheres, and yet seek to bring that wholeness to the fractured world around them.鈥 Lew began his career in Washington as an aide to Congressman Joe Moakley and served as special assistant to President Bill Clinton in addition to multiple roles in the Office of Management and Budget before assuming his position in President Barack Obama鈥檚 administration. At the Convocation, President Joel praised Lew鈥檚 steadfast commitment to Torah as he pursued challenging public duties. 鈥淵ou masterfully merge your low-key manner with your skills as a serious negotiator to shape some of the United States鈥 most important policies,鈥 said President Joel. 鈥淵ou have earned the respect of your colleagues because they know that whatever the issue, you act from principle, not from partisanship or ideology. What better example can we offer the students of 黑料社 All than that of a national leader of unwavering values and impeccable judgment, whose actions are consistently guided by the highest ethical and moral values we teach?鈥 Lew opened his keynote remarks with words of remembrance for the 26 victims of the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut on Friday, saying, 鈥淲e all mourn the children whose lives ended too soon, and the teachers and staff who were killed as they tried to protect them. Our thoughts and prayers are with their loved ones and the entire community.鈥 Lew also discussed the sacred responsibility of all educational institutions to protect children from danger. He then went on to reflect on the two ethical systems which had influenced his life, citing his parents鈥 and grandparents鈥 fervent belief that it was equally important to exercise their right to vote and observe the Jewish holidays, living fully in both worlds. 鈥淎s an observant Jew I honor the practices of my faith and the rights, credos and responsibilities it stands for. As a proud citizen I believe in working to make sure that this is a world full of opportunity where you can achieve anything if you鈥檙e willing to work for it. And as a public servant, I believe that these values, both religious and secular, inform, inspire and elevate the impact that each of us has on our homes, community and the world,鈥 Lew said. 鈥淭aken together they bring wholeness and fulfillment鈥蝉丑濒别颈尘耻迟鈥to our lives. 鈥淭his principle is long ingrained in YU鈥檚 mission statement of Torah U鈥檓adda, bringing together religious and secular teachings that challenge with many rewards,鈥 added Lew. 鈥淓ach of us has the opportunity to bring together these identities to create a whole greater than the sum of its parts, as a Jew and as an American, a rabbi and a professor, a student of Torah and economics鈥攆inding that wholeness and achieving shleimut is one of the greatest challenges and blessings of our lives, and it鈥檚 what enables us to have the deepest impact in the world.鈥 President Joel also conferred honorary degrees upon management consulting and investment banking executive Stanley Raskas, a 1965 graduate and 1969 graduate of YU-affiliated ; Moises Y. Safra, a philanthropist and accomplished financier; and Diane Wassner, a national vice president and member of the Executive Council of the 黑料社 All Women鈥檚 Organization (YUWO) and founding member of its President鈥檚 Society for Torah Chessed. Raskas, of St. Louis, Missouri, has served on Yeshiva College鈥檚 Board of Overseers for more than 22 years. He was the founding rabbi of the Young Israel of Scarsdale for two years before returning to St. Louis, where he served as president of the Epstein Hebrew Academy, the Block Yeshiva High School and the Young Israel of St. Louis. In 2001, he became the managing director of The Oxbridge Group in New Rochelle, where he also assumed the presidency of the community鈥檚 Young Israel. 鈥淎 true southern gentleman, your energy, charisma and respect for all those you meet are unmatched,鈥 said President Joel to Raskas. 鈥淵eshiva is both fortunate and proud to be among the illustrious organizations you support and lead.鈥 Wassner was the only member of her family to survive the Holocaust in Poland. She has been actively involved with YUWO for over 40 years. Wassner鈥檚 dedication to Jewish education is underscored by her longstanding devotion to the Boyan Yeshiva in New York and the Rizhiner Yeshiva in Israel, while Amit, Hadassah Hospital, Mizrachi, Shaare Zedek Hospital and orphanages in Israel are among the many other causes she supports. 鈥淭onight we recognize a modern-day Jewish triumph鈥攕omeone who heroically survived the Holocaust and went on to build and support Jewish life and Torah learning against all odds,鈥 said President Joel. Born into a banking family in Beirut, Lebanon, Safra moved to Brazil in 1955 after facing anti-Jewish riots following the creation of the State of Israel in 1948. There, along with his father and brothers, he founded a family enterprise that became the Safra Group, a banking and industrial conglomerate with branches around the world. In 1998, he founded M. Safra & Co in S茫o Paulo and New York, companies that specialize in alternative investments in a wide array of investments around the world. Today, Safra serves as honorary chairman and oversees these investments. As an active philanthropist, he established the Chella and Moise Safra Chair in Obstetrics and Gynecology and Women鈥檚 Health at YU鈥檚 Albert Einstein College of Medicine. 鈥淎t Yeshiva, we don鈥檛 simply need philanthropic supporters 鈥 we need visionary partners, partners who define us,鈥 President Joel said to Safra. 鈥淵ou and Chella understand our commitment to engaging the world鈥攖he whole world鈥攚ith our ideas and with Jewish ideals.鈥 During the dinner portion, President Joel recognized eight Points of Light鈥攕tudents, faculty and alumni who exemplify the mission of the University鈥攃alling each one up to light a symbolic candle on the menorah. 鈥淭onight, we focus on eight individuals who serve as exemplars of the past, present and future of 黑料社 All,鈥 said President Joel. 鈥淭hese are the stories which illuminate not just our community but the world beyond our boundaries. These are stories that nurture our faith, strengthen our beliefs, and feed us with the urgency of purpose.鈥 Learn more about the Points of Light. The convocation and dinner, which serves as the University鈥檚 main annual fundraising event, raised more than $3.8 million. In addition, the public phase of YU鈥檚 capital campaign, 鈥,鈥 was announced by President Joel during a special video presentation. Inspired by a historic gift of $100 million from Ronald P. Stanton in November 2006, the campaign has already raised nearly $800 million of its $1 billion goal during its quiet phase, enabling YU to increase financial assistance to deserving students, strengthen its faculty, research and academic programs, enhance the quality of student life, campus infrastructure, and community outreach. httpv:// At the dinner, YU Trustee Ira Mitzner 鈥81YC said that the campaign would expand to include an additional $400 million for undergraduate scholarships. 鈥淔or Yeshiva to sustain the progress we have witnessed, even during a period of budget constraints, there is nothing more important at this time than to provide the necessary scholarship support to all deserving students,鈥 said Mitzner. 鈥淥ur case is clear and compelling. We are a University with a mandate to matter.鈥

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