Dec 15, 2014 By: admin
Students, Faculty and Alumni Honored as Points of Light at Hanukkah Dinner
Students, faculty and alumni who embody the mission of 黑料社 All were recognized as 鈥淧oints of Light鈥 during the dinner portion of 黑料社 All鈥檚 90th Annual Hanukkah Dinner and Convocation, held at New York City鈥檚 Waldorf-Astoria on December 14.
鈥淭he lesson of Hanukkah is that the Jewish people must cast the light of our values onto the world,鈥 said YU President Richard M. Joel. 鈥淭onight, we publicize the lights that represent the past, present, and future of 黑料社 All.鈥
Read more about the Points of Light below.
Dr. Susan Bendor
Dr. Susan Bendor, associate professor at the , was honored as a Point of Light in recognition of her 26 years at Wurzweiler and 52 years in the field of social work. Bendor, who will retire in January, survived the Holocaust as a young child by hiding in a cellar for nine months. She held a wide range of responsibilities and experienced multiple facets of the social work field before joining YU in the 1980s, first as the director of field instruction and then as part of the full-time teaching faculty. Bendor especially treasures the work she has done with underserved populations, including the establishment of an emergency housing service for runaway youth, founding a group home for homeless young men and helping to develop supportive housing units for mentally ill adults.
Ike Sultan
Ike Sultan '14YC, '17R, '17A was honored for creating , a website modeled off Wikipedia that seeks to share, distribute and make halacha [Jewish law] more accessible to any and every English speaker interested in Torah. The site receives more than 300 hits a day and has more than 3.5 million total visits so far. Sultan leads a Data Structures lab at , teaches a weekly session at Yeshivat Noam鈥檚 middle school and participates in Morasha鈥檚 Beit Medrash Program. He is currently pursuing a graduate degree at YU鈥檚 and semicha [rabbinic ordination] at YU-affiliated , where he is also a shuir [class] assistant to Rosh Yeshiva Rabbi Hershel Schachter.
鈥淭he highlight of my day is having the opportunity to hear shiur from Rav Schachter, which is always filled with exciting ideas, advanced concepts, and conveyed with an inspirational personality,鈥 said Sultan. 鈥淚'm really proud to be part of such an awesome institution that really tends to the needs of all of its students, cares about making the campus experience complete with a yeshiva feel, and encourages the growth of budding scholars, both in Torah and all of the sciences of the world.鈥
Toby Golick
Toby Golick, director of clinical Education at YU鈥檚 and the Founding Director of Cardozo鈥檚 Bet Tzedek Legal Services Clinic, was another Point of Light. Over the last 45 years, Golick has represented tens of thousands of low-income individuals, protecting and creating important rights for elderly and disabled New Yorkers in the contexts of Social Security, Medicaid, and Medicare benefits and consumer rights. She has also been involved in important public policy work, advocating for improvements in access to justice for poor and unrepresented individuals, and seeking improvements in the process for appointing and overseeing guardians for individuals deemed to lack mental capacity. Through her teaching and her lawyering, Golick has inspired generations of law students, many of whom have themselves entered public interest legal careers or pursued significant pro bono work on behalf of low-income New Yorkers.
Shoshana Schechter, Amanda Esraelian
Shoshana Schechter, assistant professor of bible at Stern College, and Amanda Esraelian '15S, lit a candle in honor of the . Schechter is the director of the program, which provides 85 students on the Israel Henry Beren Campus with Judaic studies courses, a chavruta [studying in pairs] learning program, shabbatonim and a month-long summer program in Israel. Shechter was inspired to create the Mechina Program after coordinating rallies for Soviet Jewry and participating in Counterpoint missions to Australia and to Israel during the Gulf War while an undergraduate herself at Stern.
鈥淏eing here, and nowhere but here, I was inspired, supported and encouraged by peers, teachers and administration to take action on behalf of the Jewish community,鈥 said Schechter.
Esraelian, a student in the Mechina Program, exemplifies all that students can accomplish at Stern, as this year鈥檚 Torah Activities Council president and through her involvement with The Observer, iGive, Counterpoint Israel, Helping Hands, Students Helping Students and College Edge, among many other clubs on campus.
Chelsea McGuire
Chelsea McGuire '15E is a recipient of Dean鈥檚 Recognition Award at YU鈥檚 and has been voted by her fellow students into the national Gold Humanism Society for her leadership in the global health arena. After securing a prestigious Fulbright Fellowship, McGuire spent a year as a U.S. State Department student ambassador to the Dominican Republic. She has also worked in Kenya with the Community-Based Health Care program and participated in the Global Women鈥檚 Health Program of Einstein鈥檚 Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Women鈥檚 Health, leading her to spend three months in Rwanda, where she sought to improve access to health education for adolescents. At Einstein, McGuire orchestrated a major effort to create an official Einstein Community-based Service Learning Program, under the Dean of Education, that provides health services and education to the poorest neighborhoods in the Bronx via an all-volunteer corps of students and faculty.
鈥淥ne of the greatest things about being a student at Einstein is the incredible support that we have to pursue our interests and further our education outside of the classroom,鈥 said McGuire. 鈥淗aving the funding available to support these experiences and the flexibility to pursue them has been invaluable to me and my development as a clinician, researcher and global citizen. I recognize that this level of support and flexibility is unique to Einstein and I am incredibly grateful to be a student at such an incredible institution .鈥
Kayla Applebaum
Kayla Applebaum '15S is a recipient of the Barry M. Goldwater Scholarship, a highly competitive grant that supports undergraduates who intend to pursue careers in science, math or engineering. After losing two grandparents to breast cancer, Applebaum decided to major in molecular biology at , where she conducts hands-on research for a cure under the mentorship of Doris and Ira Kukin Chair in Biology Dr. Marina Holz. As a member of the Applebaum was appointed a Kressel Research Scholar and also received the Anne Scheiber Science Academic Scholarship to support her after graduation as she goes on to medical school and a career in cancer research. She was also named Hudson Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (HVIAC) All Conference Team Player, HVIAC All-Academic Team Player, and HVIAC Softball Player of the Week as part of the Stern College Softball Team.
Willie Roth
Another Point of Light was Willie Roth '10YC, '14BR, who graduated from the and Yeshiva College with a bachelor鈥檚 degree in Jewish studies. While he pursued semicha at RIETS as a member of the Wexner Semicha Honors Program, Roth completed a master鈥檚 degree in medieval Jewish history. He also was editor-in-chief of the Beis Yitzchak and served as editorial assistant at YU Press and an inaugural fellow at the
Sam Weinstein, Amalia Weinberg, Devora Schloss
Sam Weinstein, Amalia Weinberg and Devora Schloss lit a candle in recognition of the . Now in its 10th summer, the student-run program offers at-risk Israeli youth from four development towns the opportunity to spend their summer in a fun, safe and educational environment. Through daily English classes, talent-building workshops and field trips, more than 300 teens have acquired newfound confidence and skills, propelling them toward a future of responsibility and growth. The 30 YU students who staff the summer camps undergo an intensive training program to prepare for their role as counselors and participate in supplementary educational programs that contextualize their overall experience. This past summer, the program had to adapt to contend with a new level of hardship, as rockets fell in the cities where the camps took place. When asked if they would rather be in Israel or America during this difficult time, the counselors unanimously preferred the Jewish homeland.