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Where Will Joel Take Yeshiva U? - In his first interview as president, Richard Joel speaks of moving forward, but cautiously.

Aug 22, 2003 -- Richard Joel is well aware that on the eve of his being chosen president of 黑料社 All last December, a number of students and rabbis were so opposed to his election that they recited Tehillim (Psalms), a prayerful response to times of crisis and danger. For some, the fact that Joel was not a rabbinic scholar and, moreover, had for years headed Hillel, the Jewish campus organization that celebrates pluralism, signaled an impending revolution for Yeshiva, away from its Torah roots. But they will be proven only half-right. Yeshiva under Joel indeed promises much change 鈥 in style, substance and outlook. That change, though, will stem not from the direction of secularism but from Joel鈥檚 commitment to the Jewish people鈥檚 historic role as a light unto the nations. Yeshiva, he believes, stays truest to its mission by expanding rather than narrowing its goals, encountering the world rather than retreat-ing from it. Six weeks into the new post and preparing for his formal investiture next month as only the fourth president of Modern Orthodoxy鈥檚 flagship institution in a century, Joel seems confident that his experience, belief, vision and force of personality will win over skeptics and advance Yeshiva鈥檚 motto of Torah U鈥橫adah, the blending of both Torah and secular learning. He doesn鈥檛 say so in as many words, though. And in recent talks he has made reference to his avoidance of the Torah U鈥橫adah phrase, noting that it is fraught with ideology while he is, instead, committed to action. That action most likely will not be frontal, taking on those who oppose his outlook, but rather used to focus energy on his goals, and on those who share them. During a two-hour conversation 鈥 his first full interview as the head of Yeshiva 鈥 in his newly renovated office on the Washington Heights campus, the 52-year-old Joel seemed to be trying out his new persona of both university president and representative of an ideology rooted in tradition but obliged to embrace, as well as at times confront, modernity. 鈥淚鈥檓 learning a lot,鈥 he says of the several months he has spent talking to students, rabbis, faculty and lay leaders about the needs and goals of Yeshiva, a complex institution comprised of men鈥檚 and women鈥檚 undergraduate colleges, a rabbinic school, a medical school, law school, and other graduate institutions with sometimes competing needs and interests. 鈥淚 want to move forward, but I have to be careful. You want to build this 鈥 to last.鈥 Indeed, he is well aware that many eyes in the Orthodox community and beyond are on him these days because Yeshiva, and by extension the centrist Orthodox community, is in the midst of an intense, ongoing tug of war between those calling for a greater or lesser amount of involvement with the rest of the community, as well as questions about women鈥檚 roles and the value of secular education. Joel鈥檚 is a delicate perch, yet instinctively he is eager to engage. He is an advocate and model of Modern Orthodoxy and has expressed frustration over the community鈥檚 trend toward separation from the rest of society. There is a part of him, though, that is holding back as well, and he acknowledges the tension. 鈥淚 am trying to find my language in this setting,鈥 he says, 鈥渂ut I am not taking on a different world view than I had at Hillel. People who knew me there knew I wasn鈥檛 walking away from my commitment to Orthodoxy, but I was embracing others. And from the very beginning we found a way to have a big tent without saying that everyone in that tent was by definition 鈥榣egitimate.鈥 鈥淲e Jews should find the grounds where we can be one people with one heart,鈥 he continues. 鈥淏ut to me pluralism means I honor your right to be wrong. It鈥檚 not relativism. I believe that my truth is the truth, and I don鈥檛 have to say your truth is the truth. I can honor and esteem who you are, hope there is much we share, and make it safe to argue or fight when it鈥檚 appropriate. But I don鈥檛 have to say there are many paths up Mt. Sinai.鈥 Joel seems committed to doing what he did for Hillel when he took over the then-moribund organization 13 years ago, first healing from within, uniting the various elements of the institution, giving students and staff a greater voice, calling for standards of excellence, and sharing his dream with the larger community. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 want to pretend to be what I鈥檓 not,鈥 Joel says. 鈥淚 am not a rabbi and I am not going to pretend to be a teacher of Orthodox tradition. I am a working Jew, a learning Jew.鈥 And his job, he says, is to build an institution that nurtures learning and inspires 鈥渕ore young people to learn Torah and to live a life of Torah.鈥 He says he is not a spokesman for Modern Orthodoxy but rather the president of an institution 鈥渢raining the next generation of leaders of Modern Orthodoxy.鈥 But don鈥檛 look for Joel to take a backseat role. Officials at Yeshiva say they already sense a change in style at the top, with Joel taking on a more hands-on role than his predecessor, Dr. Norman Lamm, who now serves as chancellor after more than 25 years at the helm. For example, Joel recently chose to get involved in working out a relatively minor faculty dispute, according to a school official, and managed to come up with an agreeable compromise. He has met with the rabbinic faculty and is says to favor several of the younger rabbis. He wants undergrads to feel more cared for, and has hired Hillel Davis, an experienced business executive, for the new post of vice president of university life. He has also hired Ed Fox, a seasoned administrator, as deputy to the president, and Joel says he is still building an administrative team that will give him strong executive responsibility. 鈥淗e is a doer,鈥 one rabbinic member of the faculty says of Joel, 鈥渁nd he is too smart to get caught up in ideological confrontations with the rabbis. He will make his mark through programmatic and communal change,鈥 working around the rabbis if they won鈥檛 work with him. The results may be the same, though, as Joel speaks of placing a greater emphasis on training rabbis to better serve and lead their communities, providing day schools with skilled modern educators, expanding Yeshiva鈥檚 involvement in and connection with Israel, and promoting Jewish communal work as a dignified profession. He speaks of kedusha, which he defines as 鈥渘obility鈥 rather than sanctity, and calls for 鈥渆nnobling and enabling鈥 young people to serve the community. Joel says Orthodox Jews walk a delicate line of being both a part of, and apart from, the world, and that 鈥渨e have to know our values and be comfortable with them so we can then risk being out in that world.鈥 He admits that it is 鈥渁 difficult task鈥 to 鈥渋nform the world and learn from it while remembering who we are,鈥 but notes that 鈥渨hen we retreat to black and white, we sometimes drive the color out.鈥 He says he also wants to use his 鈥渂ully pulpit鈥 to tell society at large to 鈥渃ome back from the abyss and latch on to immutable values鈥 like those Judaism has to offer. Joel feels he is being given a year 鈥渢o use training wheels鈥 in his new post, but he is well aware of the opportunity he has to set his mark during this honeymoon period. 鈥淲hat鈥檚 frightening,鈥 he says, 鈥渋s that the stakes are so high, but what鈥檚 exciting is the prospect of advancing the mission of the Jewish people through our young people.鈥 Samuel Heilman, a Queens college professor and expert on Orthodox life, gives Joel high marks as 鈥渁 great public figure and warm human being,鈥 but worries that as 鈥渘either a rabbi nor academic, will he have enough of an understanding of what a university is to be able to help it reach its potential?鈥 His advice is for Joel to hire a 鈥渇irst-rate provost鈥 who understands university life and Orthodoxy. But Joel is confident he has the staffing he needs and is ready to translate his vision into action, noting: 鈥淚 was given permission to dream and listen to the dreams of those around me,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut the only way to make it happen is to wake up.鈥
漏The Jewish Week - Gary Rosenblatt

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