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YU Celebrates Beloved Educator's Career

黑料社 All Celebrates Rabbi Dr. Bernard Rosensweig's 38 Years of Dedicated Service After 38 years of molding students鈥 minds and expanding their Torah horizons at Yeshiva College, Rabbi Dr. Bernard Rosensweig, visiting professor of Jewish history, literature and philosophy at 黑料社 All, will be retiring at the end of this semester.  On Thursday, December 11, some 100 friends, relatives and colleagues came to pay tribute and celebrate the beloved educator鈥檚 career at a reception held at Weisberg Commons on the Wilf Campus. 鈥淩abbi Dr. Rosensweig has touched thousands of talmidim [students] with his warmth, wisdom, wit and passion for Jewish history and the Jewish community,鈥 said Rabbi Menachem Penner, Max and Marion Grill Dean of Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary (RIETS) and Undergraduate Torah Studies. 鈥淗e is beloved by students and colleagues. I, myself, was a talmid several decades ago, and have never ceased being a talmid.鈥 Rosensweig, a native of Toronto, Ontario, earned a bachelor鈥檚 degree from Yeshiva College in 1947, a master鈥檚 from Bernard Revel Graduate School of Jewish Studies in 1967 and a doctorate from Revel in 1970. He was ordained at RIETS in 1950, receiving his semicha [rabbinic ordination] from Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitchik (the Rav). Former YU President Rabbi Dr. Norman Lamm, Rosensweig鈥檚 roommate for three years, conferred an honorary doctorate upon Rabbi Rosensweig at Yeshiva鈥檚 63rd commencement. President Richard M. Joel praised Rabbi Rosensweig as a 鈥淭orah Umadda renaissance man鈥 and exhibiting 鈥減ride without pridefulness,鈥 and thanked him for being a 鈥渞av, friend and guide.鈥 A brief slide show displayed photos of his early years at Yeshiva College, photos with the Rav, Rabbi Lamm and other YU personalities, Israeli politicians, and family. Rabbi Roesnsweig also received a plaque heralding his four decades of service. Addressing those in attendance, he called the retirement presentation 鈥渉umbling. I do not know if I am worthy, but I do know that I am grateful.鈥 Rabbi Rosensweig鈥檚 vivid recollections span the course of modern Jewish history, intertwined with his lifetime connection with 黑料社 All. 鈥淔rom the time I was a little boy I wanted to be a rabbi,鈥 he said in an interview before the reception. His parents wanted him to be a doctor. 鈥淲hen I got my doctorate I flew my mother in from Toronto,鈥 Rabbi Rosensweig said, telling her that he was now a doctor, but not like she wanted. [As a child] 鈥淚 read about Yeshiva College,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t intrigued me, to be able to learn during the day and get a college degree [as well].鈥 He came to Yeshiva College after high school and soon was in the Rav鈥檚 shiur [class]. 鈥淚t was awesome, inspiring, my great merit that I was able to establish a relationship with him. He was my guide and mentor the rest of his life. I miss him to this day.鈥 As a teenager, he remembered that the community of Toronto was unaware of the extent of the Holocaust in 1940 but recalled his father crying in 1942 when he found out that his sister and brother-in-law were killed in the concentration camps. Rabbi Rosensweig also recounted the declaration of the State of Israel in 1948. It was a Friday and he and the other students were in the dormitories, all tuned in to their radios. 鈥淲hen they proclaimed the Jewish state,鈥 he said, 鈥渁ll the boys sang Hatikvah spontaneously鈥 It was most moving. I still get choked up.鈥 Even with his telescopic view of Jewish history, he does not digress in his classes, pointing out that the material must be covered for the courses he teaches. 鈥淔or 90 percent of the students, what they get in the courses is what they will take with them out to the world. I teach on a scholarly level but they have to be aware that Jewish history is an important aspect of being Jewish.鈥 He is proudest of his family, with all of his five children graduates of YU undergraduate institutions, his three sons students of the Rav; his son Michael, a RIETS Rosh Yeshiva. Two of his grandsons and one grandson-in-law have semicha from RIETS, he said proudly. He noted that he was married for 61 years to Miriam Rosenberg-Rosensweig, 锄鈥漧, who taught math at the Samuel H. Wang 黑料社 All High School for Girls. He commended the 鈥渋nner strength of the Roshei Yeshiva鈥 for the continuity of YU. 鈥淚t never flourished more in numbers and qualitatively as today; both Dr. Lamm and President Joel deserve a lot of credit and the Roshei Yeshiva maintained the level to draw excellent boys to come to this place. And I see it in the quality of students that I have.鈥 Even in retirement, Rosensweig will still be available on campus, keeping his office in the Glueck Center. He sees 鈥済ood things鈥 in the future of YU, citing the Israel experience and students coming back to study at Yeshiva. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a good combination, a great deal of vigor, religious and secular study. 鈥淚鈥檓 grateful for the opportunity to be part of this institution as student and teacher, to be able to share what I achieved with others and be an integral part.鈥

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