REVIEW - Lefkowitz Leadership Initiative
Transcription
REVIEW - Lefkowitz Leadership Initiative
YEAR IN A G U D AT H I S R A E L OF AMERICA REVIEW 2014 v"ga, – s"ga, ktrah ,sudt vehrntc TABLE OF CONTENTS 2 3 MESSAGE FROM THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE 4 RABBINIC LEADERSHIP 5 LAY LEADERSHIP 6 TORAH PROJECTS & DAF YOMI COMMISSION 8 YOUTH DIVISIONS 10 ADVOCACY 16 ANNUAL EVENTS 18 SOCIAL AND COMMUNITY SERVICES 22 YESHIVA SERVICES 24 COMMUNICATIONS DEPARTMENT 25 AGUDAH WOMEN OF AMERICA 26 RESOURCE DIRECTORY YEAR IN REVIEW MESSAGE FROM THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE DEAR FRIEND OF AGUDATH ISRAEL: We are proud to present this pictorial summary of some of the activities and accomplishments of Agudath Israel of America over the course of the past 12 months. As you can see from the pages that follow, Agudath Israel, through our national office and regional offices around the country, is involved in a myriad of activities and projects affecting virtually every aspect of contemporary Jewish life, and stands at the forefront of responsible activism on behalf of the Torah community. But it would be a mistake to focus exclusively on the projects and day-to-day accomplishments of our organization. That would be like focusing on the trees and losing sight of the forest. The simple truth is that the whole of Agudath Israel is greater – much greater! – than the sum of its individual parts. Agudath Israel stands for something very special: the coming together as a mass movement of diverse segments of Torah Jewry, a mighty ko’ach ha’rabim under the leadership of Gedolei Yisroel. That is what defines Agudath Israel and animates every aspect of the work we do. So as you leaf through the pages of this booklet, we hope you take pride in the projects and tremendous achievements of Agudath Israel of America – and even more so, in the ko’ach ha’rabim that makes all of this possible, of which you are an integral part. Thank you for your ongoing friendship and support. Rabbi Chaim Dovid Zwiebel Executive Vice President Rabbi Shlomo Gertzulin Executive Vice President for Finance and Administration Rabbi Labish Becker Executive Director 3 RABBINIC LEADERSHIP AGUDATH ISRAEL has served as the premier umbrella organization for the Orthodox Jewish community for over 100 years. Its mission has been encapsulated by the slogan “shouldering responsibility.” Addressing the multifaceted needs of Klal Yisroel which range from protecting the rights of Jews to practice religion freely, ensuring the fiscal viability of our educational system, providing adult educational programming, assisting the underprivileged in our community, organizing after school activities for Jewish youth and advocating for the rights of the special needs population, Agudah is at the forefront of efforts to serve the needs of the growing Jewish population. Moetzes Gedolei HaTorah meeting at Agudath Israel of America Headquarters Through its nine regional offices, Agudath Israel maintains a strong presence in communities nationwide advocating for the local interest of its constituents. The Moetzes Gedolei HaTorah, which is comprised of senior Roshei Yeshiva and rabbinic personalities, is the foundation of the Agudah movement. This rabbinical board oversees 4 YEAR IN REVIEW Agudah activities, ensuring that the highest standards of ethics and integrity are maintained. They also guide Agudath Israel through many issues that arise on the local, national and international scene. The Conference of Synagogue Rabbonim, consisting of over 200 Rabbis nationwide, provides a united front for religious and spiritual guidance in local communities across the country. Conference of Midwest Rabbonim 5th Annual Conference, Chicago, IL THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES, NATIONAL OFFICERS AND VAAD HANHALAH are the lay bodies that oversee the activities of Agudath Israel of America. These groups meet on a regular basis to hear reports about, and give input to, the different activities of Agudath Israel. Members of various committees work with individual divisions of Agudath Israel to ensure that they perform effectively. Agudath Israel of America Board of Trustees Meeting LAY LEADERSHIP 5 TORAH PROJECTS & DAF YOMI COMMISSION Rabbi Matisyahu Salomon speaking at 26th Nationwide Yom Iyun, Passaic, NJ 6 YEAR IN REVIEW HIGHLIGHTS • Distributed 15,000 Daf Yomi bookmark calendars as well as the Daf Plus Newsletters and Resource Directory to Lomdei HaDaf throughout the country • Published Daf Yomi Directory highlighting 39 Daf Yomi locations in the Catskills • Daf Yomi Publicity campaigns announcing the beginning of every Masechta were advertised in 5 languages • Worldwide Daf Yomi Siyumim were hosted by various Daf Yomi chaburos across the continent and broadcast in close to 100 communities at the conclusion of almost every Daf Yomi Masechta • 3,500 people participated in a series of Aseres Yimei Teshuva & Pre-Pesach Conference Calls • 27 communities across the United States, Canada and Mexico participated in a Nationwide Selichos Yom Iyun Broadcast • 1,400 women participated in a Summer of Torah, a 5 part series of inspirational lectures given in the Catskills • 50 Halacha Le'Maseh throughout the year Shiurim were organized • 36 Shiurim dedicated to promoting a deeper understanding of the Daf Yomi Sugya were organized • More than 250 participants traveled to Yerushalayim for the 14th Annual Yerushalayim Yarchei Kallah learning program and hundreds other joined in local Yarchei Kallah programs throughout the year • 200 Rabbonim from across the United States and Canada belong to the Agudath Israel Conference of Synagogue Rabbonim, participating in conference calls to discuss issues impacting the tzibur • More than 1,000 people participated in Shabbos of Chizuk Program in Atlanta, GA, Cincinnati, OH, and Miami, FL 7 YOUTH DIVISIONS PIRCHEI AGUDATH ISRAEL • Pirchei Agudas Yisroel provided after school programming for elementary aged yeshiva students in 100 branches across the United States and around the world • The Pirchei National Hasmodo program garnered tens of thousands of hours of voluntary learning during Yom Tov with close to 2,000 participants • The Pirchei Weekly is distributed to over 10,000 print readers and to thousands more worldwide via email • Over 900 boys participated in the Pirchei Kesser Mishnayos Program • Siyumei Mishnayos attracted 3,000 boys from over 15 cities across the United States and Canada • 50 boys completed a six year course of study, learning more than 4,000 mishnayos each in preparation of their Bar Mitzva • 125 Pirchei branches nationwide featured father/son learning programs, bein hazemanim trips, youth minyanim and local Pirchei centers • Pirchei provided development and program support to affiliates in Europe and Israel BNOS AGUDATH ISRAEL • The Bnos Shabbos Groups program, consisting of over 200 advisors, 1,000 leaders and 5,000 members, brought elementary school girls together with Bais Yaakov role models for an oneg Shabbos each week • Bnos hosted leadership training and appreciation events for 300 branch and group leaders from 38 cities in the United States and Canada Pirchei Agudas Yisroel Bar Mitzva Siyum 8 YEAR IN REVIEW 51st Annual Pirchei Siyum Mishnayos Camp Agudah New York National Bnos Agudas Yisroel Leadership Convention BNOS ONE-ON-ONE AGUDATH ISRAEL SUMMER CAMPS • Bnos One on One paired 800 big and little sisters from communities across the United States Camps Agudah, Machane Ephraim, Bnos, Bnoseinu, Chayl Miriam, and Agudah Toronto • Bnos One on One hosted 16 professional training and appreciation events for big sisters • The East Coast network of Agudath Israel of America camps accommodated capacity crowds this past summer, serving over 2,500 campers • Bnos One on One continued its national development efforts, expanding its program to Toronto and Miami in addition to Baltimore, Brooklyn, Five Towns, Lakewood, Los Angeles and Monsey BNOS BIKUR CHOLIM • Participants of the Bnos Bikur Cholim program prepared and delivered 3,000 mishloach manos packages to nursing home residents MIDWEST SUMMER CAMPS Agudah Midwest Boys / Girls, Bnos Ma’arava, SPARK for Teens, Pirchei Day Camp, B’nos Day Camp, Munchkins Day Camp, and Camp Nageela Midwest • The Agudah Midwest network of camps served close to 2,000 campers 9 ADVOCACY AGUDATH ISRAEL’S GOVERNMENT AFFAIRS DEPARTMENT SCHOOL CHOICE: ◆ LEGISLATIVE BREAKTHROUGHS • $22 million generated this year through school voucher and scholarship tax credit programs supported by Agudath Israel in AZ, FL, GA, IN, OH, PA, RI, WI, and VA • Led statehouse missions and participated in rallies in Albany, NY, Annapolis, MD, Atlanta, GA, Harrisburg, PA, Indianapolis, IN, Nashville, TN, Springfield, IL, and Tallahassee, FL • Florida: Together with a coalition successfully advocated for an expansion of the Florida scholarship tax credit program which: ◆ ◆ 10 eliminated the “prior-year public school attendance” requirement expanded the program to middle-income families YEAR IN REVIEW ◆ Agudath Israel of Illinois Annual Mission to Springfield, IL increased the value of each individual scholarship created an education savings account program for students with disabilities • Ohio: Successfully lobbied to allow high school students to receive a voucher if they are assigned to a public school with low graduation rates. Estimated net impact on Jewish day school families is more than $1 million annually starting in 2016-2017. • Several areas in Cleveland Heights and University Heights became eligible to receive tuition vouchers. This will likely generate an additional $500,000 in scholarship funding per year for Cleveland families choosing Jewish day schools for the 2015-2016 school year. SCHOOL CHOICE: IN THE NEWS • Published letters to the editor and op-eds on the topic of school choice in the Columbus Dispatch, Memphis Hebrew Watchman, Hamodia, Ohio Gadfly and other publications • Israel: Agudath Israel of California successfully lobbied the University of California to prohibit their institutions from participating in the academic boycott of Israel • Agudath Israel of Maryland was involved in a similar, successful effort RELIGIOUS FREEDOM: AUTOPSY • California: Successfully intervened to amend a bill to protect the religious rights of those opposed to unnecessary autopsy • Maryland: Agudath Israel’s Maryland Director was officially named the Liaison/Chaplain of Maryland’s Office of the Chief Medical Examiner. Developed protocols with the medical examiner and prevented numerous autopsies. RELIGIOUS FREEDOM: IN THE COURTS • Joined Nefesh, an international association of Orthodox Jewish mental health professionals, in an amicus curiae brief challenging a New Jersey law that prohibits therapists from using “gender orientation change efforts” with minors • Following a lawsuit filed by Agudath Israel and others, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit issued a unanimous decision to overturn a lower court’s ruling on New York City’s regulation on metzitzah b’peh have significant repercussions for Orthodox Jews involved in cases before rabbinical courts. New York State Supreme Court justices will decide the application of an old statute prohibiting judicial proceedings on Sundays. RELIGIOUS FREEDOM: IN THE LEGISLATURE • Ohio: Testified in support of the Ohio Religious Freedom Restoration Act and participated in several interested party meetings on the topic • Pennsylvania: Worked to change a bill in Harrisburg that attempted to significantly amend the state’s anatomical gift laws RELIGIOUS FREEDOM: EDUCATION • Worked together with the Jewish Education Project to have the New York State Education Department change the date of the new Algebra Regents from Shavuos to Erev Shavuos • Successfully reached out to the College Board to request a second alternate date for the October 2014 PSAT (the non-Shabbos alternate date they originally provided fell out on Hoshana Rabba) END-OF-LIFE • Ohio: Worked to modify MOLST (Medical Orders for Life Sustaining Treatment) legislation to maintain the strength of health care power of attorney forms, such as the Halachic Living Will, and to protect a patient’s desire to be treated in accordance with his or her religious beliefs • New Jersey: Worked to prevent the passage of a physician-assisted suicide bill • Filed an amicus curiae brief in a case that could 11 SPECIAL EDUCATION: • New York: Played a key role in a major breakthrough for parents of students with special needs. The City of New York pledged to: ◆ ◆ ◆ Expedite parents’ private school tuition reimbursement Refrain from re-litigating settled cases unless there is a change in the child’s IEP Limit parents’ obligation to present full documentation of their child’s case to only once every three years. • Following the intervention of Agudath Israel, NYC private schools can now offer special education services when public schools are not in session, such as legal holidays or before public schools begin, as long as they follow a 180-day school calendar • Through lobbying, Agudath Israel enabled special needs students in New York to have 15 Special Education Teacher Support Services (SETSS/P3) sessions per week allowing children with severe disabilities the opportunity to remain in mainstream classrooms • California: Conducted a series of meetings with the Los Angeles Unified School District to develop a special education program for yeshiva students in the Los Angeles area NONPUBLIC SCHOOL ADVOCACY: • Agudath Israel of Illinois successfully launched a school lunch program in Chicago • Maryland: Initiated a task force to ensure state- funded construction grants for nonpublic schools were crafted in a manner of greatest benefit to eligible schools 12 YEAR IN REVIEW • $1 million in text book and construction grants were allocated to Jewish day schools NONPUBLIC SCHOOL ADVOCACY: TRANSPORTATION • Illinois: Secured $1.6 million busing grant • Maryland: Worked with the Maryland Transit Administration to expand a service that accommodates Baltimore Jewish day school students • Together with a group of nonpublic school leaders and Montgomery County Officials initiated a new pilot program to provide yellow school busing to several Silver Spring-area day schools at a subsidized rate NONPUBLIC SCHOOL ADVOCACY: TEXTBOOKS, NURSING, OTHER SERVICES • The 2014-15 New Jersey state budget added nearly $5 million in funding for nonpublic schools, with $2.4 million allocated for technology initiatives and $2.5 million earmarked for nursing services. Both increases were supported by Agudath Israel. • Crisis in New Jersey: During the funding crisis in Lakewood, Agudath Israel’s New Jersey director, met repeatedly with local and state officials to resolve the issues of withheld funding for remedial services, textbooks, and nurses in private schools, affecting over 25,000 students. • Ohio: Approximately $70 per student in additional auxiliary services funds will be available, thanks to legislative action that repealed a clause slipped into a bill the previous year. • Successfully lobbied to exempt nonpublic schools from onerous graduation requirements and to block a state-mandated “third grade reading guarantee,” together with coalition partners. Senate President Keith Faber appointed Rabbi Yitz Frank, Agudath Israel’s Ohio director, to the Nonpublic Schools Graduation Requirements Committee. GOVERNMENT: • UPK: Participated in intense negotiations with the staff of Mayor Bill de Blasio regarding his plan to provide Universal Pre-K (UPK) opportunities for tens of thousands of additional four year old children. These negotiations resulted in the Mayor’s office issuing guidelines for the full-day UPK program which allowed some yeshivos to participate. Further urging resulted in the Mayor’s office issuing an RFP for half-day programming. SECURITY INITIATIVE: • Agudah leadership met with statewide and local candidates in numerous states • Launched strong voter registration drives and successful “get out the vote” efforts in Maryland, Ohio, and Illinois • Agudath Israel worked together with Assemblyman Dov Hikind, to initiate and administer the Leiby Kletzky Security Initiative Grant. 80 four-directional security cameras were installed throughout Boro Park and Midwood to deter criminal acts and aid in apprehending criminals. Providence Hebrew Day School students perform at Rhode Island Statehouse during National School Choice Week ADVOCACY 13 ADVOCACY Senator Cory Booker (D- NJ) greeting Rabbi Avi Schnall, NJ Director on a visit to Lakewood NJ Rabbi Abba Cohen addressing Agudath Israel Washington Delegation Agudath Israel Albany Mission with NY State Senator Dean Skelos WASHINGTON: INTERNATIONAL • Explained Israel’s security needs during its action in Gaza and advocated for supplemental Iron Dome funding • Expressed concern and the need to enhance Capitol Hill awareness regarding the surge of global anti- Semitism • Clarified the implications of restrictions on circumcision and kosher slaughter for European Jewry • Boosted protection of Jewish cemeteries abroad against desecration • Advocated for the security and rights of Jewish schools in the Former Soviet Union 14 YEAR IN REVIEW WASHINGTON: NATIONAL be forced to provide benefits that violate their beliefs • Lobbied for the inclusion of, and easy access to, religious child care and pre-K providers • Opposed efforts to weaken the RFRA law and the strong religious protections it provides • Lobbied to strengthen the federal nonprofit security, school safety, disaster relief and emergency preparedness programs for synagogues, schools and community centers • Offered solutions on how to strengthen the federal “comp time for religious observance” law • Lobbied for maintaining a robust “charitable deduction” and other education-related tax benefits • Lobbied for the protection of Title I remedial education program to prevent actions that would block the equitable participation of nonpublic schools WASHINGTON: RELIGIOUS FREEDOM • Lobbied the Administration and Congress to protect religious organizations’ right to hire in conformance with their religious mission and not • Worked to develop and disseminate official procedures for the entry and handling of lulavim, esrogim and matzoh • Advocated for greater religious accommodation in the military in regard to kosher food and religiously-appropriate grooming and attire • Met with Department of Education to ensure that the federal school lunch program accommodates kashrus requirements and that federally-assisted food pantries will have greater access to kosher foods • Advocated for health and safety procedures for the appropriate processing of poultry after kapporos, thus making available thousands of chickens to charitable institutions 15 ANNUAL EVENTS Novominsker Rebbe speaking at Agudath Israel Midwest Convention Rabbi Yitzchok Zilberstein giving shiur at 14th Annual Yarchei Kallah Legislative Round Table 16 YEAR IN REVIEW Agudath Israel Regional Directors Meeting at 92nd Annual Convention Atzeres Tefila with 50,000 Participants Israeli Shmittah observing Farmer speaking at keynote session at 92nd Annual Convention Emergency Washington Mission Combatting Anti-semitism 17 SOCIAL AND COMMUNITY SERVICES Community Services Board of Directors Meeting COMMUNITY SERVICES • Through its relationship with United Way, Agudath Israel brought in more than $60,000 of funding to Tomchei Shabbos programs this year and over $2 million since its inception, providing weekly food packages to needy individuals in Borough Park, Flatbush, Queens, and Far Rockaway SOCIAL SERVICES • COPE Institute’s Junior Accounting Program, recommended for 21 credits by the American Council on Education and Thomas Edison State College, enrolled 155 students (nearly 2,000 since inception) 18 YEAR IN REVIEW • COPE’s CPA Track Program culminates in a Bachelor’s of Science degree, enabling graduates to sit for the CPA exam. More than 100 students were enrolled this year • Over 85% of COPE graduates find jobs • Initiated VITA program in partnership with the IRS which offers free federal and state income tax return preparation for low- to moderateincome individuals and families • Professional Career Services (PCS), with offices in New York and New Jersey, matched many job seekers with employers • Southern Brooklyn Community Organization (SBCO) and the Ocean Parkway Community Development Corporation (OPCD) helped provide affordable housing to low and moderate income families, the elderly and disabled in Borough Park and Kensington. 300 average served per year • SBCO commenced construction on the Culver Affordable Housing Project located on 37th Street, between 12th & 13th Avenue • Fresh Start Training Program provided computer and job readiness workshops and support for women facing financial responsibilities due to family crises found themselves faced with new financial responsibilities • Customized job skills training include computer skills in typing, Word and Excel, and Home Care training • Senior Citizen Centers in Borough Park, Flatbush and Washington Heights offered hundreds of elderly senior citizens free kosher hot lunches daily as well as a wide range of social services • Adult Education and Literacy Services provided assistance to over 350 immigrants per year, bringing them to employment level through instruction in language, reading and writing • Agudist Benevolent Society provided bereavement and burial services to members throughout the country • Overseas Passover Campaign helped provide matzoh, wine and other Passover food items to thousands of Jewish families in Eastern Europe CHAYIM ARUCHIM • The Center for Culturally Sensitive Advocacy and Counseling assists those facing difficult challenges in the health care system, specifically in end-of-life situations • Launched a 24 Hour hotline resulting in a significant increase in calls • Between June 2014 and November 2014, over 400 families called Chayim Aruchim for assistance • Received 84 calls regarding DNR (Do Not Resuscitate) and DNI (Do Not Intubate), 64 calls from individuals in need of assistance navigating negotiations with hospitals, 28 calls regarding the do’s and don’ts of inserting a peg and dozens of calls related to brain-death, dialysis, hospice, IV hydration, medication, pain medication, pressers, surgical procedures, etc. • Launched a discharge service in October 2014 to help hospital patients find appropriate rehabilitation facilities upon discharge • Over 40 Rabbonim in the Midwest participated in a three part video conference series addressing important medical halachic issues ZICHRON KEDOSHIM • This year, Zichron Kedoshim retrieved over 25,000 names from Pages of Testimony, school projects, shul plaques, archival documents and books LEGAL SERVICES DEPARTMENT • Agudath Israel’s Legal Support Services LLC is a network of 200 lawyers who volunteer their time and skills to assist in cases that meet the organization’s criteria. These include custody battles between spouses of different levels of religious observance, immigration-related problems, Shabbos and Yom Tov observance issues, and zoning issues affecting yeshivos and shuls. • Helped finalize the regulations for the New York State Tuition Assistance Program to enable yeshiva gedolah students to benefit from the program which provides up to $5,000 in yearly scholarship assistance to needy students. 19 SOCIAL AND COMMUNITY SERVICES • Helped numerous students receive accommodation for their religious needs 20 CONSTITUENT SERVICES DEPARTMENT • Helped numerous employees threatened with the loss of their jobs due to absence for religious reasons • Responded to approximately 800 calls a month, providing callers with referrals, information, or direct assistance tailored to their concerns • Helped numerous patients in hospitals receive appropriate medical treatment and end of life care in accordance with halacha • Provided free legal assistance to employees or students experiencing religious discrimination at work or at school • Successfully lobbied the New York State Legislature to amend the Palliative Care Act to require that treatment options as well as palliative care options be presented to terminally ill patients and their families • Helped clients obtain kosher food in the hospital and arranged shofar blowing for the homebound YEAR IN REVIEW • Represented clients with religious observance issues in housing areas (such as automatic electric lights in public spaces on Shabbos) • Referred clients to organizations providing business counseling, interest free loans, financial assistance and physician referrals • Advised yeshivas/shuls on parsonage, incorporation, tax and zoning issues • Referred clients to lawyers on a wide variety of issues • Assisted clients in applying for government benefits programs including Medicaid, Medicare, Social Security, SSI, food stamps, and acquiring birth certificates • Assisted with end of life issues, provided information on hospice care, DNR’s, and free Halachic burials for the indigent and disseminated Halachic Medical Directives to individuals, chaplains, and rabbis • Provided assistance in applying for financial emergency aid to prevent eviction • Offered employment assistance including a free resume writing service, referrals to GED and professional training courses, and referrals to Professional Career Services and other organizations which help people find employment • Provided free legal assistance to help constituents preserve the life of critically ill loved ones when hospitals wanted to stop treatment or withdraw life support • Provided free legal assistance to help constituents prevent the cremation of a loved one Annual Legislative Breakfast 21 YESHIVA SERVICES DEPARTMENT OF SPECIAL AFFAIRS /PROJECT LEARN EDUCATION • Over the past several years, Project Learn has worked with New York City to change the approval procedure for special education tuition reimbursements, bringing in hundreds of thousands of dollars for financially burdened families and easing the overall process for parents YESHIVA SERVICES DIVISION • Hosted webinars for 125 yeshiva principals and administrators across the country dealing with the Affordable Care Act and how it relates to yeshivos as employers • Helped parents navigate the Committee on Special Education (CSE) process in order to get the placement or services their children need to succeed • Hosted a Back-to-School webinar for 75 principals and administrators from across New York State which included new immunization reporting requirements, changes in the Federal E-Rate program (which provides reimbursement to schools and libraries for phone and internet related expenses), and the Common Core Curriculum and Assessments • Director of Project LEARN, served as expediter of the certification process for New York State service providers working in nonpublic schools. • Held two workshops on the Federal E-Rate Program, one for beginners and one for more experienced school administrators • Director of Project LEARN was appointed CoChair of the New York City Nonpublic School Subcommittee for Special Education. • Hosted annual New Schools Workshop for all newly opened yeshivos and newly hired yeshiva administrators and principals New York State Bus Grant 22 YEAR IN REVIEW Torah Day School of Atlanta students meet with Senator Jason Carter at the Statehouse • Disseminated 80 communications to yeshivos throughout the country informing schools about funding opportunities, legal obligations and other important information • Helped facilitate yeshiva participation in a brand new New York State Security Equipment Grant program which allocates $9.70 per enrolled child for security enhancements to enhance safety in schools. Yeshivos across the state were eligible to receive $1.5 million in funding under this new program. • Yeshivos in New York State received close to $40 million in mandated services and CAP funding and approximately $12.4 million in textbook aid, library materials aid, software aid and computer hardware aid funds • Helped increase the number of participating yeshivos in the city from 30 to 130 • In other funding streams, New York City yeshivos received: ◆ ◆ ◆ ◆ more than $2 million in Title I professional development approximately $1.3 million in Title IIA professional development approximately $5.2 million in Title III funds to provide services to Limited English Proficient students and their teachers more than $21 million to schools for late afternoon bus service • Continued long-standing efforts to increase the participation of yeshivos in New York City in the Federal Title I Program. This program allows nonpublic school students to receive supplemental educational services in literacy, mathematics and English as a second language. 23 COMMUNICATIONS DEPARTMENT THE PUBLIC AFFAIRS DEPARTMENT • conveys the views of Torah Jewry to government, legislatures, and the world at large • Fielded hundreds of phone calls from media outlets worldwide conveying the authentic Torah view on important contemporary issues • Worked to create an accurate and positive portrayal of Agudath Israel in the media and the community at large through hundreds of press releases, statements and articles about the work of Agudath Israel • Published the Weekly Window, an email newsletter reaching more than ten thousand people that reported the activities of the Government Affairs department throughout the country • Sponsored the National Orthodox Jewish Archives, a unique repository of historical documents, publications and photographs relating to the growth of Orthodox Jewry in the United States and the history of Agudath Israel on an international scope Yourconvention.org Rabbi Avi Shafran speaking at Convention session on the public image of the Orthodox Jew 24 YEAR IN REVIEW Get out the vote campaign Dr. Aviva Biberfeld addressing women at 92nd Annual Convention N’SHEI AGUDAS YISROEL • Several thousand women attended classes and shiurim in the New York Metropolitan Area with many more in other areas • N’shei C.A.R.E.S. assisted women at Maimonides Medical Center with 130 doula and post-partum volunteers • Keren Yesomim, Hachnossas Kallah and Nizkakim Vecholim funds helped over 400 families this year • Launched HaSeviva program to provide support for frum women in the business and professional world • The Miriam Borchardt Camp Scholarship Fund awarded stipends to many families enabling children to attend a frum camp of their choice Summer of Torah Lecture Series in Catskill Mountains AGUDAH WOMEN OF AMERICA 25 RESOURCE DIRECTORY NATIONAL RESOURCE DIRECTORY AGUDATH ISRAEL OF AMERICA 212-797-9000 REGIONAL OFFICES: Office of State Relations 513-530-1364 Arizona 480-467-4593 California 310-659-8152 Florida 305-532-2500 Illinois 773-279-8400 Maryland/ Mid Atlantic 410-484-3632 New England 617-566-4420 New Jersey 732-415-6380 Ohio 216-455-1111 Texas 972-404-8980 Washington 202-835-0414 Ontario 416-256-3890 Quebec 514-699-4881 United Kingdom Global Relief and Rescue 011-44-796-647-6694 ext. 251 TORAH EDUCATION PROGRAMS Conference of Synagogue Rabbonim ext. 270 Daf Yomi Commission ext. 266 Torah Projects Commission ext. 267 Midwest Conference of Synagogue Rabbonim 773-279-8400 YOUTH SERVICES Bnos Agudath Israel ext. 275 Pirchei Agudath Israel ext. 274 Zeirei Agudath Israel ext. 272 CAMPS Camps Agudah, Machane Ephraim, Bnos, Bnoseinu and Chayl Miriam 212-797-8172 26 YEAR IN REVIEW Camp Agudah Toronto 416-781-7101 Camp Agudah Midwest Boys / Girls, Bnos Ma’arava, SPARK for Teens, Pirchei Day Camp, B’nos Day Camp, Munchkins Day Camp 773-279-8400 Camp Nageela Midwest 773-604-4400 COMMUNICATION Office of Communication ext. 311 Office of Public Affairs ext. 229 Orthodox Jewish Archives ext. 384 YESHIVA SERVICES 212-797-7386 Education Affairs ext. 326 Special Education Affairs CONSTITUENT SERVICES Agudah Women 212-363-8940 Agudist Benevolent Society 718-436-1458 Chayim Aruchim 347-633-0487 Chevra Oseh Chesed ext. 274 Community Services ext. 321 Constituent & Legal Services ext. 335 Simchas Chava ext. 251 Zichron Kedoshim ext. 217 SENIOR CITIZEN CENTERS Borough Park Senior Citizen Center 718-854-7430 Brookdale Senior Citizen Center of Flatbush 718-434-8670 Moriah Older Adult Luncheon Club 212-923-5715 SOCIAL AND COMMUNITY SERVICES COPE Employment and Training 212-809-5935 ext. 301 718-506-0500 COPE Institute and COPE Education Services 718-506-0500 ext. 219 Fresh Start Training Program Professional Career Services (PCS) PCS-New York 718-436-1900 PCS-New Jersey 732-367-4178 Southern Brooklyn Community Organization (SBCO) 718-435-1300 *Extensions correspond to the main line 212-797-9000 27 TABLE OF CONTENTS THE RABBI MOSHE SHERER NATIONAL HEADQUARTERS 42 Broadway New York, NY 10004