Tikvah Fund Institute for Women

It is a woman’s prerogative, they say, to change her mind. The same ought to hold for a women’s program. Happily, the Tikvah Fund, the group that is responsible for the most intellectually stimulating week of the year for me, is exercising that option. After first deciding to defer the special summer program for frum women this year, Tikvah changed its mind. There will indeed be a female counterpart to the now highly competitive men’s program this August, and registration is now open..

“Women, Men and the Future of Marriage in America” would be a great topic to double down on at any time; the recent Supreme Court decision makes it a front-burner topic for all thinking Jews. Like other Tikvah Fund programs for the observant community, the program allows treatment of this topic in a manner unachievable elsewhere. It brings together recognized Torah personalities, icons of the secular world with academic, legal, and media background, committed Torah Jews who can bridge the two worlds, and provides the venue and the time for the participants to pursue issue in depth.

The Torah faculty will be led by Miriam Kosman, a well-known author (including the acclaimed Circle, Arrow, Spiral: Exploring Gender in Judaism) and lecturer who is working towards her PhD from Bar Ilan in the humanities. (She is married to a rosh kollel well-known in the States for his particularly clear and quick Daf Yomi presentations, and is also the daughter of rabi u-mori R. Moshe Eisemann shlit”a of Ner Israel). Rav Dovid Cohen, shlit’a will offer a halachic perspective and entertain questions in the same way he does at AJOP, where his presentation is always one of the high points of the gathering.

On the secular side, a young man who many believe is the single most articulate scholarly presenter of a well-reasoned case for traditional marriage in the country will provide the arguments that are presentable to thinking Americans. I would love to be a fly on the wall as a bunch of be-sheitled and be-skirted young women listen in rapt attention to Sherif Girgis, an Egyptian Catholic.

There are more. You can read all about them, and learn how to apply on the website. Acceptance into the program (which covers all expenses plus a modest stipend) is competitive.

The Tikvah Fund Summer Institute for Women will take place in midtown Manhattan from August 23 through August 25.

Meanwhile, single men who are not afraid of gifted women are rejoicing at the Tikvah turnaround on the women’s program. Rather than have to date an abundance of candidates in the longer-term competition, they will allow Tikvah to do the sorting, and leave them with an identifiable group of the brighest, most curious and engaged (not THAT kind of engaged) women to move to the top of their shidduch lists. (Full disclosure: despite the wishes of said single men, the Tikvah Institute for Women actually will accept frum married women as well.)

And speaking of men, process of selecting participants in the men’s program from August 9-16 is now complete. The lucky participants survived the application process, interview, and two rounds of cuts. The survivors are a great bunch, and hail from all over the yeshiva world landscape: Brisk(s), Mir, BMG, and RIETS.

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11 Responses

  1. Rachel says:

    Yes!!! Thank you!!! Starting my application right now 🙂

  2. anonymous says:

    Oh well, too old. And since I didn’t win the Publishers Clearning House I can’t offer to sponsor transcription.
    Very impressive and hatzlacha!

  3. S.W. says:

    Meanwhile, single men who are not afraid of gifted women are rejoicing at the Tikvah turnaround on the women’s program. Rather than have to date an abundance of candidates in the longer-term competition, they will allow Tikvah to do the sorting, and leave them with an identifiable group of the brighest, most curious and engaged (not THAT kind of engaged) women to move to the top of their shidduch lists. (Full disclosure: despite the wishes of said single men, the Tikvah Institute for Women actually will accept frum married women as well.)

    Is it really necessary to define intelligent women in terms of their marriageability? I am curious to see if the program will address that

  4. A yid says:

    Speaking for the unmarried men. YES. Gold is defined in monetary terms as well.

    Take it as a complement.

  5. Reb Yid says:

    To follow up on S.W.’s point:

    Interesting that the women’s program features both men and women to learn from, while the men’s program features only males. Is it really so offensive for men to learn from knowledgeable female presenters?

    [YA – Not offensive at all, although sometimes a violation of the mechitzos we place between men and women to maintain communal kedushah (See first Rashi in Kedoshim) That said, mechitzos are not absolutes. Where there is justification – where a woman presenter would do a better job – many of us would have no problem. I can’t speak for Tikvah (I’m hired for the project, but I’m not a regular staff member), but from the considerable amount that I have seen, they pick the best people for the job, the latter being defined by their mission statement. If the men’s program were somehow to include a segment on the Ramchal and his times, I think they would jump to hire Prof. Elisheva Carlebach – and I would be sitting in the front row. If the program would include a focus on the synthesis of postmodern literary criticism and the approach of Chazal, I believe they would recruit Yael Ziegler in a heartbeat. ]

  6. mb says:

    Are these gender specific programmes still legal?

    [YA – WE struck a deal with the Feds. They leave us alone, and we come out in support of SSM. (We now – at least some of us – support unions previously frowned upon in some of the community. From here on in, we are behind SSM: Same Shtreimel Marriage. Belz, Vishnitz, Zalmanies and Aharonies. It’s all legal and supported by the Constitution.]

  7. Leslie Ginsparg Klein says:

    A yid, I think what S.W. was trying to point out is that if the article had been about the men’s Tikve program, there would not have been a paragraph on how Tikve was doing single women a favor by identifying which be-pantsed and be-yamulked young men would make good husbands.

    But I do appreciate Rabbi Adlerstein’s attempt to present a woman’s intelligence and accomplishment as advantageous. Too often, in the shidduch world, those qualities are viewed as a negative.

  8. tzippi says:

    Your version of SSM may be legal but really, during the three weeks must we contribute to further polarization? Cancel my subscription.
    ( ;-D)

  9. Bob Miller says:

    This type of seminar could benefit from the participation of Jewish journalists/authors such as Melanie Phillips and Caroline Glick.

    [YA – Excellent suggestions]

  10. Bob Miller says:

    I don’t think you want two people wearing shtreimlach to marry each other.

    [YA – Watch what you say. After the SCOTUS decision, you could conceivably get prosecuted for saying that.]

  11. A yid says:

    Dr. Klein

    Given how hard it is to ferret such information out of shidduch sources you don’t have to convince me!

    I submit, based on purely anecdotal evidence, that the Yeshiva system produces more boys with braidkiet than the bais yaakovs do girls.

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