w—v al LI F valw 'air; gr 0 At a g rc o, ig M Machon L'Torah is rolling out its highest honor for one of Detroit Jewry's most respected sages. SUSAN TAWIL Special to the Jewish News E e's a walking talmudic encyclopedia. " So says Rabbi Avraham Jacobovitz, direc- tor of Machon L'Torah, the Oak Park-based Jewish Learning Network of Michigan, about Rabbi Shmuel Irons. Rabbi Jacobovitz' friend and col- league, Rabbi Irons, is a Talmud chacham (Torah sage) and co-founder with Rabbi Moshe Schwab of the Kollel Institute of Greater Detroit, located in Oak Park. Rabbi Irons will receive the Crown of Torah award at Machon L'Torah's 20th anniversary banquet on Tuesday, June 27, at the Ramada Hotel in Southfield. Rabbi Scholarly pp Rabbi Irons, a "hidden treasure," earns Jewish Learning Network of Michigan's Crown of Torah. P ho to by B i ll Hansen Spirituality Jacobovitz calls Rabbi Irons "a central figure, in the com- munity who represents the growth of Torah." Rabbi Irons, who heads the Kollel Institute as Rosh Kollel, lectures throughout the community in both Orthodox and non-Orthodox venues. He recently spoke on hospice issues for the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit. Rabbi' Irons serves as halachic (Jewish law) adviser to Mikvah Israel in Oak Park and chairs the Yeshiva Beth Yehudah and Bais Yaakov Vaad HaChinuch (Education Council). "He's like a hidden treasure," says Rabbi Jacobovitz. "His breadth of knowledge is amazing. There's not more than a handful of people in America that come close to his level. And yet, he's very approachable." Family Ties Rabbi Irons, born in Los Angeles in 1946, attended Yeshivat Ner Yisroel in Baltimore, then continued his studies at the talmudic academy, Bais Medresh Gevoliah, in Lakewood, N.J. He lives in Oak Park, where he and his wife, Leah, have raised a family of seven sons and a daughter, ages 16-31. "Her dedication and self-sacrifice enabled me to become what I am," Rabbi Irons says appreciatively of his wife, a woman of intellect and insight in her own right. In 1974, together with Rabbi Schwab, Rabbi Irons recruited 10 rabbis to launch the Kollel Institute of Greater Detroit, America's first community kollel. Kollels, now found in many large Jewish communities throughout the world, are combination graduate schools Rabbi Shinuel Irons, co :founder of the Kollel Institute of Greater Detroit. for rabbis and community-based Torah centers. The rabbinic "fellows" learn among themselves (Talmud and other tracts of study) and give of their time to teach members of the community, either one- on-one (traditional Chavrusa style) or in classes. "It is a very high level of learning," says Rabbi Irons. The Kollel fellows are supported by stipends raised from within the Jewish community. They often go on to assume positions of religious leadership. Many of the rabbis who teach in Yeshiva Beth Yehudah/Bais Yaakov and Yeshivas Darchei Torah were fellows in Detroit's Kollel. In addition to Rabbi Jacobovitz, past Kollel fellows include Rabbi Beryl Broyde, head of the merkaz kashrut supervision at the Vaad Harabonim (Council of Orthodox Rabbis of Greater Detroit), and pulpit Rabbis Yoel Sperka of B'nai Israel, Eli Meyer Jundef of Ohel Moed, Elimelech Goldberg of Young Israel of Southfield and Eli Yelen of Yagdil Torahin Southfield. "The biggest accomplishment of the Kollel is to advance a heightened appreciation of the value of Torah within the community," Rabbi Irons says. "The chal- lenge is to bring more people in. Many more could avail themselves of what the Kollel has to offer." Approximately 100 community members learn at the Kollel each week. It is housed in a building undergoing expansion and renovation to accommodate a swelling population. "The Kollel is 100 percent community-funded by those who appreciate it," Rabbi Irons says. He notes that obtaining funds is "a constant struggle."