e I tt _ .. . Bayla and Rabbi J at Young Israel of Oak Park The Jewish Way Relocated Machon L'Torah still seeks to quench student spiritual thirst. Robert Sklar I Contributing Editor is roots run deep into the soul of Jewish Detroit as a fundamental source of learning about the wisdom and joy of Torah, no matter what your level of religious observance. Over a momentous 30-year period, _ Bayla and Rabbi Avraham Jacobovitz built Machon L'Torah from scratch in Oak Park with seed money donated by a Holocaust survivor. Machon L'Torah, Hebrew for "Foundation for the Torah;' is now a trans-Atlantic Jewish learning network. It has been based in Israel since mid-2010, when the Jacobovitzes relocated. A Tel Aviv native, he is Machon's international direc- tor. A Brooklyn native, Bayla not only runs the Goldie Wrotslaysky Women's Division, but also is one of its essential teachers. The couple returned to Young Israel of Oak Park for Machon's annual dinner and Chinese auction. The synagogue is across 10 Mile from where Machon's Jewish Learning Network of Michigan house once stood. About 150 people paid $180 per couple or more on Feb. 12 to hear the rabbi's mes- sage about the nonprofit's new frontiers. "Machon has changed in many ways in the past two years, but we've kept what unites us — our commitment to and love for Torah:' Rabbi J, as he's affectionately known, told guests. 14 February 23 • 2012 This year's dinner theme was "Kindness & Faith:' Rabbi J's core point: Jews who believe God loves them should tell God that through Torah-inspired values and action — demonstrating how much God and the Jewish people are entangled by Torah's "eternal pages:' Campus Thrust , The Jacobovitzes were in the U.S. primar- ily to visit campuses with Machon out- reach branches, including Rutgers and the University of Washington. In his Feb. 12 dvar Torah, Rabbi J yearned for compelling follow-up so all Jewish students — from the unaffiliated to the religiously observant — could tap into spiritual nourishment while fighting anti-Semitism and Jewish indifference on American campuses. With so many draws in the secular world, Rabbi J said, many Jewish stu- dents wrestle with religious identity and heritage. His focus harkened to his oft- expressed view that "college campuses could be either the burial site of the Jewish future or the cornerstone for a very won- derful life and Jewish future' Whether students observe Shabbat or keep kosher isn't Rabbi J's paramount concern. Foremost, he wants to instill a love for being Jewish. For every Jewish student touched by Hillel or Chabad on campus, dozens of others thirst for spiri- tual quenching because they don't know what being Jewish means. They have no answers for why Israel matters. Some give in to Jews for Jesus or other Christian proselytizers. Rabbi J is Orthodox and teaches Torah Judaism, but no Jewish student is turned away or forced to accept a predetermined takeaway. It's up to each student how to define "a good Jewish life' It's better, the rabbi believes, to have young adults dis- cover Judaism's relevance to them than be told they somehow are lesser Jews. Tension, however, has bubbled up. At times, less-observant parents have questioned Machon's wide welcome mat, including a small stipend to study, when their children found a more-observant pathway in Rabbi J's midst. Providing Answers Rabbi J spotlighted a new initiative that's galvanizing young Israeli rabbis with the knowledge and confidence to respond to young Jews for whom Judaism and Israel hardly resonate. He announced plans for a similar instructional program in America for Jewish educators and lay leaders. A signature Machon program is the Maimonides Jewish Leaders Fellowships, now independently active on more than 50 North American campuses. The MJLF enables Jewish students to embrace Judaism, get involved communally and develop leadership skill at their pace. It began in 2001 with 17 fellows at the Jewish Resource Center (JRC) at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. Its success exposed the need to serve the thousands of Maimonides fellows who went to Israel to be immersed in learning and Jewish life. Thus came Yeshivalite — Machon's burgeoning outreach opportunity. Machon's Jewish Awareness America, meanwhile, continues to speak to a broad- er range of Jewish young adults seeking a sturdier Jewish identity and Jewish pres- ence in their lives. Locally, Machon maintains a stream of Torah classes. It also provides individual and family counseling. Skype and telecon- ferencing have extended the organization's teaching reach. Rabbi J made a funding pitch for the Machon L'Torah Israel Educational Center he and Bayla envision near their home in Ramat Beit Shemesh Alef, about 45 min- utes from Jerusalem. The young adult cen- ter would house Yeshivalite, plus a more- intensive yeshivah experience as well as an accredited Jewish Studies Semester Abroad program, Shabbat enrichment, student-outreach training, and special seminars and retreats. Until that dream is realized, the Jacobovitzes open their home to young Jewish Detroiters studying in Israel and who want to observe Shabbat in a heimish setting. U - M Connection Jake Rothman, a University of Michigan junior, was a Maimonides participant last fall through the Ann Arbor JRC. Under Rabbi Fully Eisenberger, the 20-year-old economics major from Atlantic City "saw different perspectives and viewpoints of real-world issues affecting Jews today" Rothman especially liked "the in-depth lessons and lively discussions that were focused on Torah and the Talmud, which made both come alive." "Rabbi Fully," he added, "does an incred- ible job at teaching and motivating his students to become more involved and active in Jewish learning, while simultane- ously grooming us for our status as future leaders in our Jewish community" Rothman's top takeaway: "That Rabbi Fully and the others at the JRC enabled a group of students from diverse back- grounds and attitudes on their faith to unify into an enthusiastic group with a proud Jewish identity." 0 Jake Rothman at Israel's Western Wall during his sophomore year