Rachel Bernstein, Author at 黑料传送门 Tue, 03 Jan 2023 14:40:06 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 /wp-content/uploads/2022/11/cropped-favicon-32x32.png Rachel Bernstein, Author at 黑料传送门 32 32 220799709 Anne Frank tree takes root at University of Iowa /anne-frank-tree-takes-root-at-university-of-iowa/ Thu, 09 Jun 2022 00:00:00 +0000 /anne-frank-tree-takes-root-at-university-of-iowa/ A piece of Jewish history has been uprooted from Amsterdam and planted in Iowa City. One sapling grown from an old chestnut tree 鈥嬧嬧 which stood outside of the secret annex where Anne Frank wrote her famous diary 鈥 was planted at University of Iowa.

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Anne Frank tree takes root at University of Iowa

Author

Date

June 9, 2022

Three individuals dig a hole with large shovels

A piece of Jewish history with roots in Amsterdam has sprouted in Iowa City. 

One sapling grown from an old chestnut tree 鈥 which stood outside of the secret annex where Anne Frank wrote her famous diary 鈥 was planted this spring at University of Iowa.

The tree died at an estimated 170 years old. But through its saplings, which have been planted in 13 cities across the U.S., the tree is finding new life.

Originally scheduled for spring 2020, the planting was delayed because of the coronavirus pandemic and a fervent desire to host an in-person ceremony. 

More than 500 people gathered for the planting ceremony at the campus Pentacrest, recognized as the symbolic center of campus. 

鈥淚t was an incredibly moving experience to gather as one Hawkeye community the week of Yom HaShoah to watch the Anne Frank tree sapling being planted on the Pentacrest,鈥 said Ashley Holt, executive director of Iowa Hillel.

Kirsten Kumpf Baele, a Holocaust scholar and faculty member at University of Iowa, secured this honor with a proposal to the Anne Frank Center for Mutual Respect鈥檚 Sapling Project. 

During the sapling ceremony, Kumpf Baele shared a little-known detail: Anne Frank began her legacy in the state of Iowa as part of a pen pal exchange on April 29th, 1940. She wrote a letter to Juanita and Betty Wagner of Danville, Iowa. 

鈥淭his is the first and only letter she would send. Eleven days later, the German army invaded the Netherlands,鈥 Kumpf Baele said. 鈥淎nne Frank may not have been able to develop this Iowa connection any further, but by way of our collective caring of and attentiveness to this sapling, each one of us can help grow awareness of her story.鈥

The sapling was an opportunity to honor Anne Frank, an aspiring writer, in a place that has been teaching people to write for decades. 

A UNESCO designated 鈥淐ity of Literature,鈥 Iowa City has been touted as an international haven for lovers of the written word. University of Iowa, with top-ranked programs in creative writing and nonfiction writing, has created a vibrant writing culture in a small city in middle America. 

Leading up to the ceremony, University of Iowa organized a three-part discussion series on 鈥淭he Diary of Anne Frank鈥 at the Iowa City Public Library. Josh Hare, who serves as program director at Iowa Hillel, led the second session exploring Judaism and Anne Frank. 

As a result of the planting, there have been hold lists at multiple libraries in the region for the 鈥淒iary of Anne Frank.鈥 Some local bookstores had to order extra copies.

鈥淲hen we talk about the 鈥楧iary of Anne Frank,鈥 there鈥檚 usually this somberness, this rain cloud that enters the conversation,鈥 Hare said. 鈥淲hile there is sadness, we can also be guided by the positive themes of her story. And that brings people closer together.鈥 

Hare became a member of the sapling project committee when he arrived on campus in June 2021. He rallied a team of Hillel students to help organize programs before and after the ceremony.

Sophomore Sami Simon, 20, was one of them.

鈥淕rowing up, Anne Frank was one of the first associations I had when learning about the Holocaust,鈥 said Simon, an education studies and human relations major. 鈥淓specially as a Jewish student, it鈥檚 meaningful to be rooted to Anne Frank here on campus.鈥

The evening of the planting ceremony, students and community members gathered at Iowa Hillel to celebrate Shabbat. Hare and Rabbi Esther Hugenholtz, who leads Agudas Achim Congregation in Coralville, Iowa, led a song-filled service. 

Ashley Holt said, 鈥淎lthough Yom HaShoah acknowledges a horrific time in the history of the Jewish people, the day’s events brought hope and a sense of belonging to the students who felt like their Jewish identity was being celebrated, not just by the Jewish community but the whole Hawkeye community.鈥

Rachel Bernstein is a senior at University of Southern California.
Photo credit: Tim Schoon

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Hillel seniors sign off with reflections on college experience /hillel-seniors-sign-off-with-reflections-on-college-experience/ Thu, 19 May 2022 00:00:00 +0000 /hillel-seniors-sign-off-with-reflections-on-college-experience/ Hillel seniors are preparing to cross the graduation stage this summer. Meet the soon-to-be college graduates who say the Hillel effect lasts long after they leave campus.

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Hillel seniors sign off with reflections on college experience

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, and

Date

May 19, 2022

Cap, gown, tassel 鈥 check.

Hillel seniors are preparing to cross the graduation stage this summer. Meet the soon-to-be college graduates who say the Hillel effect lasts long after they leave campus.

Alanna Margulies, Johns Hopkins University, Class of 2022

Hopkins Hillel encouraged me to explore my Judaism beyond celebrating holidays and keeping kashrut. I became part of the Modern Orthodox community, and little by little, I began observing Shabbat. I turned off my phone, powered down my laptop, and spent time with my friends. I chose to live an observant Jewish lifestyle, but that didn鈥檛 mean I had to give up the things I loved. I still celebrated Shabbat with all of my friends from different denominations, and I still participated in college activities that were important to me before and are still important to me now.聽

I knew I wanted to make a difference on campus, and that鈥檚 why I began participating in leadership roles. I鈥檝e been an intern for the Orthodox Union鈥檚 Jewish Learning Initiative on Campus (OU-JLIC), president of the Israel Middle East Forum, and social and marketing chair for the Hillel student board. In these positions, I learned how to create community by planning events, like 鈥楾he Great Latke vs. Hamentashen Debate,鈥 where I recruited professors and worked collaboratively with other members of the Hillel community. Most recently, I was Hopkins Hillel’s student board president, where I was able to become more confident as a leader and continue using my voice. As a leader, I鈥檝e learned how to make ideas come to life, and that鈥檚 what鈥檚 truly meaningful to me. 

As I prepare to graduate, I鈥檓 thinking about my Jewish future. I鈥檒l need to be much more intentional about the communities and activities I鈥檓 a part of because I won鈥檛 have the structural support of Hillel anymore. I鈥檝e definitely grown a lot as a Jewish young adult, and it鈥檚 become something that鈥檚 personally meaningful to me. As I move into adulthood, I鈥檒l need to build my own community around me, and in many ways, I want to emulate what we have 黑料传送门.鈥

Harrison Rosengard, Brandeis University, Class of 2022

鈥淢y first day on campus, I saw someone wearing a Brandeis Hillel聽shirt and pulled him aside to learn more. He took me to services that Friday, and that encouraged me to go every week. From there, my involvement with Hillel continued to grow. I signed up for the Jewish Learning Fellowship, a seminar to help students deepen their Jewish understanding. That was my first experience with Jewish learning that wasn鈥檛 sitting in a classroom and reading prayers. From there, my passion grew.聽

Originally, I came to Brandeis thinking I would study science. Once I got to experience Brandeis Hillel, the community that is here, the other people my age who are excited to be Jewish, something just felt right. The community was so vibrant and lively that it made me go from Jew-ish to someone who keeps Shabbat, who keeps kosher, who wants to devote his life to a Jewish community. Now, I want to be a rabbi. I want to support people 鈥 spiritually, mentally, and emotionally.聽

I can’t think of an aspect of Hillel that wasn’t a meaningful role, a meaningful experience in some way, shape, or form. There is no other group of people who can match the energy, the spirit, the welcoming attitude, and the fun times that I’ve had here 黑料传送门. I’m going to infuse that same energy into my community when I become a rabbi. For my entire career, I want to do whatever I can to get close to that same level of passion and enthusiasm at Brandeis Hillel.鈥 

Lauren Milstein, University of Southern California, Class of 2022

鈥淏efore I was even accepted into USC, a close family friend gave me the most recent edition of the Hillel College Guide Magazine. One article, called 鈥楩reshfest,鈥 was about a USC Hillel聽retreat for incoming Jewish freshmen and transfers. Reading the article further solidified my goal to go to USC and my desire to be a part of the Jewish community on campus.聽

The following spring, I was accepted into USC, and that summer, I actually went to Freshfest. I experienced so many of the things described in that magazine article, like making s鈥檓ores and lifelong friends. The words from that story leapt off the page in real time. That inspired me to pay it forward as a freshman engagement fellow at Freshfest in 2019 and 2021. 

And when I wasn鈥檛 at Freshfest, I was still involved with USC Hillel. It always provided a place of lively conversations and snacks, as well as a wonderful way to connect with my Jewish heritage and identity, whether through Shabbat dinners, Passover seders, or networking events with Jewish alumni.鈥

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Brown/RISD Hillel Fosters Jewish Connection Through Pop-up Art Exhibition /brown-risd-hillel-fosters-jewish-connection-through-pop-up-art-exhibition/ Thu, 12 May 2022 00:00:00 +0000 /brown-risd-hillel-fosters-jewish-connection-through-pop-up-art-exhibition/ A pop-up art exhibit at Brown/RISD Hillel fostered connectivity between Jewish art lovers, and inspired more students to envision their work on the gallery walls. Motivated by the success, the Hillel has since organized two other art exhibits featuring depictions of Jewish spiritual objects created by more than 30 students.

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Brown/RISD Hillel Fosters Jewish Connection Through Pop-up Art Exhibition

Author

Date

May 12, 2022

Just before winter break, as many Brown/RISD Hillel students were packing their bags and saying goodbye to their friends, two sophomores were fretting about their artwork.

Campus art studios were closing for break, meaning Mira Goodman, 20, and Thalia Bonas, 19, would need to lug their seven large oil canvases off campus and through an airport. 

For Bonas and Goodman, both of whom are studying visual arts at Brown University, painting these canvases was part of an effort to make up for lost time. After months of pandemic isolation, the artists channeled their pent-up creativity into artwork last fall. 

Now, they had captivating paintings and nowhere to put them.

The students had a thought: Maybe Hillel could store their artwork. They reached out to Molly Goldmeier, the assistant director of Brown/RISD Hillel. 

鈥淲e said 鈥榃ow, this is an awesome opportunity for an exhibit,鈥 Goldmeier said. 鈥淪o our Hillel became a gallery.鈥

She said many students would never expect Hillel to transform into an art gallery. Beyond Shabbat dinners and holiday gatherings, Hillel can enrich Jewish life by elevating student passions, Goldmeier said.

鈥淲e鈥檙e always looking to add value to the student experience,鈥 Goldmeier said. 鈥淓ven if it is just as simple as storing art. We鈥檙e a very creative Hillel with a lot of spirit on our team.鈥

Brown/RISD Hillel opened the exhibit in early February. Over the next six weeks, Goodman and Bonas received texts from friends who visited the Hillel exhibit.聽

Bonas said working with Hillel to exhibit her art was an amazing experience. 

鈥淚t was so kind of them to offer to store and showcase my work,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 really appreciate all the help and effort they provided to help make it happen.” 

The artwork was diverse, ranging from depictions of Jewish celebrations to various romantic relationships. One of the paintings depicted a family seder. Multiple students said the grandfather depicted in the painting looked like their own grandfather.

鈥淗illel has consistently been a supportive environment for me as an artist,鈥 Goodman said. 鈥淪o for them to suggest creating a show out of my pieces showed how much they care about encouraging local artists like me to create and display work.鈥

The pop-up exhibit fostered connectivity between Jewish art lovers, and inspired more students to envision their work on the gallery walls. Motivated by the success, Brown/RISD Hillel organized two other art exhibits featuring depictions of Jewish spiritual objects created by more than 30 students.

Goldmeier is looking forward to more art-inspired events 黑料传送门, which she hopes will bring more Jewish students together.

She said, 鈥淎rtwork brings out emotion in people and touches everyone in a different way.鈥

Rachel Bernstein is a senior at University of Southern California.

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Hillels Give New Energy, Bring More Students to Shabbat /hillels-give-new-energy-bring-more-students-to-shabbat/ Tue, 19 Apr 2022 00:00:00 +0000 /hillels-give-new-energy-bring-more-students-to-shabbat/ Stretching from coast to coast, Hillels are reimagining Shabbat experiences to empower students to connect with Judaism and become Jewish leaders. Their creative efforts offer an alternative to traditional Shabbat services, which involve structured prayer in a synagogue.

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Hillels Give New Energy, Bring More Students to Shabbat

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Date

April 19, 2022

Hillels are on a mission: to reenergize Shabbat. 

Stretching from coast to coast, Hillels are reimagining Shabbat experiences to empower students to connect with Judaism and become Jewish leaders. Their creative efforts offer an alternative to traditional Shabbat services, which involve structured prayer in a synagogue.  

Dalilah Bernier, a 黑料传送门 Springboard Ezra Fellow at Hillel Milwaukee, said these innovative services deepen Jewish connectivity, as they offer new opportunities for students to learn more about each other and Jewish values.聽 聽

Shabbat is central to Judaism and Jewish life, she added. The consistency and variety of these weekly gatherings help students connect with each other.

鈥淭he motivation for students to create their own services stems from their desire to break from the ordinary prayer experiences they鈥檙e used to,鈥 Bernier said.

Oregon Hillel, where celebrating Shabbat outdoors is the norm, is one of those Hillels that is creating new and extraordinary Shabbat experiences.聽

The popular winter program, called Retreat in the Snow, brings about 80 students to Bend, Oregon for a weekend of skiing and Jewish learning. When the weather gets warmer, a smaller group of students head to the Pacific Coast for a weekend retreat, which includes a Shabbat service overlooking the ocean.

Hillel for Utah also organizes Shabbat experiences in the great outdoors.聽

The Snow and Desert Shabbaton, focusing on the connection between Judaism and Israel, is a favorite. Students have used microscopes to compare particles in the Great Salt Lake with Israeli water sources, including the Dead Sea and the Mediterranean Sea.

Other Shabbat experiences 黑料传送门 for Utah have included goat yoga and weekend hikes in the mountains.

Chlo茅 Laverson, an alumna of Hillel for Utah, said some of her favorite college memories were celebrating Shabbat 黑料传送门. Laverson, 22, served as president of Hillel for Utah prior to graduating last May. 

鈥淗illel for Utah Shabbatot are so inclusive and welcoming,鈥 said Laverson, who holds a degree in strategic communications from University of Utah. 鈥淚 always knew I had Shabbat night plans.鈥 

Towson University Hillel is also revamping Shabbat, empowering students to make services their own.聽

Leora Match, the program director at Towson Hillel, said students have updated the Hillel siddur, or prayer book, to make the language more accessible. 

鈥淭he assortment of prayer books we had were either hard to follow, had archaic English translations or lacked good transliteration,鈥 Match said. 鈥淲e needed a user-friendly siddur that would allow anyone, regardless of their Jewish upbringing or experience, to seamlessly follow along.鈥  

Rachel Kamel, 21, a junior double majoring in mass communications and electronic media and film, was instrumental in creating the new siddur. For over a year, she worked on the prayer packet while serving as ritual chair and president at Towson Hillel.

鈥淭hese spiral-bound packets have many additional readings, prayers, and songs to give students the ability to make Hillel Shabbat their own,鈥 Kamel said. 鈥淏ecause of our updated prayer packets, services are more accessible to students of all backgrounds.鈥 

Kamel, along with a group of Towson Hillel student leaders, spearheaded the project through fall 2021. The final siddur contains Hebrew transliteration, English translation, and Jewish art created by students. Towson Hillel used a professional printing company to produce copies so they would last for years to come.

Bradley University Hillel recently took on a similar challenge when it set out to craft a siddur that catered to students of all Jewish backgrounds.聽

鈥淚 like that it has the camp songs that we actually want to sing,鈥 said Michael Siler, a junior mechanical engineering major. 鈥淚t鈥檚 something that we made.鈥 

Revamping the Hillel siddur was a three-month project. The prayer book includes traditional prayers and songs from iconic Jewish singers and songwriters, such as Debbie Friedman and Matisyahu. 

鈥淚t鈥檚 less intimidating than your traditional siddur,鈥 said Micah Brody, a sophomore double majoring in math and computer science. 鈥淚t鈥檚 more welcoming.鈥 

All of the services at Bradley Hillel are run by students and filled with Jewish learning, music, and dancing. 

Executive Director of Bradley Hillel Matt Lorch said, 鈥淎mong all these Hillels, there is hope that these new traditions of Kabbalat Shabbat will bring more students together in the celebration of Judaism and inspire other Hillels to explore their own versions of services.鈥

Rachel Bernstein is a senior at University of Southern California.

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This Year, In Person /this-year-in-person/ Thu, 14 Apr 2022 00:00:00 +0000 /this-year-in-person/ Passover has always been our gateway to come together. A way to see how everyone has grown. But as I neared college, I knew that my seder was going to look different. At least temporarily. I needed to give myself space to find new Passover traditions with my Jewish community on campus.

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This Year, In Person

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Date

April 14, 2022

I often think I have an average-sized family, but when I see everyone seated at their unassigned but basically assigned seats on Passover, I think twice. The table has gotten longer and longer each year. It ends up stretching from the living room to the entryway, as if trying to contain the ruach (Hebrew for 鈥渟pirit鈥) that Passover brings out of each of us. Of course, it never can.

We go around the table, reading and singing in Hebrew and English from the iconic Maxwell House Haggadah. The pages are familiar. We learn about the four children: one wise, one wicked, one simple, and one who does not know how to ask. We sing classic songs, including 鈥淓chad Mi Yodea鈥 (鈥淲ho Knows One?鈥) and 鈥淐had Gadya鈥 (鈥淥ne Little Goat鈥).

Passover has always been our gateway to come together. A way to see how everyone has grown. At each seder, we鈥檝e created moments that鈥檒l be remembered for years to come, and we鈥檝e asked questions beyond the Four Questions we know by heart. I鈥檝e always adored these traditions.  

But as I neared college, I knew that my seder was going to look different. At least temporarily. I needed to give myself space to find new Passover traditions with my Jewish community on campus. 

Shortly after starting college at the University of Southern California, I found a Jewish home 黑料传送门. I spent Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur, Sukkot, and Hanukkah with new friends who became family. One of my favorite memories was carrying the Torah around the sanctuary on Rosh Hashanah. As 2020 rolled around, I was more than ready to experience my favorite holiday 鈥 Passover 鈥 with my Hillel community.

The pandemic put a wrench in those plans.

So, I turned to Zoom. Of course, a virtual Hillel seder could never replace an in-person experience. We sang all of the familiar songs, but they just felt wrong. Judaism is meant to be experienced with family 鈥 the one you鈥檙e born into and the one you create for yourself.  

During the days that followed, USC Hillel found ways to infuse meaning into our Passover. The ritual committee created a student cookbook with family recipes so we could learn from one another and share new traditions. We did virtual 鈥渕atzah breaks鈥 in place of our normal 鈥渂agel breaks.鈥 These creative efforts gave me community, but they also made me yearn for an in-person Passover even more. 

So, I marked my calendar for 2021. When that fell through, I crossed my fingers for Passover 2022.

On Friday, I鈥檒l finally have the opportunity to experience my first and last in-person Hillel seder. I think, in its own way, this will be a special moment. Hillel has been a pillar of my college experience. I imagine it鈥檚 the sort of place that makes Passover feel like a family affair. 

As I celebrate my first and last seder on campus, I鈥檓 going to take it all in. I鈥檒l walk the familiar route to Hillel and enter the building, decorated with string lights and USC memorabilia. There鈥檒l be traditional and musical seders 鈥 the perfect blend of old and new. 

Alongside my friends, I鈥檒l gather around the seder table to ask questions and sing songs. The memories I鈥檒l create with them will be remembered for years to come. I know it鈥檒l be worth the wait.

Rachel Bernstein is a senior at University of Southern California. 

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Through Innovation, Small Colleges Bring Big Jewish Community /through-innovation-small-colleges-bring-big-jewish-community/ Mon, 20 Dec 2021 00:00:00 +0000 /through-innovation-small-colleges-bring-big-jewish-community/ Hillels like Hamilton鈥檚 are changing the narrative about finding strong Jewish communities in small colleges and towns. The notion that students have to attend a densely-Jewish area to keep connected to a Jewish community is a tired one. Students from both urban and rural areas have found a home at the Hillel on a Hill.

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Through Innovation, Small Colleges Bring Big Jewish Community

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Date

December 20, 2021

Hamilton College is located in Clinton, N.Y., a historic village that claims the tagline, 鈥淪mall town, big community.鈥 Hamilton has a student population of 1,850, only fifty people less than the village itself. The closest large city is Syracuse, about an hour away by car. Despite the distance from urban areas, Hamilton Hillel, known as the 鈥淗illel on a Hill,鈥 provides a thriving, diverse community for its Jewish students. Hillels like Hamilton鈥檚 are changing the narrative about finding strong Jewish communities in small colleges and towns.聽

The notion that students have to attend a densely-Jewish area to keep connected to a Jewish community is a tired one. Students from both urban and rural areas have found a home at the Hillel on a Hill. For some students, the number of Jewish peers at Hamilton is shocking, says Hamilton College鈥檚 resident rabbi and executive director, Rabbi Ethan Bair: 鈥淚 have met several Jewish students who come from places with even smaller Jewish communities than Hamilton College.鈥 

Those rural students then have the opportunity to connect with a Jewish community for the first time, while students from bigger cities come to a different realization. 鈥淭hese students are so happy realizing that there are many Jewish students in all of their classes. Meanwhile, students from New York City realize, 鈥極h wow, Jewish culture is not the default,鈥 and if they want Jewish community, they have to create it,鈥 Rabbi Bair said. 

Zoe Levine, a Social Justice Springboard Fellow at Oberlin College, also notices the diversity of practice within their smaller population of Jewish students: 鈥淭here is a really large mix of students who were engaged in their Jewish communities growing up and those who are just getting connected to a Jewish community now,鈥 Levine says.聽

Oberlin College is another example of a smaller school with a big community. The school has about 3,000 students 鈥 the size of some U.S. public high schools 鈥 and is a notable music conservatory and liberal arts school. However, the size of the general student population doesn鈥檛 reflect the size of the Jewish population. Levine noted that the number of Jewish students is relatively high, even compared to some larger, urban universities. Nearly a third of the student population, Levine says, identifies as Jewish. 

Like Rabbi Bair鈥檚 students, Oberlin Hillel students are creating their own community and Judaism by seeking out the familiarity of Hillel or exploring Hillel and Judaism for the first time. As Levine suggests, small colleges are a place where students can more easily pick and choose what they want their Jewish life to look like.聽聽

Part of that ease comes from innovative community-building strategies that promote self-discovery. Hamilton Hillel, for example, celebrated Simchat Torah in collaboration with the rare book specialist on campus. Hamilton, Rabbi Bair said, has a 鈥渦nique, 120-year-old Torah with multiple handwritings and styles.鈥 The variation of styles implies that the Torah itself was a collaboration. This campus event garnered attention from Jewish students, non-Jewish students, and non-Jewish literature professors. The Hillel on a Hill also works with the Muslim Student Association (MSA) to further the bonds between the two minority religions. Fewer Jewish students on campus means students need to think 鈥渙utside the box鈥 when building a community.  

Asked where the nickname, 鈥淗illel on a Hill鈥 came from, Rabbi Bair dispels notions of the lone Hillel building sitting upon vast, misty green hills with nary a home in sight. Quite the opposite: the Hillel building is actually on College Hill Road, the main street of the campus. The nickname serves as a reminder that a Jewish community isn鈥檛 only found at a large university housed in an urban setting. It鈥檚 also found in smaller locales, where people use their available resources to create a community as rich as any large university 鈥 and students from all walks of life would do well to take a closer look. 

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