The
following is an article that appeared in The Jewish Link of Bergen County, in
which I detail some of the exciting things that have been happening at the
National Council of Young Israel, a century-old
organization that has been a leading voice on the issues that face the Jewish community
in the United States and Israel:
NATIONAL
COUNCIL OF YOUNG ISRAEL USHERS IN NEW ERA
By:
Aaron Troodler
When he joined the National Council of Young Israel (NCYI) this past
August as its Executive Director, Rabbi Perry Tirschwell hit the ground
running. With his considerable experience in Jewish education and
organizational life, Rabbi Tirschwell was tasked with overseeing and making
Young Israel a transformative force in American Jewish life.
At the six-month mark of his tenure as the head of NCYI, which has ably
served the broader Jewish community for over 100 years, the immediate impact
that Rabbi Tirschwell made was extremely evident. Intent on cutting costs and
achieving financial stability, accountability and transparency, Rabbi
Tirschwell and the NCYI Board of Directors were successful in significantly
reducing the organization’s expenses, which have been cut by more than 50%.
Rabbi Tirschwell and the lay leadership of NCYI, including President
Farley Weiss of Phoenix, Arizona, Chairman of the Board Bob Levi of Silver
Spring, Maryland, and 1st Vice President Yosef Poplak of New York, initiated a
thorough review of the organization’s finances and enlisted the services of an
independent, outside comptroller.
As part of its financial restructuring, Young Israel’s national office
relocated from downtown Manhattan to Paramus, New Jersey. In addition to
cutting the organization’s rent by 60%, the move signaled NCYI’s desire to work
with the greater Jewish community. It is now housed in the same building as the
Jewish Federation of Northern New Jersey, the regional Israel Bonds office, and
the North American headquarters of Nefesh B’Nefesh. Rabbi Tirschwell has
already begun discussions with these new neighbors about joint projects.
“With the assistance of our dedicated and forward-thinking board members
and a talented and devoted professional staff, the National Council of Young
Israel is taking a proactive role in order to strengthen our organization and
renew our relationship with all of our branch synagogues,” said President
Farley Weiss. “The Young Israel movement is deeply committed to furthering the
vital role that synagogues play in Jewish communities all across the United
States.”
As part of the organization’s efforts to strengthen the NCYI’s
relationships with its branch synagogues and members across the United States,
Rabbi Tirschwell embarked on a “Young Israel listening tour.”
Rabbi Tirschwell has spent a great amount of time traveling to various
Young Israel synagogues, where he has met with their rabbis, presidents, board
members and congregants, in an effort to ascertain how NCYI can be of
assistance to them and to learn which innovative “best practices” they have to
share with their sister branches.
In a relatively short period of time, Rabbi Tirschwell has already spent
Shabbat at the Young Israels of Oak Park and Southfield, Michigan; Scarsdale,
New York; West Hartford, Connecticut; Sharon, Massachusetts; Staten Island, New
York; Stamford, Connecticut; East Brunswick, New Jersey; St. Louis, Missouri;
Memphis, Tennessee and Plainview, New York.
In addition, Rabbi Tirschwell has also visited the Young Israels of
Brighton Beach, New York; Teaneck, New Jersey; Brookline, Massachusetts;
Hollywood, Florida; Fair Lawn, New Jersey; Flatbush, Brooklyn; Houston, Texas;
Fort Lee, New Jersey; Pembroke Pines, Florida; the West Side, New York; West
Hartford, Connecticut and Kingsbay, Brooklyn.
“In his recent visit to the Young Israel of Scarsdale, Rabbi Perry
Tirschwell delivered an engaging Shabbat morning presentation about the past,
present and future of the Young Israel movement,” said Rabbi Jonathan
Morgenstern of the Young Israel of Scarsdale. “As the National Council of Young
Israel resets its focus and priorities, we look forward to seeing Rabbi
Tirschwell’s ambitious vision for our unique brand of Orthodox Jewish life
realized over the coming years.”
Aside from bolstering its synagogue services, the National Council of
Young Israel has begun an intense effort to return the organization to its
roots by putting the “Young” back in “Young Israel.” Young Israel was started a
century ago by 25–30 year olds who were not connecting religiously. Rabbi
Tirschwell has conducted dozens of meetings about services for, and with,
members of this age group, which sociologists now call the “Odyssey Years.” In
this vein, he has reached out to the Orthodox Union, Rabbinical Council of
America, Yeshiva University, the Jewish Federation and numerous synagogues
about undertaking joint projects and working collaboratively for the betterment
of the greater Jewish community.
“We are in the midst of writing an exciting new chapter in Young
Israel’s distinguished history,” said Rabbi Tirschwell. “For more than a
hundred years, the National Council of Young Israel has played a pivotal role
in the robust growth of Orthodox Judaism in North America. By working in tandem
with our branch synagogues, our talented professional staff and dedicated lay
leaders will continue enriching the work of the National Council of Young
Israel and further cement its reputation as one of the leading Jewish
organizations in the United States and Israel.”
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