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Sarah Schenirer turned the socially unacceptable idea of girls learning Torah in a Jewish school into a way of life for Jews all over the world, providing a model of how to successfully balance tradition and innovation.
One hundred years ago, in Krakow, Poland, Sarah Schenirer changed female Jewish education forever. She merged tradition and women's rights in Orthodox Judaism, creating the groundbreaking Beis Yaakov school system.
Sara Schenirer: One Woman’s Impact on the World. July 15, 1883 – March 1, 1935. A Polish-Jewish schoolteacher born on July 15, 1883, Sara Schenirer became a pioneer of Jewish education for girls.
Jun 23, 2021 · In discovering and reviving “old-new” Jewish rituals for women, Sarah Schenirer created “kosher” substitutes for the secular nature clubs and youth movements of her milieu, as well as female variations on the Hasidic and yeshiva experiences that had excluded her as a woman.
Jun 19, 2020 · What was it that I had instantly seen in the group of young women? What is a Bais Yaakov girl, as a historical phenomenon, as a “new kind of woman”? How were the first Jewish girls who attended the institution Sarah Schenirer had founded related to the group of girls I had run into that afternoon?
Sarah Schenirer hears an inspiring sermon on Judith by Rabbi Moshe David Flesch in mid-December on the Sabbath of Hanukkah in the Stumpfergasse Synagogue, which she describes as setting her on the path of teaching girls Torah.
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Sarah Schenirer worked as a dressmaker in Kraków from the time she left school until 1917, when she founded her first school and turned her attention to teaching. She was married twice, first to Shmuel Nussbaum (1910-13), from whom she was divorced, and the second time to Yitzkhok Landau (by 1931).