The Lander Legacy



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at the time, Hunter College, he accepted his first post as part of Yeshiva

University’s administration, that of Visiting Director of Graduate Studies

(see next chapter).

But promoting his qualifications to Dr. Belkin was not the only time

that Rabbi Churgin attempted to provide Bernard Lander with a career

impetus. As Lander later learned from Professor Gershon Churgin, the

professor’s brother, Pinkhos, had privately named two possible successors

to fill his shoes as president of Bar-Ilan University. One was Rabbi

Dr. Emanuel Rackman, and the other was Rabbi Dr. Bernard Lander.

The Bar-Ilan board floated the idea and asked if Lander was interested

in being considered as its next president. After due consultation, Lander

Learner to Leader 87

reported that while he was flattered by the late Rabbi Churgin’s confidence

and endorsement, he and Sarah were now the parents of three

young daughters and could not easily leave their own parents behind were

the family to pick up and make aliyah at that time. The board ultimately

selected Rabbi Dr. Joseph Lookstein to succeed Churgin as president,

who in turn, was succeeded in the post twenty years later by Churgin’s

other choice, Rabbi Rackman.

It would be Lander’s leadership role with another major Jewish organization

that would propel him even further across the national stage.

While he was serving as rabbi of Congregation Beth Jacob in Baltimore,

Lander’s cousin, Benjamin Koenigsberg, had urged him to become involved

with the Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America.

Also known as the Orthodox Union, or simply the OU, the group continues

to serve as the major sanctioning body for Kashruth observance

among America’s food processors. But this was not its sole, nor even its

primary, role.

Founded in 1898, the OU, one of America’s oldest Jewish institutions,

was established by the same rabbis who created the Jewish Theological

Seminary or JTS, America’s first acknowledged Judaic school of

divinity. The OU was established as a bulwark against the rising hegemony

of Reform Judaism in America. It served to establish and strengthen

Orthodox synagogues, youth programs, and day schools and became

known as the nation’s leading exponent of Orthodoxy and Religious

Zionism in America.

By 1902, rifts between the OU and JTS became pronounced. In order

to buoy its flagging fortunes, a group of JTS supporters that year succeeded

in attracting a well-known European scholar, Solomon Schechter,

to the United States to head the school. Schechter immediately set about

to “liberalize” the seminary, hoping to attract enrollment from among

American-born rabbinic candidates. Exactly 100 days after Schechter’s arrival,

the OU broke with JTS, charging that it was leading Jews in the very

direction that the OU had been established to avoid. It was announced

that the OU and its affiliates would no longer recognize as legitimate the

semicha (ordination) bestowed by JTS upon its rabbinic graduates. This

move prompted Schechter and others to found the Conservative movement

as a sort of “middle path” between the traditional course of Orthodoxy

and the modernist road of Reform.

88 The Lander Legacy

In 1923, the OU Kashruth Division was initiated when it contracted

with the H.J. Heinz company to oversee the preparation of the company’s

condiments and other food products. The familiar OU hekhsher

(seal of approval), was first displayed that year on bottles of Heinz

Ketchup. The OU grew rather slowly until the 1950s when it actively

sought to enlarge its scope of affiliated Orthodox synagogues. As rabbis

trained by Rabbi Joseph Soloveitchik and ordained at Yeshiva’s RIETS

seminary were dispatched to OU-affiliated synagogues across the

country, Orthodox Jewry saw its influence spread beyond the confines of

New York and the eastern seaboard. Today the OU remains the largest

Orthodox Jewish organization in America. It has survived and flourished

due to an ability to adapt effectively to American-style pluralism without

forgoing Halachic principles.

Bernard Lander began attending the OU’s biannual conventions in

the 1940s. Over the ensuing years he witnessed and keenly understood

how demographic forces were causing Jews to rush to the suburbs and

abandon their Orthodox synagogues in the old neighborhoods. Lander

lent his support as the OU fought valiant battles on behalf of Orthodoxy—

through such programs as the Torah Umesorah network of Jewish

day schools—seeking to preserve and further expand Orthodoxy amid the

new post-war American Jewish landscape.

At the OU convention held over Thanksgiving weekend of 1954,

Dr. Lander joined a group of young activists as a new generation of leadership

was swept into office. Lander, along with Samuel Brennglass of

Massena, New York, was elected national vice-president while Lander’s

good friend, Forest Hills attorney Harold Boxer, became national secretary.

Boxer, in his professional travels throughout the country, had

made a point of visiting not only Orthodox, but also Conservative synagogues.

He shared with Lander his observations that while the Conservative

movement had been operating a successful national youth group

(United Synagogue Youth) for more than three years, nothing of the sort

yet existed under the Orthodox umbrella. Lander, Brennglass, and Boxer

placed the creation of just such a national synagogue youth movement

at the top of the OU’s agenda. Brennglass drafted the resolution that

called for the immediate establishment of the National Conference of

Synagogue Youth (NCSY), and while some debate ensued, support for

Learner to Leader 89

the resolution was overwhelming. Boxer was named as the NCSY’s first

chairman, and Bernard Lander stepped up to serve on the new group’s

governing body, the NCSY Youth Commission.

The enthusiasm that brought the NCSY into existence soon gave way

to the realities of trying to manage a nationwide entity without benefit

of adequate funding. Despite increasing dissension and frequent calls for

disbanding the organization that arose from within the OU’s upper leadership,

Boxer and Lander became unwavering advocates for maintaining

support. “What would be the purpose of the OU itself if we were to abandon

our Jewish youth?” Lander asked rhetorically.

NCSY struggled to remain viable throughout the 1950s, and in 1959,

under the direction of a new national director, Rabbi Pinchas Stolper, it

finally turned the corner. Stolper assembled a cadre of yeshiva student

volunteers and dispatched them to communities around the country to

set up teenage Shabbatonim (Sabbath retreats). The tactic worked, as students

recruited from the major New York Orthodox religious schools set

to work and began introducing an exciting brand of Judaism to America’s

disaffiliated young people. The wheels that were put into motion through

Lander, Boxer, and Stolper’s pioneering work have continued to turn. Over

the ensuing decades, NCSY Shabbatonim have ignited dormant feelings

of Yiddishkeit (Jewishness) appreciation and religious observance among

countless Jewish adolescents across the nation. The program is today considered

one of the most successful outreach initiatives ever developed by

the American Orthodox community.

In his impassioned work to establish and maintain the fledgling

NCSY, Bernard Lander emerged as a national leader committed to investing

in Jewish youth. His advocacy over the ensuing years served to place

and keep NCSY at the top of the OU agenda. As vice president, Lander

also fought repeatedly to increase funding allocations to college campus

programs, convincing the more reluctant that investing in such youth programs

would yield higher returns than any other.

Because of his work in the civil rights arena and his stature as a sociologist,

Dr. Lander was tapped to serve as the OU representative to the

Synagogue Council of America. The SCA was established as an expression

of Jewish shared community known as Klal Yisroel (the entire Jewish

people). Its primary agenda was in the area of community relations, where

90 The Lander Legacy

it worked with other Jewish agencies to promote civil rights, foster urban

development, and improve conditions for the less fortunate. While the

SCA’s mission was in keeping with Lander’s commitment to social justice,

he soon began experiencing second thoughts as the group moved further

and further from basic Jewish principles, a drift that was attributable to

the increasing influence of the SCA’s Reform leadership. This religious

dynamic expressed itself in political terms since Rabbi Joseph Soloveitchik

had repeatedly resisted calls from the organization’s leaders to withdraw

OU’s membership in the SCA. Such a bolt, Rabbi Soloveitchik feared,

would be perceived as a failure of Jewish unity by the general community

and act to harm overall Jewish interests.

In 1967, Dr. Lander was offered the presidency of the SCA and again

found himself at a crossroads. He could either accept the position and strive

to change the course of the organization from within, or he could resign

rather than head a group that was leading Jews away from Torah values.

In a quandary of conscience, Lander turned to the man known simply as

Reb Moshe. Rabbi Moshe Feinstein was a world-renowned Torah scholar

and posek (an adjudicator of Jewish law). His expertise in Halakha was unparalleled,

and he was regarded by most as the de facto rabbinic authority

for Orthodox Jewry in North America. Reb Moshe counseled Lander that

he could not, as an observant Torah-true Jew, agree to become the head of

an organization dominated by the Reform and Conservative movements.

Lander understood the wisdom of Reb Moshe’s advice and immediately

resigned his position on the Synagogue Council. The group continued,

with limited effectiveness, through the 1990s when it disbanded after the

Reform movement acted to sanction mixed marriages between Jews and

non-Jews and publicly condoned unions between gay partners.

By the early 1950s, Bernard Lander felt that the arc of his career was

starting to turn downward. He faced increasing frustration that his work

in areas of social advocacy was not leading him anywhere. He began to pay

attention to the repeated overtures he was receiving from congregations

urging him to accept a pulpit position. The irregular schedules and uncertainties

of his situation were beginning to take their toll. Sarah informed

him that she wanted to see him at breakfast and dinner each day but not

at lunchtime. Unfortunately, none of the congregational posts he investigated

would allow him sufficient time and opportunity to continue his

Learner to Leader 91

social activism and academic work. And he was not prepared to give those

up merely in exchange for a regular work schedule.

Throughout those years, Bernard Lander continued to enjoy the many

public speaking opportunities that his position with the OU and Mizrachi

had afforded him. He loved traveling and observing Jewish life outside of

New York. In turn, he began to develop a strong following as word of his

oratorical skills spread throughout the Jewish world. Yet, while the speaking

tours were exciting, they failed to satisfy his deeper yearning to conduct

a truly meaningful life. He continued to listen for opportunities that

would allow him to fulfill his passion to promote Orthodoxy in America.

The fateful call from President Belkin, asking Lander to consider returning

to Yeshiva in order to head the school’s graduate program, was exactly

what Bernard Lander had been hoping to hear.
93
Chapter ten

The Yeshiva Years

Not study is the main thing, but action.

—Pirkei Avot (Ethics of the Fathers) 1:17

Bernard Lander had never fully left Yeshiva University, either spiritually

or physically. He had maintained close ties to many of his

former professors and classmates, several of whom were now

members of the Yeshiva faculty. Even during his years in Baltimore, it was

a rare week that did not find him traversing the short distance between

his parents’ home and the Yeshiva campus. Now he was being summoned

to come aboard in a new role that he felt would overcome the angst and

anxiety he had been experiencing in recent years. His hopes were high as

he prepared for his return to the halls of Yeshiva.

Dr. Lander knew Dr. Samuel Belkin and had met with him several

times over the prior decade since Lander’s return to New York City.

Lander viewed himself as a member of the Yeshiva family, and thus he

had never been reluctant to share his opinions about the school’s mission

with Belkin. While Lander applauded Belkin’s plans to establish a new

medical school as “a great leap forward,” for example, he also let Belkin

know, by means of personal correspondence, that a day-college program,

serving students not qualified for or not interested in the 9:00 am–3:00

pm program of intensive Talmud study at RIETS, would be even more effective

in strengthening Orthodox Judaism than a medical school. Lander

concluded his missive with “One can accomplish more with regard to the

inculcation of a religious spirit, in a college atmosphere than in a medical

school situation.” Ironically, it was the successful quest for a Touro College

medical school that marked the final years of Dr. Lander’s life.

Dr. Lander responded to Samuel Belkin’s invitation to serve as dean of

Yeshiva’s Graduate Division with humble enthusiasm. As a Yeshiva alumnus,

he wrote back that he considered it “a great honor and privilege” to be

94 The Lander Legacy

able to build Jewish life through service to his alma mater. He recognized

that this opportunity had arrived at the perfect moment in his life, and he

told Belkin that he was ready to assume his responsibilities immediately.

But there was one obstacle.

At this point, Dr. Lander held a full-time faculty position at Hunter

College that he intended to maintain. An awkward situation would arise if

a member of Hunter’s faculty also held the title of dean at another school.

The matter was easily resolved, however, when Belkin agreed to change his

title from dean to “Visiting Director of the Graduate Division.”

As a key figure in the Yeshiva hierarchy, Samuel Belkin had followed

closely in the footsteps of the school’s founder, Bernard Revel. Like Revel,

Belkin had served as rosh yeshiva (principal or head) at RIETS, gave brilliant

shiurim (lectures) in Talmud and Codes (codified books of law), and

sat on the school’s rabbinical ordination committee. As president, Belkin

strove to see Yeshiva University take its place among the great American

institutions of higher learning. At the time Bernard Lander became a

member of its senior administration in November 1954, the school was in

full expansion mode. The Albert Einstein School of Medicine was being

organized and set to open its doors in the fall of the following year.

The atmosphere of energetic activity was infectious as Dr. Lander took

up his new responsibilities, hitting the ground running with a dazzling

burst of new initiatives. Lander immediately implemented a new departmental

structure at one of the graduate division’s two units, the School of

Education and Community Administration or SECA. SECA now would

consist of four faculties: psychology, religious education, secular education,

and social work. He promptly assigned four key tasks to each of the

department heads:

1) Conduct research and determine which American schools are

known to operate the best programs in your field. Then study

their curricula for ideas on how to elevate the quality of your

own program.

2) Determine the requirements for accreditation in order to allow

for the granting of Masters and Ph.D. degrees in your field.

Establish specific admissions requirements for your department.

3) Develop a defined program of study for your department that

will facilitate accreditation.

The Yeshiva Years 95

Lander next set the same requirements for the faculty at the Bernard

Revel Graduate School of Jewish Studies, the other division of Yeshiva’s

graduate school. By June 1955 both deans had developed programs with

clearly defined admission requirements, designed course curricula, and

identified needed faculty. The effect of these measures was immediate and

highly positive, particularly in the area of faculty morale. Professors at

both graduate schools understood that accreditation would enhance the

academic standing of their programs and, as a by-product, elevate their

own academic stature as well.

Once SECA’s departmental structure had been defined and the curriculum

developed, it served as a template for two separate graduate programs

Lander had envisioned: a School of Education and a School of

Social Work. Dr. Belkin supported these initiatives and agreed to consult

with an expert in the field of education to prepare and submit a grant proposal

to the Ford Foundation. Despite the consultant’s promises, this tactic

met with failure. Lander believed it was because the third party expert

did not possess, and therefore could not adequately express, the passion

for the project that only intimate familiarity could engender. Assuming

the task himself, he prepared a detailed proposal that captured not only

the cold statistics, but also the burning need for this project on the part of

the school and the community. He successfully built a comprehensive case

on behalf of a “pioneering school” of education and was eventually issued

a $500,000 grant from the same Ford Foundation that had earlier turned

the school down.

The news of this achievement spread quickly, and no one was more

delighted than Samuel Belkin. “I will not forget what you have done for
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