Yeshivah College | |
---|---|
Location | |
East St Kilda, Victoria Australia |
|
Information | |
Type | Independent, Single-sex, Day school |
Denomination | Orthodox Jewish |
Established | 1955 |
Principal | Rabbi Smukler |
Key people |
The Lubavitcher Rebbe; Rabbi Y. D. Groner. OBD |
Enrolment | 385 (K-12) |
Colour(s) | Navy Blue & Gold |
Slogan | Educating for life |
Website | www.ybr.vic.edu.au |
The Lubavitcher Rebbe;
Yeshivas Oholei Yosef Yitzchok Lubavitch (Hebrew: ישיבה אהלי יוסף יצחק ליובאוויטש), known more commonly as Yeshivah College, is an independent, single-sex, Orthodox Jewish day school for boys, located in St Kilda East, a suburb of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
The school is run by the Chabad-Lubavitch movement's Yeshivah Centre, and caters for students from kindergarten through to Year 12.
The previous Lubavitcher Rebbe sent 5 Chabad families to establish a community in Australia. They originally moved to Shepparton as there was already a Chabad family there.
In the 1950s they moved to Melbourne and started the school in 1958. Rabbi Yitzchak Dovid Groner was sent from New York to help in the school and not long after his arrival he became the principal and director of the school.
Yeshivah College now thrives on the same campus as Yeshivah Shul, the community's synagogue.
The school has received wide criticism for its handling of reported child abuse in the 1990s.
The school is part of a worldwide network of schools named after Rabbi Yosef Yitzchok Schneersohn, the sixth Lubavitcher Rebbe. The school is as a branch of the Yeshiva Centre umbrella, and Rabbi Mordechai Berger was the principal of the high school, having replaced Rabbi Avrohom Glick at the start of the 2008 school year, however, Rabbi Glick stepped in as Interim Menahel when Rabbi Berger left at the end of the 2009 school year. Rabbi Glick ended his term as Interim Menahel at the end of term two, being succeeded by Rabbi Yehoshua Smukler from Sydney, Australia.
From students in Year 10 and upwards, Yeshivah College has two educational tracks. One is a dual curriculum including both religious studies and general education studies. The other is a religious studies only curriculum known as Mesivta (Hebrew for "academy").