AMIT Hammer Junior and Senior High School for Boys, Rehovot
Once known as the “Red Jail” for its color and troubled student body, today AMIT Hammer for boys is a very different place—and not only because the school was painted.
Once known as the “Red Jail” for its color and troubled student body, today AMIT Hammer for boys is a very different place—and not only because the school was painted.
The school has an impressive 100% bagrut rate, which is even more significant when considering the wide mix of students’ religious, socioeconomic and ethnic backgrounds.
The yeshiva focuses on academic excellence along with love of Torah, Israel and one’s fellow man, and strives to install a religious Zionist identity in its students. The results are impressive: a 95% bagrut rate.
Consisting of a middle school and a boarding yeshiva high school for boys in the desert town of Yerucham, B’Levav Shalem has seen enrollment double in the past three years, to 342 students.
A team of students from AMIT Bellows Ulpanat Noga in Beit Shemesh won the AMIT national research competition, which was held last week at the Science Museum in Jerusalem.