AMIT Alumni Leading Israel
AMIT alumni leading Israel: The real-life impact of your investment
AMIT alumni leading Israel: The real-life impact of your investment
The prizes confirm what the students at each school already knew: The classroom can also serve as a community.
A Groundbreaking Museum Exhibition Reveals the Connections
Only a year ago, Olympic athlete Hailey Kops was studying at the Midreshet AMIT Seminary in Jerusalem, with plans to attend nursing school upon her return to New Jersey.
In addition to academic excellence, one of the central pillars of AMIT’s educational vision is Torat Chaim, the goal of which is to inculcate in students the values of Torah as a way of life.
It is shortly before eight o’clock on a Sunday morning in Rehovot, and most of the Ron Arad High School’s 735 seventh- to twelfth-graders are streaming into class — all but those currently quarantined for COVID-19.
11th-grade students at AMIT Hillel High School in Rehovot volunteered and gave out with real joy. The students prepared and produced a Purim happening for the children of the Sharet neighborhood in the city of Lod, which included play stations, art workshops and food stalls.
Reading the Purim celebrations at the Amit Beer Tuvia school, the school administration in collaboration with the teachers’ committee decided to salute the entire staff of the high school and organized a happy and enriching Purim party, especially for them, when the whole party was based on the staff’s talents.
The excited children were very happy, the parents were excited and also the nursing staff joined in with applause and great joy. It was a special and exciting experience, especially after a long period of Corona, where outsiders who were not close relatives could not be admitted to the wards.
After a two-year period of living in the shadow of the Corona, at the Amit Kennedy Acre School in Acre, they chose to celebrate the Purim events as a sign of connection and love for the people. On Rosh Chodesh Adar, the students set out on the boys’ path, led by social education coordinator Ira Lahiani.