Hebrew College’s Centennial kicks off with Torah-inspired art exhibit

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Deb Feinstein, chair of the Hebrew College Arts Initiative and Hebrew College Trustees, spoke to the crowd.

Hebrew College recently launched its centennial programming with the opening of “Seeing Torah: A Visual Midrash,” an art exhibit representing the spiritual, political and feminist lessons of the Torah by Boston artist and Hebrew College adult learner Anita Rabinoff-Goldman. 

Pictured, from left, Hebrew College Arts Committee members Susan Schechter, Dorothea Buckler and chair Deborah Feinstein.

This visual diary, which will be on display through December, consists of 54 squares filled with patterns, colors and textures that encourage viewers to reflect on what Torah means to them, to relate to it through their own experiences, and to consider how Torah can be a continuing source of learning and discourse. 

“As a Jewish woman, these are my stories, my family’s history, and they tie me to every other Jewish person. By understanding more of our history, I gain a greater understanding and appreciation of Judaism and a greater understanding of myself,” Rabinoff-Goldman said at the opening. “I created a body of work that illustrated and deepened my understanding of Torah as well as its relevance to our 21st century lives. Hopefully, by sharing it with more people, others will benefit from a different way of entering the text. We are called a ‘people of the book’ and there are many explorations of Torah by many experts in many books that fill many libraries.” 

Hebrew College President Sharon Cohen Anisfeld offered remarks.

Rabinoff-Goldman launched “Seeing Torah” after deciding to read the entire Torah from start to finish, beginning on Simchas Torah (this year, Sept. 28-29). She later enrolled in Me’ah Classic, Hebrew College’s intensive two-year, 100-hour adult-learning program. This coming year, she will be part of a new Artist Beit Midrash, a collaboration between Hebrew College and the Jewish Arts Collaborative. 

Rabinoff-Goldman’s exhibit was initially scheduled to open in March 2020, but was postponed due to COVID-19. Hebrew College President Rabbi Sharon Cohen Anisfeld said that now is an even more perfect time for the exhibit to open—exactly 100 years after Hebrew College first opened its doors in the fall of 1921.  

Students from Hebrew College’s cantorial program shared music.

“It is through deep literacy that we give rise to rich intellectual, spiritual and cultural creativity, [and] it is through Jewish education that we give birth to a vibrant Jewish future,” Anisfeld said. “What better expression of those values than an art exhibit born of deep and sustained study of the yearly Torah cycle —that is itself a work of visual midrash? Undertaken—incidentally—by someone who had supposedly ‘retired’ — but has shown us all what it means to cultivate a lifelong capacity for learning, creativity, and renewal.” 

Myra and Robert Snyder.

The Hebrew College Arts Initiative, chaired by Trustee Deborah Feinstein, seeks to partner with different areas of the college and focus on bridging the academy and the community through the gallery exhibits and lunch-and-learn conversations. This fall, in the Seeing Torah gallery, Hebrew College will host a series of alumni-led public conversations, all from 1:15-2 p.m.: Oct. 4 with Rabbi Jessica Lowenthal; Oct. 26 with Rabbi Allison Poirier; and Nov. 17 with Rav-Hazzan Aliza Berger.  

Hebrew College alumnus Rabbi Hillel Greene, and his wife, Lily Rabinoff-Goldman, daughter of the artist.

As part of the centennial celebration, Hebrew College will also hold other special events, including a November groundbreaking of its new shared-campus, a winter day of learning and a Centennial Gala on June 2, 2022.  

Hebrew College is also offering a Special Centennial Lecture Series adult learning course, “The Old Made New and the New Made Holy: Leading Scholars & Thinkers Reflect on a Century of Jewish Experience and Explore the Challenges That Lie Ahead,” taught by leading scholars and rabbis, including Rabbi Sharon Cohen Anisfeld (Hebrew College); Rabbi Angela Buchdahl (Central Synagogue, NY); Rabbi David Ellenson (Hebrew Union College); Rabbi Arthur Green (Hebrew College); Rabbi Shai Held (Hadar); Rabbi Benay Lappe (SVARA: A Traditionally Radical Yeshiva); and Jonathan Sarna, PhD (Brandies University).  

The artist, Anita Rabinoff-Goldman is encircled by her friends.

“Anita, your work gives exquisite expression to this abiding truth. You have enlarged and expanded our understanding of Torah by sharing so generously your own creative encounter with the text,” Anisfeld said at the art exhibit opening. “In this moment, what a blessing to experience the gift of beauty, of color and texture and an artist’s hand reaching out, connecting us all with stories and texts that are timeless and striving to touch that which is transcendent.”