Bayit Lepletot

Bayit Lepletot

Bayit Lepletot dormitory buildings
Formation 1949
Purpose Orphanage for girls
Headquarters 1 Beharan Street
Location
Official language
Hebrew
Key people
Rabbi Avraham Y. Stern
Rabbi Moshe Yona Rosenfeld
Website bl-girlstown.org

Bayit Lepletot (Hebrew: בית לפליטות, literally, "Home for Refugees"), is an Orthodox Jewish orphanage for girls in Jerusalem, Israel. Established in 1949 in the Mea Shearim neighborhood to accommodate young Holocaust refugees and orphans, the orphanage opened a second campus in north-central Jerusalem in 1973 called Kiryat Banot (Hebrew: קרית בנות, "Girls Town"). Over time, the resident profile changed to comprise girls from dysfunctional or abusive homes, children of terror victims, and abandoned immigrant children. Girls enter the orphanage as young as three years of age and can remain at the home until their wedding. The orphanage takes full responsibility for each girl's welfare and covers all living, educational, and wedding expenses. As of 2004, the two campuses had housed and educated over 8,000 girls.

History

Dedication plaque on the 1959 building
Kiryat Banot (Girls Town) campus in north-central Jerusalem

In the postwar years, Israel was flooded with young Holocaust refugees who were being placed in non-religious institutions by the Israeli government.[1][2] Girls whose parents were unable to cope were also wandering the streets without a framework.[3] The Toldos Aharon Rebbe, Rabbi Aharon Roth, tried to accommodate some of these girls in his own home in Jerusalem. Unable to deal with the economic burden of caring for them, he asked his chassid, Rabbi Naftali Rosenfeld (1914–2012), to take over the undertaking.[1] Rosenfeld, a native of Kleinwardein, Hungary, was a Holocaust survivor whose first wife and three children had been murdered by the Nazis; he made aliyah after the war with his second wife, the daughter of Rabbi Moshe Yona Schlesinger of Hungary.[1] Rosenfeld rented a basement apartment in the Mea Shearim neighborhood of Jerusalem and opened the Bayit Lepletot orphanage in 1949 with an enrollment of seven girls.[2][3]

While enrollment grew, conditions were difficult. By the early 1950s, Bayit Lepletot housed several dozen girls in two small rooms with a leaky roof and an outdoor toilet shared with a neighboring family. One of the rabbis in the program made a collection every morning in the synagogue and gave the proceeds to the housemother so she could buy that day's main meal.[2] In years to come, the directors would arrange for used clothing to be sent from America.[2]

The operation of the orphanage was also difficult on Rosenfeld's wife, who had also lost her family in the Holocaust and was left alone for long periods to care for their children while her husband was away fund-raising overseas. At one point she and her husband consulted the Belzer Rebbe, Rabbi Aharon Rokeach, who blessed Rosenfeld's wife that she would be able to manage and would merit to raise good Jewish children.[1][2]

Rabbi Shlomo Pappenheim joined Rosenfeld as a co-director shortly after the home's founding. In 1960 Rabbi Shmuel Yitzchak Stern, an American-born accountant and grandson of Yaakov Yosef Herman, became the third co-director.[3][4] Both Rosenfeld and Stern worked for the orphanage for over 50 years.[1][5] Today the sons of the original co-directors fill those roles.[3]

Bayit Lepletot constructed its own building in Mea Shearim in 1959.[6] The original quarters, renamed "The Small Building", continues to accommodate girls from preschool through fifth grade.[6] The home also conducts activities in two neighboring buildings.[7][8] In 1969 the orphanage purchased land for a second campus in north-central Jerusalem with the aid of a United States government grant.[6] Kiryat Banot (Girls Town) opened in 1973 on a hillside below the neighborhood of Unsdorf.[5] The campus, located at 55 Sorotzkin Street,[9] includes a Museum of Jewish Art with collections of Jewish ritual objects.[10][11][12]

Rosenfeld also established the Beit Hachlamah convalescent home for new mothers in the Bayit Vegan neighborhood in 1975. In 1987 this institution was moved to larger facilities in Telz-stone.[1]

In 2006 Bayit Lepletot was the subject of a Canadian Federal Court of Appeal case, Bayit Lepletot v. Canada (2006 FCA 128), which determined that the agency agreement between the Canadian registered charity of Bayit Lepletot and the orphanage in Israel was non-existent, since the charity's funds were being transferred to the Israeli institution through an intermediary.[13][14]

Description

The profile of girls living at Bayit Lepletot has changed from orphans and refugees to girls from dysfunctional or abusive homes, children of terror victims, and abandoned immigrant children.[2][3][7][15] The orphanage takes full responsibility for each girl's welfare, "acting as both surrogate parent and advocate" to give them the personal and emotional support they need.[3] Girls enter Bayit Lepletot as young as three years of age and can remain at the home until their wedding.[15]

Bayit Lepletot provides both living and educational arrangements, and operates its own school for girls who scholastically lag behind their peers.[1][3] It also furnishes private tutoring; dance, music, and drama therapy; and vocational training.[9][15] The summer schedule includes a sleepaway camp.[9] An average of 25 to 30 girls are married each year, with the orphanage providing all their wedding needs.[2]

By 2004, the orphanage had housed and educated nearly 8,000 girls.[2] The two campuses together have capacity for up to 600 residents.[9]

Directors

Original co-directors

Present-day

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Rabinowitz, Yitzchak (1 February 2012). "אחר מיטתו של רבי נפתלי רוזנפלד זצ"ל מייסד ומנהל מוסדות "בית לפליטות"" [After the Passing of Rabbi Naftali Rosenfeld, zt"l, Founder and Director of 'Bayit Lepletot']. Kikar HaShabbat (in Hebrew). Retrieved 6 September 2016.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Levin, Devorah (January 2004). "Portraits in Mesirus Nefesh". Inspiration. 1 (5): 34–38.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Astaire, Libi. "Giving the Eibishter's Children a Future" (PDF). Mishpacha. Retrieved 5 September 2016.
  4. Weisberg, Moshe (31 July 2012). "אבי היתומות – הרה"ח שמואל יצחק שטרן זצ"ל" [Father of Orphans: Rabbi Shmuel Yitzchak Stern, zt"l]. BeChadrei Charedim (in Hebrew). Retrieved 8 September 2016.
  5. 1 2 "Samuel I. Stern Memorial". documents.mx. 28 April 2015. Retrieved 4 September 2016.
  6. 1 2 3 "Bayit Lepletot". Bayit Lepletot. 2016. Retrieved 6 September 2016.
  7. 1 2 Sasson, Miriam. "A Home with a Heart: Girls Town Jerusalem". Community Magazine. Retrieved 6 September 2016.
  8. Weisberg, Moshe (14 November 2014). "הרבי מבעלזא חנך את הבנין החדש של 'בית לפליטות'" [The Belzer Rebbe Dedicates the New Building of 'Bayit Lepletot']. BeChadrei Charedim (in Hebrew). Retrieved 8 September 2016.
  9. 1 2 3 4 5 Bachrach, Rachel. "Ten Questions for Rabbi Avraham Y. Stern". Mishpacha. Retrieved 5 September 2016.
  10. Klein, Michele (1998). A Time to Be Born: Customs and folklore of Jewish birth. Jewish Publication Society. p. 318. ISBN 0-8276-0608-7.
  11. International Directory of Researchers in Jewish Folklore, Ethnology, and Related Fields. Jewish Folklore and Ethnology Newsletter. 3. 1980. p. 19.
  12. Epstein, Shifra (1987). "Textiles of Union: On Festive Roundels Made and Used by the Jews of Irani Kurdistan". Jewish Folklore and Ethnology Review: 5. (footnote 16)
  13. "Bayit Lepletot v. Canada (Minister of National Revenue), 2006 FCA 128 (CanLII)". CanLII. 28 March 2006. Retrieved 6 September 2016.
  14. "Using an Intermediary to Carry out a Charity's Activities within Canada". Canada Revenue Agency. 20 June 2011. Retrieved 6 September 2016.
  15. 1 2 3 Peck, Arlene G. (26 September 1990). "The diversity of Jerusalem". The Indiana Jewish Post & Opinion. 57 (1). p. 13.
  16. 1 2 "Contact Us". Bayit Lepletot. 2016. Retrieved 6 September 2016.
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