Shoshana Fruchter Samuels â08S was studying in the Graduate Program for Women of Advanced Talmudic Study (GPATS) at Stern College for Women when her husband, Ayol Samuels â08YC, whom she had met on a Counterpoint trip to Honduras (co-sponsored by YUâs Center for the Jewish Future and the American Jewish World Service) in January â06, was accepted into medical school in a joint program with Ben Gurion University in Israel and Columbia University. The program entails three years of study at Ben Gurion in the southern Israeli town of Beâer Sheva, with the final year of study at Columbia University in New York. Shoshana decided to get her Masterâs in Jewish philosophy from Ben Gurion and enroll at Nishmat to receive training to become a yoetzet. That first year in Israel, Shoshana gave birth to her first child, Yehuda. She often took him, snug in a baby sling, along with her to class at Ben Gurion and Nishmat, which is based in Jerusalem and over an hour away from Beâer Sheva. She remarks, âFinding the balance between my dual studies and motherhood, and setting up a home in Israel was somewhat difficult, but it taught me to set very specific time frames in which to accomplish specific goals.â
âI tried to use every second wisely, and when that wasnât enough I stayed up really late,â she laughs.
At Nishmat, she was in a group of ten women, which included Sarah Cheses â06S, a fellow Stern graduate who was living in Israel at the time. âThe hardest part about Nishmat was the intensity of the learning, but at the same time, it was also the best thing about it,â explains Shoshana. âI appreciated the level of learning and ability to really dive into the texts in-depth.â It was Shoshanaâs training at GPATS that helped prepare her for the rigors of such concentrated learning. âAt GPATS, I had the opportunity to develop my learning skills in preparation for Rabbi Moshe Kahn's shiur and to learn Niddah with Rabbi Gedaliah Berger, and today, in my role as a yoeztet, I have gone back to consult my notes from that time,â says Shoshana.
Her skills in juggling numerous roles and responsibilities have helped Shoshana balance moving back to the States just after giving birth to her second child, Shlomo, and maintaining two jobs as a halacha and Jewish philosophy teacher at Maâayanot High School for Girls in Teaneck, NJ while serving as a yoetzet for Congregations Rinat Yisrael, Netivot Shalom and the broader Jewish community. Shoshana also serves as a visiting yoetzet for the Jewish community in Los Angeles, traveling a total of six times this year for Shabbat or weekend visits. Shoshana declared, âBecoming a yoetzet is, for me, a win-win. Not only did I get to engage in high-level study with women who are serious about their Jewish learning, but I was fortunate to emerge from the program with very practical skills that allow me to utilize my knowledge âon the ground.â That I am able to use the knowledge I gained at Nishmat to help women is really a dream come true.â
Shoshanaâs former Nishmat classmate, Sarah Cheses, thought she would become a doctor and, accordingly, majored in biology at Stern. âIn my genetics class, Dr. Babich brought in Torah sources that related to the topic at hand. I once told him that I loved the fact that when we walked into genetics class there were excerpts from the gemara waiting to be studied, and the next day he gave me a whole packet filled with articles on Torah and science,â says Sarah. âThatâs pretty unique to Stern.â
Sarah was drawn to teaching while in college, and taught science and Jewish philosophy at a girls high school after graduating. She then moved to Israel with her husband for a couple of years while he finished his semicha at the Gruss Institute. âWhen I first heard of Nishmatâs yoetzet program, I thought it was the perfect way for me to combine my love of learning halacha, and health and teaching,â says Sarah.
Now back in the U.S., she is completing her Masterâs in public health at Columbia. She and her husband, who have a 17-month old daughter, Adina, also serve as JLIC educators for Yale University; the Orthodox Unionâs Jewish Learning Initiative on Campus sends educators to serve on different college campuses throughout the U.S. to enhance Jewish learning and life on campus. Although she is not currently serving as a yoeztet for any particular community, she plans to give classes to different communities in the near future, and she is learning the laws of niddah in one of her chevrutas (study partnerships) at Yale.
âWe all learn the basics of halacha, either in school or from our parents, but we often need to ask questions on more complicated issues. With nidda, most women receive lessons before their weddings, and that certainly isnât enough education to know what to do in every situation,â explains Sarah. âSome women donât feel comfortable asking a rabbi their questions on niddah and taharat hamishpacha, and having a community yoetzet allows those women to ask their questions, enabling them to keep halacha correctly and in a more enjoyable way.â
Aliza Segal â93S, â93BR, a native of Memphis, TN, was one of Nishmatâs first graduates, in 2000. After graduating Stern, she received her Masterâs in Bible from the Bernard Revel Graduate School of Jewish Studies, where she met her husband, Dr. Michael Segal. The couple moved to Israel, which had been their longtime dream, and settled in Beit Shemesh. Aliza began teaching at Michlelet Mevaseret Yerushalayim (MMY), a seminary that offers serious learning for post-high school young women. âWhen Nishmat opened in 1997, it immediately interested me because I had been looking to learn in a high-level beit midrash for women, and its mission to help women appealed to me,â says Aliza. âIt wasnât clear right away what the program would turn out to be, and the term âyoetzet halachaâ was only created when they needed to put something on our certificates when we graduated!â
She continues, âNishmatâs program turned out to be a revolutionary thing for the Jewish community, and Iâm proud to be a part of that beginning.â After completing the program, Aliza taught at Maâayanot High School in NJ when her husbandâs post-doctorate studies took them to the States for a year, and conducted educational research at Atid, the Academy for Torah Initiatives and Directions, back in Israel. She worked for the Nishmat hotline, and has fielded hundreds of personal calls (and visits) from women throughout Beit Shemesh and other communities in Israel, and sometimes even the U.S.
âThere was such a thirst from women to have a female address these halachic issues of taharat hamisphacha,â says Aliza. She then went to obtain her Ph.D. in education at Hebrew University. Now, the Segals and their four boys, who range in age from 5 to 16, are back in the U.S. as Aliza completes her post-doc at New York University. She says, âI think itâs wonderful that a yoetzet has become professionalized in the U.S. within a communal setting. It will be nice when that happens in Israel as well.â
When asked about the best part of being a yoetzet, Aliza remarks, âSeeing the relief in someoneâs eyes when she realizes sheâs not alone in her situation, and that she has someone to help her get through it. Thereâs joy and sadness in this position, but seeing that feeling of relief is the most poignant for me.â
Feeling inspired by żŰżŰ´ŤĂ˝alumnae Shoshana Samuels, Sarah Cheses and Aliza Segal? To read about other fantastic and inspirational żŰżŰ´ŤĂ˝graduates, visit the alumni Web site and check out the ; or, to share your own achievements, submit a .