Rabbi And Mrs. Neuman To Be Honored At Bais Yaakov Ateres Miriam Dinner This Motzaei Shabbos

А smile at the beginning of the day. A warm hello. A concerned "How are you?” These seemingly simple memo­ries of Rabbi Moshe Neuman shlita are what generations of students of the Bais Yaakov Academy of Queens hold dear in their hearts. From the years 1961 to 2011, Rabbi Moshe Neu­man was at the helm of this Queens institu­tion, shepherding it from a school of 27 stu­dents in a tiny building in Corona to a school of close to 850 students in a four-story build­ing in Kew Gardens. Throughout those years, Rabbi Neuman was a consistent and reliable presence for all the girls who learned at Bais Yaakov.

As a young man, Rabbi Neuman was work­ing toward a degree in tax law, but his obvi­ous talents in the area of chinuch led his rosh yeshivah in Yeshivas Chaim Berlin, Rav Yitzchak Hutner zt”l, to nudge him in a dif­ferent direction. From his first experience as an eighth-grade substitute, it was clear that Rabbi Neuman was a natural. He "got kids” and was able to reach them on their level, gain their trust, and make them want to learn.

Rabbi Neuman worked for four years as a third grade rebbe and assistant principal in Detroit. After his marriage to Rivkah Hol­lander, the couple moved to Allentown, Penn­sylvania, where Rabbi Neuman served as prin­cipal of the Jewish Community Center Day School. In the spring of 1961, sensing that it was time for their growing family to return to New York, Rabbi Neuman accepted the posi­tion as principal of a fledgling girls' school in Queens.

Bais Yaakov flourished under the auspices of Rabbi Neuman, growing quickly from a small school into the thriving institution it is today. What was the secret of his success? Bais Yaakov alumni who attended the school at any and every point during Rabbi Neuman's 50 years of tenure all point to the same key characteristics: "He knew everyone's name - first and last,” and, "He greeted us each and every morning with an enthusiastic ‘Boker Tov’ and a smile.” While these might sound like small gestures, it is clear by the deep im­pression they have made that they were in­deed significant and meaningful to his many students.

Hands-on would not be an adequate term to describe the level of care and concern that Rabbi Neuman brought to his position. Any way a child needed to be nourished, he was the man for the job. It would not be unusual to see the esteemed principal bend down and tie a young student's shoelace. In a letter reprinted in BYQ's Fiftieth Anniversary Com­memorative Album, 1959-2019, Rabbi Paysach Krohn writes that when the Balsam farm on Cross Bay Boulevard closed down, Bais Yaak- ov had a problem getting chalav Yisrael milk. Rabbi Neuman came to the rescue, schlep­ping the milk in his car from Boro Park each and every day.

Rabbi and Mrs. Neuman a few years back

Ruchy (Neuman) Elbogen (no relation to Rabbi Neuman) remembers that as a young student, just four years old, a fellow student put a pearl into her ear. Rabbi Neuman calmly tried to remove it with a straw but was un­successful. This was before the days of Hat- zolah and cell phones, so the principal took Ruchy in his own car to the Emergency Room at nearby Jamaica Hospital where her mother met them. Sounds like a frightening situa­tion, but Ruchy says that with Rabbi Neuman at her side, "All I recall is calm. And the credit for that lies only with Rabbi Neuman.”

"Can I come in and disturb your class?” was Rabbi Neuman's opening gambit to enter the classroom and spend some quality time with BYQ's talmidos. As Mrs. Gitty Acker, an administrator in BYQ and longtime third grade morah, shares, she would call Rabbi Neuman into her classroom each time the girls finished learning a parshah in Chumash. He would "quiz” the students, giving them a chance to show off all they learned. He also went into each classroom in the school dur­ing Elul to blow the shofar and used to read part of Megillas Esther to Mrs. Acker's stu­dents each year before Purim. "The girls were always amazed when he said the Aseres B’nei Haman in one breath.” In the sixth grade, he would give weekly parshah lessons from Rab- beinu Yonah. He was not a principal who sat in his office. He spent time in the classrooms.

Rabbi Neuman knew how to turn even bitter moments into sweet ones. Mrs. Chana (Goldberger) Fendrich recalls nostalgically how when she was thrown out of class and sent to the principal's office, Rabbi Neuman offered her a candy and told her not to tell anyone. (Of course, now the entire Queens community knows. Sorry, Rabbi Neuman; the secret is out.)

Many BYQ faculty members still speak to Rabbi Neuman on a regular basis. He had a very close relationship with the teachers. As one teacher says, "Rabbi Neuman could get us to do anything for a student because we knew that he was willing to do anything. There was no such thing as saying no.”

Mrs. Nechama Jurkowitz, Limudei Kodesh Principal at Bais Yaakov, recalls that Rabbi Neuman would sit with the teachers and both listen to them and give over to them. "Teachers felt it was worth coming to school to teach, and also to be taught - by Rabbi Neuman.”

Rabbi Neuman didn't just know every student's name. He knew everything about them there was to know: their challenges, their strengths, what might have worked for them in the past, and what did not. He looked for the best in each child so he could inspire her to bring out her ko- chos and reach her potential. Mrs. Tamar (Well) Miller entered BYQ in seventh grade after moving to New York from Chicago. She and her father arrived first, ahead of the rest of the family. She relates that Rabbi Neuman used to check on her all the time. "He always used to ask me how I was doing. I'll always remember his smile and his warmth. He really cared.”

Mrs. Elisa (Hoffman) Taub, Director of the Midos Program in Bais Yaakov, attended BYQ as a student and sent her daughters to the school. In her view, "Rabbi Neuman never changed, from when I knew him as a little girl to when I knew him as an adult.” With his sig­nature warmth, everyone felt a personal con­nection to him. "He always got his messages and his values across through his anecdotes. Eretz Yisrael, ahavas Yisrael, the Jews trapped behind the Iron Curtain, the Holocaust - he was always teaching - but you didn't neces­sarily feel like he was teaching you - he was putting his heart into your heart.”

Rabbi Neuman's caring extended beyond his students to the entire klal Yisrael. Mrs. Shi- fra (Jakubowicz) Silber remembers that every assembly would begin with kapitel kuf-lamed (T’hilim 130), recited responsively as a tfilah "for our brothers and sisters trapped behind the Iron Curtain.” This made a lasting impres­sion on his many students.

Above all, Rabbi Neuman wanted to teach the girls at Bais Yaakov to have midos and mentchlichkeit. "Stand up for someone older who might need a seat... Call your grandpar­ents before Shabbos.” These lessons were im­parted on a daily basis.

Mrs. Nechama Jurkowitz captures one of Rabbi Neuman's unique qualities: "When you speak to him, you feel like there is no one else in the whole world who matters to him at that moment. Students felt that way, and teachers, too. He never forgot what you spoke about, and always remembered to ask you about it. It was all about relationship.” She also emphasiz­es that he allows for people not to be perfect. "People look back at their time in Bais Yaakov and say, *He believed in me, and that gave me the strength to go and achieve.'”

While Rabbi Neuman is no longer physi­cally at Bais Yaakov, Bais Yaakov students still have a prominent place in his heart. Just a few weeks ago, Rabbi Neuman was in Bais Me- drash of Cedarhurst with his son, Rabbi Nos- son Neuman, and was heard asking the mara d’asra, Rabbi Spiegel, for a brachah. "What type of brachah?” inquired Rabbi Spiegel. "A brachah for shidduchim for all the girls in Bais Yaakov.” As ever, Rabbi Neuman is still con­cerned about his girls and taking action on their behalves.

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Bais Yaakov Ateres Miriam, located in the heart of Far Rockaway, has the z’chus to honor Rabbi and Mrs. Moshe and Rivkah Neuman at its upcoming dinner. The world of chinuch would not be what it is today without Rabbi and Mrs. Neuman, who, for more than half a century, have completely dedicated them­selves to the youngest members of our klal. Working with each child's strengths to achieve his or her potential, Rabbi and Mrs. Neuman cultivated and were mechanech many of the parents and grandparents you see today in our communities. Whether at Bais Yaakov of Queens, Toras Emes, or through 613 Torah Avenue, Rabbi and Mrs. Neuman touched the lives of almost every single family you will meet - families with strong, torahdikkeh values, with a love for yiddishkeit that is felt in the home, and is lived every day. This leg­acy of chinuch with warmth is renewed each morning, as Rabbi Nosson Neuman stands at the helm of Bais Yaakov Ateres Miriam, guid­ing his talmidos in the footsteps of those who came before them. May Rabbi and Mrs. Moshe Neuman and Rabbi and Mrs. Nosson Neuman be zocheh to many more healthy and successful years being osek in the chinuch and nurturing of our children. May they see continued nachas from their students, their children, their grandchildren, and their great grandchildren ad bi’as go’el.

The 7th annual dinner for Bais Yaakov At- eres Miriam will take place this coming mot- zaei Shabbos, Parshas Va'eira, January 5. The reception is at 8:30 p.m., with the program to follow. Rabbi Moshe Neuman will be there and would love to greet you.

By Sima Mandelbaum