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SOME
PRIVATE SCHOOLS
Taxpayers
fund Jewish school Florida Opens First Hebrew Public School
By LARRY LUXNER HOLLYWOOD, Fla. — Margaret Schorr, a marketing and public-relations consultant, wanted her 5-year-old daughter Hannah to learn Hebrew, but she wasn't willing to pay the $8,000 to $13,000 annual tuition that Jewish day schools in South Florida typically charge for kindergarten. For attorney David
Barnett, price wasn't the issue — he wanted his Both families
are set to take advantage of a groundbreaking option: When the school year starts on Aug. 20, Schorr's daughter and Barnett's daughter will be among the 430 or so students attending the new Ben Gamla Charter School in this city. The taxpayer-funded institution says that it will offer two hours of instruction a day in Jewish-related topics, but not religion. Not a single class
has yet been taught, but the school is generating Ben Gamla's charter
was approved in March, but the school was still the hot topic at a
July 24 school-board meeting that drew a standing-room-only crowd.
Supporters of the school — the brainchild of the area's former
U.S. congressman, Peter Deutsch — say it could serve as a national
model, providing families with a financially accessible option at
a time when most non-Orthodox households are opting not to send their
children to Jewish day schools. Some critics, on the other hand, worry that the school's main contribution will be to serve as a road map for religious communities seeking to lower the wall separating church and state. "In other countries, we Jews were forced to support religious institutions of the dominant religions," said Rabbi Allan Tuffs of Temple Beth El, a Reform congregation in Hollywood. "The Jewish community has succeeded in America largely thanks to the principle of separation of church and state. "But with charter schools like Ben Gamla, we are opening the door for public money to be used to support all sorts of religious ideologies across America," he warned. "What will we say to the imam down the street who says he wants to teach Arabic within an Islamic cultural setting? Or the fundamentalist Christian group that wants to start a school to teach Christian culture?" By definition,
charter schools are publicly financed elementary or Ben Gamla's director, an Orthodox rabbi named Adam Siegel, said that students will learn Hebrew, Jewish culture and Jewish history for two hours a day; faculty will be forbidden from teaching Torah or prayer. Siegel, 37, added that the school will serve kosher meals, and students will be permitted to organize their own worship services. "I didn't
get hired for this job because I'm a rabbi," he said. "Plenty
of Susan Onori, the
charter-school coordinator for the Broward school "We felt
that was inappropriate for a public school," she said, adding
"The Ben Gamla school is not religious in nature at all," stated Onori. "We do not fund public religious schools in the state of Florida." Onori vowed that the school would be monitored, and have its charter revoked if it was found to be teaching Judaism. "They have
a contract with us," she said, "and the contract is very
About 16,500 of the county's 236,000 students attend charter schools, with 52 such institutions expected to be operating by the time classes begin next month. The new Jewish-themed school is named after Rabbi Joshua Ben Gamla, a first-century rabbi in ancient Israel who is credited with establishing the concept of public education. "Ben Gamla
was the one who saved Torah study for his generation," Tuffs accused
Deutsch of misrepresenting the school as secular in "The director doesn't call himself rabbi anymore; now he's Mr. Siegel," claimed Tuffs. "This is an Orthodox rabbi who has a B.A. He's got no credentials of any kind other than having run a yeshiva-style school. If you really want to have a Hebrew-language program, you hire an Israeli with an advanced degree in pedagogy. It's so disingenuous." School-board member
Eleanor Sobel also raised concerns about the "But your
principal is an Orthodox rabbi, and your original location Deutsch insisted
that "Ben Gamla is not a Jewish day school, but a "Trust me,"
he said, "if we were doing anything in violation of that, Competition with other Jewish schools Deutsch and Onori
both asserted that the school's main detractors A champion of
the charter-school movement during his time as a "We have
an additional charter from Miami-Dade County for another According to Deutsch, 80 percent of Ben Gamla's students are coming from other public schools. He said that it's safe to say that most of them are Jewish, although it is impossible to provide an exact figure because as a public school, the institution is forbidden to ask applicants their religion. 'A Self-Selected Group' "We have
a lot of kids from Israel, but we also have Hispanic kids. The school is
being managed by Academica, a firm that currently "Consider
that in Broward County, there are approximately 50,000 Barnett, the Hallandale
Beach attorney who felt a regular day school Tzipora Nurieli,
an Israeli-born Hallandale woman, said that she "I was supposed
to send them to Hillel in North Miami Beach, but this school is the
most amazing miracle that's ever happened," she said. "It's
a combination of teaching my kids Hebrew, but also taking |
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