Baltimore, MD - Nov. 29, 2018 - The tragic evening of November 9-10, 1938 in Germany was only the beginning of what would be the most devastating blow to the Jewish people since the destruction of the Beis HaMikdash and our exile from Eretz Yisrael. Kristallnacht, the Night of the Broken Glass, was also the beginning of broken families, lives and hearts. But it never broke the Jewish people. Klal Yisrael, the eternal nation, persevered despite the Final Solution.

Yeshivas Kochav Yitzchok /Torah Institute of Baltimore was founded 66 years ago by Rabbi Yitzchok Sternhell, zt"l and a handful of other Holocaust survivors looking to rebuild their lives, family and Yiddishkeit. Creating a cheder that would provide a Jewish education for their sons was an essential part of this restoration and hence Shearis Hapleita was established. Now named in memory of Rabbi Sternhell, YKY/TI sensitively teaches its talmidim to remember the European Churbon and what we lost, while appreciating the opportunity we have today to live a Torah life.

Through a generous partnership with Mrs. Marlene Resnick and her late husband, Stanley a"h, YKY/TI's middle school held its 25th annual Kristallnacht program. The Resnicks always felt it was especially befitting for a cheder that was founded by Holocaust survivors and rebuilders to reflect on the Churbon.  This year, Rabbi Tzvi Rosen of the Star-K and a YKY/TI grandparent delivered the lecture to the middle school, sharing inspirational lessons of emunah, hashgacha pratis and mesiras nefesh based on his mother’s and uncle’s experiences during the Holocaust. Rabbi Rosen’s passion and his own amazement over his family’s incredible history resonated with his audience as they were given a glimpse into those dark years and subsequent years of rebuilding.

 YKY/TI is very grateful to Mrs. Resnick for helping instill these invaluable lessons to the cheder’s talmidim.