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BRICKS
AND MORTAR
New
Home for Hillel
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Were
building a community that
encompasses all aspects of the Jewish community and that sees itself proudly
as an integrated part of the broader University, said Rabbi Howard
Alpert, a week before last months groundbreaking ceremony for Steinhardt
Hall, the new home of Hillel at the University. That new three-story building,
which will be located just east of 39th Street between Locust Walk and
the Fels Center of Government, is scheduled to be completed in the spring
of 2003. It is named for Michael Steinhardt WG60 and his wife Judy,
who contributed a substantial gift to the $12 million project.
Since
there are roughly 6,000 Jewish students at Penn, including some 3,000
graduate and professional students, Hillels current building at
202 S. 36th Street is too small to allow for the sense of community
that we need to establish, explained Alpert, executive director
of the Hillel of Greater Philadelphia. On Friday nights we hold
religious services all over campus, because our building isnt large
enough for the 600 or more students who come to the three services that
we have every week.
The new
building, he noted, will allow us to hold simultaneously three sets
of services for 600 students or more, and also serve dinner to those who
want to stay.
Penns
Jewish community is a decidedly heterogeneous one, with many different
religious practices and political ideologies, Alpert noted. The
building has been designed very consciously to promote a sense that all
forms of Jewish expression are valid, and that theres room for all
of them in the building. But at the same time, theyre all part of
an overarching Jewish community.
At
the same time, we see the Jewish community at the University as fully
integrated with the broader University community. And so the building
has been designed not to be a fortress, but rather to be open and inviting
to the entire community.
One
example of that openness will be the first-floor coffee bar, which will
open onto the terrace outside. We see that as a transition, where
all members of the University will come together and mingle, said
Alpert. And a two-story accordion-shaped glass wall on the
southwestern portion of the building is intended to give students a
sense of being part of the broader world out there.
The
essential meeting place of Steinhardt Hall, he explained,
will be the Rotunda on the first floor. Were envisioning it
as the place where the various Jewish religious communities will gather
together Saturday morning or Friday night before dispersing off into their
separate services. We also see it as a public space on campus that will
be open for the whole community to make use of it as a gathering point
and for social receptions.
Other
rooms include a student lounge, a living room (which were
consciously patterning after the living room at the Inn at Penn),
a library, a 300-seat auditorium, a study hall for studying religious
texts, a graduate-student lounge, a seminar room, administrative offices,
and a student-activities space for the 27 independent Jewish-culture groups
on campus.
The
new building will also have a Kosher dining commons, and Alpert expressed
the hope that it will be attractive not only to students who keep
Kosher but to the broader Jewish community and indeed to non-Jewish students
as well.
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Copyright 2001 The Pennsylvania
Gazette Last modified 11/1/01
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