Denah Weinberg


Denah Weinberg is an Orthodox Jewish Rebbetzin and founder and dean of EYAHT College of Jewish Studies for Women in Jerusalem. EYAHT has over 2,000 alumnae. She is also a speaker on women's issues in Israel and abroad, and has published several essays in Jewish women's anthologies. She is the widow of Rabbi Noah Weinberg, founder of Yeshivat Aish HaTorah.

Biography

Weinberg was born in Far Rockaway, Queens, New York to Albert and Esther Goldman. Albert was the youngest of eight children of Rabbi Yaakov Yitzchok Goldman, rabbi of Congregation Ohave Shalom in Pawtucket, Rhode Island, and his wife, Dina. Weinberg had two sisters, Naomi and Judy, both of whom are deceased.
She married Noah Weinberg in New York in February 1958. They lived in Jerusalem, Israel and raised 8 sons and 4 daughters. One of their sons, Rabbi Hillel Weinberg, briefly succeeded his father as rosh yeshiva of Aish HaTorah. She was widowed in 2009.

Founding EYAHT

After giving weekly classes to women in her Kiryat Sanz apartment for several years, in 1984, with seed money from Aish HaTorah, she opened the EYAHT college in two ground-floor apartments located across the street from her home. She named the college "EYAHT" by creating an acronym for the phrase, אשה יראת ה' היא תתהלל, Eesha Yirat Adonoy Hee Tithallal, "A woman who fears God, she shall be praised".
Weinberg taught The 48 Ways to Wisdom, a curriculum developed by her husband based on Pirkei Avot. She also taught a curriculum on the beauty and meaning of Shabbat, which she developed. She placed a strong emphasis on the role of the Jewish woman in her family and community, with special classes in shalom bayit and chinuch habanim.
Shortly after inaugurating a five-story, campus for EYAHT in the Romema neighborhood in 2014, EYAHT was closed.

Speaker, writer, and community activist

Rebbetzin Weinberg is a featured speaker at the annual Aish HaTorah Partners Conference in New York. She has published several essays in books geared to Jewish women.
During the 2006 Lebanon War, she launched a "1000 Soldiers, 1000 Women Praying" campaign to sign up 1000 women to pray once a day for the welfare of Israeli soldiers on the battle lines.

Published works