Yeshivat HaHesder Yerucham


:he:ישיבת_ההסדר_ירוחם|Yeshiva Yerucham
Yeshivat Hesder Yerucham is a hesder yeshiva located in the development town of Yeruham, Israel. It was founded in 1993 and currently there are over 220 students. It is known for its high level of Gemara learning.

History

In the early 1970s, a group of Religious Zionists settled in Yeruham with the goal of imporving the south of Israel, and helping to increase the quality of life for the residents of Yerucham. Over time, the group grew in number and expanded its activities by taking on educational responsibilities as well. After establishing "Midreshet B'Yahad", a Seminar Center of Judaism, Society and Zionism Studies, the group realized the need for a yeshiva as the next step in strengthening the existing projects by bringing youth to Yeruham.
The leader of this group, Shmuel Friedman Ben-Shalom, approached :he:אליהו_בלומנצויג|Rabbi Eliyhau Blumenzweig, who at the time taught at Yeshivat Har Etzion, with a proposition to be the Rosh Yeshiva, which he accepted. The yeshiva subsequently opened its doors in 1993.
Today, the yeshiva is considered to be one of the most serious hesder yeshivas in the country.

Curriculum

Daily Schedule:
Shachrit : 6:30am-8:00am
Breakfast: 8:00am-8:30am
Morning seder: 8:30am-1:00pm
Lunch/break: 1:00pm-3:00pm
Mincha: 3:00pm-3:20pm
Afternoon seder: 3:20pm-7:30pm
Supper: 7:30pm-8:00pm
Marriv: 8:00pm-8:30pm
Night seder: 8:30pm-11:00pm
Yeshivat Hesder Yerucham emphasizes the importance of learning Talmud in depth, specifically through the Brisker Method. A typical day in Yeshiva will include two sessions of intensive Talmud study and one of extensive study.
In terms of the afternoon seder, students can either learn with a charvuras, go to shiurim, or a combination of both. The yeshiva offers weekly classes in Tanakh, Jewish philosophy, Hasidic philosophy and the works of Jewish scholars such as Maimonides, Rabbi Yehuda Halevi, the Maharal of Prague, Moshe Chaim Luzzatto, Joseph B. Soloveitchik, Abraham Isaac Kook, and many others.
The daily schedule is: shachrit at 6:30am, followed by a halachah seder until 8:00am. Breakfast is from 8:00am-8:30am. After breakfast is morning seder, which is typically gemara iyun, and it goes from 8:30am-1:00pm. Following the morning seder is lunch and a break from 1:00pm-3:00pm. Mincha is at 3:00pm, followed by the afternoon seder, from about 3:20pm-7:30pm. Afternoon seder consists of more iyun gemara, followed by a couple hours of emmunah. Many of the students use the entire afternoon seder for learning machshava, tanach, mussar, and emmunah. From 7:30pm-8:00pm is Maariv, followed by supper from 8:00pm-8:30pm. Night seder consists of learning bekiut, and it goes from 8:30pm until at least 11:00pm, although there is no given time for night seder to end, and many students learn until later.
The daily schedule goes from Sunday to Thursday, and there is a morning shiurim given on Fridays as well. On motza'ei shabbos there is night seder, and on thursday night many students do "mishmor" and learn until very late hours of the night.

Educational approach

The gemara shiurim at the yeshiva are given at a very high level, and usually go into geat depth on a certain topic in the gemara. The works of the Rishonim and Acharonim are often analyzed in the shiurim. The rosh yeshiva gives a "shiur klali" for the entire yeshiva during thursday's morning seder.
The yeshiva guides its students to base their perspective upon the teachings of Rabbi Yehuda Halevi and the Maharal of Prague in accordance with the ideology of Abraham Isaac Kook, as is often customary in Religious Zionist yeshivas. With the goal of educating students to deal independently with the challenges they face living as an observant Jews in a modern world, the yeshiva encourages a broader study of biblical, rabbinic, and other classical and modern works.
The yeshiva educates its students to be aware of their surroundings and attentive to the needs of society in general. The yeshiva believes that the keys to solving Israel’s socioeconomic gaps lie in integration and education. All the students volunteer in the community mainly in the field of education. Many of the yeshiva's alumni settle in Yeruham instead of heading to the country's central cities.
The yeshiva also promotes other programs, among them:
In addition to :he:אליהו_בלומנצויג|Rabbi Blumenzweig, the other rabbis who teach in the Yeshiva are Rabbi Uriel Eitam, Rabbi Chaim Wolfson, Rabbi Shai Gnizi, Rabbi Shmuel Gleizer, Rabbi Achiya Ben Pazi, Rabbi Asher Weiss, Rabbi Ido Heber, Rabbi Shmuel Ariel, and Rabbi Elyakim Sharir. Rabbi Gnizi, Rabbi Gleizer, Rabbi Asher Weiss, and Rabbi Ben Pazi all began as students in the yeshiva. There are also rabbis who come from afar to give weekly classes, such as Rabbi Eliyahu Bazak and Rabbi Meir Kahana. Previously there were other teachers who have since left. These include :he:מיכאל אברהם|Rabbi Dr. Michael Abraham, Rabbi Ehud Barzilai, Rabbi Yair Ya'acobi, Rabbi Avi Luria, Rabbis Yoseph Elitzor, and Rabbi Nir Weinberg.

Yeshiva's publications

Here are a some of the publications from the yeshivas collective student body that have come out over the past number of years:
Many of the rabbis that teach in the yeshiva have also published a number of sefarim.