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NY Premiere Screening of Lonely Man of Faith Draws Capacity Crowd

Feb 5, 2007 -- Nathan Lamport Auditorium in Zysman Hall on the Wilf Campus was filled to capacity for the New York premiere screening of Lonely Man of Faith: The Life and Legacy of Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitchik, a documentary about the renowned Talmud scholar and Rosh haYeshiva at Yeshiva University’s affiliated Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary (RIETS) from 1941 to 1985. Almost 1,100 people—including students, alumni, faculty, and friends—attended the event on Saturday night, Feb. 3. The documentary was made by New York City filmmaker Ethan Isenberg with the input and advice of many people connected with YU. “Making this movie appealed to me because it shows the development of modern Orthodoxy and American Judaism and how we got to where we are today,” said Mr. Isenberg, whose film on Rabbi Soloveitchik -- known as The Rav -- was his first major work. “I was also fascinated by The Rav as a lonely individual, who prized independent thinking and creativity.” Featuring historic footage and photos -- some of shiurim given by The Rav in Lamport Auditorium -- as well as interviews with people who knew the famous rabbi, the documentary traces Rav Soloveitchik’s life from the small Byelorussian shtetl where his parents lived, to his family’s escape to Warsaw after the Communist revolution, his studies in philosophy in pre-WWII Berlin, and his life in the United States. The screening was followed by a conversation among four of the Rav’s students: Rabbi Kenneth Brander, Dean of the Center for the Jewish Future; Rabbi Menachem Genack, CEO of OU Kosher and rosh yeshiva at RIETS; Rabbi Hershel Schachter, rosh kollel at RIETS; and Rabbi Mayer Twersky, rosh yeshiva at RIETS. The rabbis discussed the legacy of The Rav as “a giant in Torah and a towering presence,” said Rabbi Twersky, The Rav’s grandson and occupant of the Leib Merkin Distinguished Professiorial Chair in Talmud and Jewish Philosophy at RIETS, held by his grandfather before him. Rabbi Genack posited that The Rav preserved Orthodoxy and was responsible for rebuilding American Jewry. During his 45 years as head of RIETS, The Rav ordained some 2,000 rabbis—a distinction that no sage in Jewish history is believed to have attained.