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Building Blocks

‍‍FEBRUARY 20, 2014 - כ אדר א' תשעד 
BY MELISSA GERR

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ALEPH LEARNING INSTITUTE FOUNDER AND

DIRECTOR ROCHELLE KAPLAN 

(KIRSTEN BECKERMANN)

 

Flitting around the Chabad Lubavitch of Maryland building with the busy energy of a hummingbird, Rochelle Kaplan, founder and director of the Aleph Learning Institute, set out warm drinks on a very cold day in anticipation of her students. The latest snowfall and frigid weather did not deter her, as the full-day program of Aleph Wednesdays — The Power of One was about to begin, somewhat surprisingly, with a yoga and Pilates class led by certified fitness trainer Malkie Raskas.

 

“We have to be strong, we have to be healthy,” said Kaplan. “You have to exercise and strengthen the body to be able to serve God, because it removes illness, it prevents illness. [Aleph Wednesdays] is a well-balanced program.”

 

Aleph Wednesdays is the latest offering developed by Kaplan, and it is a special feature of the Aleph Learning Institute, which she launched in 2011. An amalgam of one-on-one and group study courses, lectures, cooking classes and self-help workshops, the institute offers a smorgasbord of topics open to all who are interested. Customized learning and an unconventional approach are also hallmarks of the program.

 

Aleph Wednesdays asks that attendees commit one entire day each week to study. The program was designed to incorporate “heart, mind, space and spirit.” It was developed, in part, because Kaplan saw her personal need to devote more time to Torah and study.

 

“It’s not making time for me. It’s making time for God,” she explained. “We all are here for a purpose. We get so busy with earning a living, just being able to live. We’re so consumed, we don’t even have a focus or direction. And as a Jewish person, we have a soul purpose.”

 

Kaplan’s intense dedication has helped make her a driving force in the Jewish community since she arrived. Kaplan and her husband, Rabbi Shmuel Kaplan, lead Chabad Lubavitch of Maryland and have been in the Baltimore area almost 40 years. The center also offers a prescribed set of courses that are based on a curriculum created by the Jewish Learning Institute, the international adult education arm of Chabad-Lubavitch. Those courses are developed separate from, but incorporated into, the Aleph Learning Institute curriculum.

 

One difference at the Aleph Learning Institute, said Kaplan, is the personalization and customization of studies. The institute accommodates individuals, friends and family members on any topic and for any type of class; anything is feasible, she said. “We really want to extend ourselves to the community and make ourselves available.”

One of the most popular offerings is Aleph Partners, which consists of one-on-one study with Kaplan.

 

Hillary Wohl, 58, has studied one on one with Kaplan and is a student of the Aleph Learning Institute. A speech and language pathologist, Wohl is an adjunct professor at Loyola University Maryland and serves on the board of The Associated: Jewish Community Federation of Baltimore. She and her husband, Joel, are members of Chizuk Amuno Congregation.

 

“Chabad takes you wherever you are,” said Wohl, who has known Kaplan for many years and has studied more formally with her for the past five years. “You don’t have to know anything. The fact that you’re a Jew is all that matters. People have lost sight of what Judaism is and the gift of it. … I think Chabad is teaching people the gift of Judaism.”

The courses and workshops offered by the Aleph Learning Institute are all based upon Jewish concepts and law but cover a wide range of topics. Money Matters and Personal Investments, the Kabbalah of Food, Bride and Groom the Jewish Way, Nature’s Wealth and Study of the Book of Tanya are a few course titles.

 

Rachel Gutman, 32, is enrolled in Aleph Wednesdays — The Power of One. Gutman, a member of the Chabad congregation in Pikesville, works part time and takes care of her two children. She makes time in her schedule to attend yoga and Pilates, Kabbalah classes and a Torah Studies class for women.

 

“The power of one means many things,” said Gutman. “I take it as the power of one decision, one person to grow their spiritual well-being, that’s enough to change them internally. To be open to it — the power within yourself to learn and connect to Hashem.”

 

The Aleph Learning Institute isn’t Kaplan’s first grand effort. In 2009, she created an annual event called the Jewish Victims of Terror Project; she also raised funds and assembled the design team needed to build a mikvah at the Chabad Center that is open to the whole community. The center recently celebrated the mikvah’s 10-year anniversary.

 

“After that project and [other] things were underway, I wanted to get into adult education,” said Kaplan. Getting Jews to be more aware of their Judaism is core to Kaplan’s, and Chabad’s, work. Her energy is contagious, and she takes any opportunity to connect with another Jew.

 

“Let’s put it this way: I’m a campaigner — you know on the road, in the store, anywhere,” she said with a laugh. “That’s me. I’m for the people, with the people, and I also feel like I’m learning from everyone else. … And you have to understand, my husband and I dedicate our lives to educating Jewish people.”

 

Kaplan’s long-range plans for the Aleph Learning Institute ultimately include an additional building to be erected behind the current synagogue that will house the institute on the second floor. But the courses and events offered now are an effort to cultivate more Jewish learning in the community and work toward that bigger goal.

 

“It’s the building before the building, meaning if two Jews meet and they think about Torah, this is a big accomplishment,” explained Kaplan, whose gestures and voice accelerate when talking about the institute’s future. “You never know the ripple effect.”

 

Read about Upcoming Programs at the Aleph Learning Institute.

 

 

jewishtimes.com/19457/building-blocks/

 

The Power of One

‍‍OCTOBER 29, 2014 - ה חשון תשעה 
BY ALLIE FREEDMAN

 

The Aleph Learning Institute is bringing in some heavy hitters for its Nov. 10 gala event. According to the organization’s founder and director, Rochelle Kaplan of Chabad-Lubavitch of Maryland, constitutional lawyer Nathan Lewin will deliver the keynote address at “Powering for Success: The Power of One,” while sports agent and author Ronald Shapiro will serve as master of ceremonies.

 

“From good food to good speakers, this event will be a success,” said Kaplan. “Lewin has presented oral arguments in front of the Supreme Court over 25 times, including three huge cases regarding Jewish religious rights. We are thrilled to have him.”

 

Beginning at 6 p.m. at the Valley Mansion in Hunt Valley, the event is drawing on experts from such fields as law, science, technology, education, business and medicine to, in the words of Kaplan, “nourish the human spirit through Jewish education.” It will benefit the three-year-old Aleph Learning Institute, which Kaplan launched to assist Jewish men and women on their personal religious journeys. The organization runs Aleph Wednesdays’ full-day learning programs at the regional Lubavitch headquarters in Pikesville.

 

Kaplan believes that Judaism should enrich both the body and the mind.

 

“We are interested in bringing different people together from various backgrounds,” said Kaplan. “‘Powering for Success’ is a model community for learning. We want to engage the body, mind and soul and develop the right formula to help adult Jewish education thrive.”

 

In addition to Lewin and Shapiro, the evening’s speakers include Julia Chang Bloch, founding president of the US-China Education Trust; Leonard J. Attman, a commercial real estate developer and chairman of the board at FutureCare Health; psychiatrist Rebecca Begtrup; and Suzanne Keilson, an associate dean at Loyola University. Israeli hi-tech firm Robo Team will also give a demonstration of its latest designs.

 

“I was looking for people with a large variety of life experiences,” said Kaplan. “I think our speakers are upstanding individuals who are true experts in their various fields. I didn’t want this presentation to be tunnel vision. I picked a mix of men and women from different backgrounds because I wanted there to be a little something for everyone. We even have robots from Israel. Everyone will have a good time.”

 

Shapiro is excited about the program.

 

“When someone is as committed to a cause focused on nurturing the human spirit through learning as is Rochelle Kaplan, it is easy to step up and support her in an effort like ‘Powering for Success,’” he said. “Having the opportunity to emcee a group like the esteemed speakers she has assembled is an honor.”

 

For more information, go to alephlearninginstitute.org.

 

http://jewishtimes.com/30508/the-power-of-one/

 

 

 

 

 

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