Days after Yeshiva University announced that it would recognize a club supporting LGBTQ students, its president said the values espoused by a typical “Pride” club are “antithetical” to the school.
A settlement between Yeshiva University and its LGBTQ club has sparked backlash from revered Orthodox Judaism authorities.
Speakers at the event included University of Toronto law professor Mohammed Fadel; Thomas Harvey, a civil rights lawyer ...
At the crux of the legal dispute was whether Yeshiva is a “religious corporation” under New York law. The state’s appellate ...
Since June, a group of American and Israeli-born Jews have been meeting every few weeks in New York for a salon-style series ...
The Supreme Court signaled Monday it is poised to side with Catholic Charities in a dispute over whether religiously affiliated groups are entitled to an exemption from certain state taxes, a decision ...
Chabad at Binghamton’s 31st-annual Shabbat dinner brought over 2,000 attendees to the Events Center to honor the Jewish ...
My position, then as now, emphatically rejects the ideology, lifestyle and behaviors which the LGBTQ term represents,” wrote one of the university’s most senior rabbis.The post ‘Regret,’ ‘deep’ apolog ...
Less than a week after Yeshiva University agreed to recognize an LGBTQ+ student club as part of a legal settlement, university president Ari Berman apologized for the way the university conveyed the ...
Yeshiva University has never before recognized an official club of this sort, according to Katherine Rosenfeld, a partner at ...
In an email to students, Rabbi Ari Berman rejected the idea that Y.U. had reversed its prohibition on the club.