In the
New York-
New Jersey metropolitan area, particularly in many areas of
Brooklyn, various Hasidic and Haredi groups (such as
Satmar,
Bobov,
Vizhnitz and many others) also attracted many new supporters for
yeshiva education, which was more intensively Torah-based than the Jewish day school model being promoted by Torah Umesorah. Notable was
Merkos L'inyonei Chinuch, which was founded in 1942 by
Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneerson, the Lubavitcher Rebbe. Holocaust survivors who immigrated to the United States in the postwar years were often strong supporters of the Orthodox Jewish day schools. They wanted their children to identify as Jews and practice the religion so that it could continue. For instance, the
Lithuanian Mir yeshiva had no wish to emulate the educational goals of secular (Jewish) society. They sent their children of high school age to
yeshivas (for the boys) and
Beis Yaakovs (for the girls); most of the curriculum was devoted entirely to
Talmud and
rabbinical literature (for the boys) and study of
Tanakh and Jewish laws and customs (for the girls). These were combined with fervent
Jewish worship. The new institutions thrived in their own right and mostly followed the guidelines of their own
rosh yeshivas and
rebbes.
Late 20th century to present As noted, Dr. Joe Kaminetsky served from 1945 until 1980 as operational head of Torah Umesorah. In 1945 when there were few Jewish day schools outside New York City. In 1946 New York had an estimated 7,000 students in 27 yeshivos of various sizes, and there was one yeshiva in each of Baltimore, Chicago, and Jersey City.{{cite web |date=March 16, 2011 |author=Dovid Sussman By the time of his death in 1999, Kaminetsky had set up hundreds of Jewish day schools across the country, in which 160,000 children were enrolled. Rabbi Joshua Fishman succeeded Kaminetsky, and served as executive vice-president until retiring in June 2007. He was a disciple of Rabbi
Yitzchok Hutner (1906–1980), who was among the leaders of
Agudath Israel of America. The current
Menahel ("principal") or national director, is Rabbi
David Nojowitz. He returned to the United States to take this position after having served as
Rosh Kollel in
Melbourne, Australia, for 25 years. In 2008 Torah Umesorah had an annual budget of $39 million; this was "the last year for which it made its tax documents public." Toward the latter part of the twentieth century, Torah Umesorah officials found that teachers and rabbis from the Haredi and Hasidic schools were consulting with its staff for training to improve
classroom management, enhance classroom
discipline and learn up-to-date
teaching skills and techniques which they often did not receive during yeshiva training. They began to set up regular classes for training of teachers and principals. Torah Umesorah has worked to find funding to establish
kollelim ("post-graduate"
Talmudic schools) in any community that is willing to set up the infrastructure and host such efforts. Some young
rabbis and
rebbetzins (their wives) have taken full- and part-time positions as Jewish educators in the local day schools. They also frequently serve in local Orthodox
synagogues as "pulpit rabbis." In some instances they have founded new Jewish day schools and synagogues of their own. == Relationship with Modern Orthodox groups ==